NOT Free Shipping Eligible
This product does NOT qualify for free shipping.
Know your farmer. This grain grown by: Ramona Farms.
This product cannot be shipped outside the US.
$13.75 – $118.00
NOT Free Shipping Eligible
This product does NOT qualify for free shipping.
Know your farmer. This grain grown by: Ramona Farms.
This product cannot be shipped outside the US.
Stone milled fresh on demand from the whole wheat berry – Breadtopia stone mills the whole grain into flour as needed to fill customer orders. Our customers are assured of receiving freshly milled whole wheat flour every time.
About bolted flour: Bolted (or high-extraction) flour is whole grain flour with some percentage of the bran sifted out, which makes it a nice compromise between hearty 100% whole grain and all purpose white flour. It’s ideal for when you want a lighter loaf or dough yet wish to retain the high nutrition found in the germ of the wheat berry.
White Sonora Wheat is considered to be the oldest wheat in the Americas. It is an ancient heritage wheat brought to the Sonoran desert by a Jesuit Missionary, Padre Eusebio Kino, and introduced to the Pima people circa 1685. The family farmers of Ramona Farms were the first farmers in the Western Hemisphere to grow wheat and they are still growing it!
This wheat was the predominant wheat variety in the desert of the southwest of the United States until the 1940s. A versatile grain, White Sonora Wheat is excellent for making tortillas and can be cooked with beans, soups, or cooked whole or cracked and used as a side dish or added to salads. While relatively high in protein content (12.73%), it is low in gluten-forming proteins. This characterizes it as a “soft” wheat.
Please follow this link for more detailed information on White Sonoran Wheat from the Slow Food USA web site.
Our White Sonora grain is grown by family farmers who are members of the Akimel O’Odham (Gila River Pima) Native American Community — a certified organic farm that is committed to ideals of sustainable stewardship of our natural resources for those of future generations.
Pastiera Napoletana is a traditional Easter pie from Naples, Italy. It's delicious, unique, and beautiful, and can be enjoyed any time of year and for any occasion. This dessert is made with cooked wheat berries, ricotta, and citrus of various forms: zest, blossom water, candied peels.
Enjoy this combination of Argentinian empanadas and Jamaican chicken patties for any meal, paired with a salad or by themselves.
Every couple weeks or so, we send out a little roundup of new recipes, techniques, and tutorials that we’ve recently posted on the site. Occasionally we announce exclusive giveaways to newsletter subscribers as well. We won’t spam you with ads or share or sell your email address. Every email we send has a 1-click unsubscribe link if you decide it’s not for you.
Rampartview (verified owner) –
I have been looking at this wheat.flour for quite a while. They grow it all around me and heck we drive by a mill store about once a week. I finally broke down and bought some. I have not seen specific recipes for this and I was determined to make a loaf of bread, and not a tortilla!. I searched a number of things and decided to modify my old standard recipe to make a couple of allowances for this flour. I wanted to really see about The Sonoran so instead of 1/3 I used 1/2 of it and 1/2 of all purpose. I also used a mix of 3/4 cup of a starter I knew was solid. With a recommendation from a friend I used 1 teaspoon of honey.
The results are amazing. I think the best way to describe this bread is that it is soft. Seems odd but to me it seems soft. It also has just a hint of sweet and a good finish of sour. This loaf proofed like you would not believe with baubles showing in the basket as it was transferred to the cloche.
Love the taste and we will continue using this flour along with the others that we like. I may forget about the Bolted flour however.