Not exact matches
John has another such parable, in which the thought takes a deeper turn: «A
grain of wheat remains a solitary
grain unless it falls into the ground and dies; but if it dies, it bears a rich
harvest»; 27 and then, with an echo of Luke's language
about «hating» one's own life, «The man who loves himself is lost, but he who hates himself [in this world] will be kept safe [for eternal life].»
Most often, we read these verses as talking
about a vineyard owner and an oxen owner, and how the vineyard owner is the one who plants the vineyard and enjoys its
harvest, and the oxen owner is the one who should not muzzle the ox, but let it eat some
grain at the mill.
But a Jewish friend told me something
about how during Passover, they can only eat flour and
grain from the previous year... nothing that has been newly
harvested.
After reading new research
about the issue of «crop desiccation» done by using glyphosate on wheat and other
grains just prior to
harvest, Tropical Traditions decided to first test some commercial wheat products with wheat grown in Montana, North Dakota, and Canada.
We talk a lot
about cooking times on this site, and as with most
grains (or
grain - like ingredients), cooking time can vary greatly from rice to rice depending on the type of wild rice you buy, when it was
harvested, and so on - so keep that in mind as you go into any recipe that features wild rice.
After reading new research
about the issue of «crop desiccation» done by using glyphosate on wheat and other
grains just prior to
harvest, Tropical Traditions decided to first test some commercial wheat products with wheat grown in Montana, North Dakota, and Canada.
Generally speaking, summer
grains, such as corn and summer wheat, are planted near the end of winter when freezing temperatures are not expected to continue for more than a few weeks, and they take
about 110 days to mature, then another 30 - 60 days to dry sufficiently to
harvest for storing as seed.
However, I'm not talking
about amber waves of
grain, but rather saving you some green, through tax - loss
harvesting.