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Can't wait to try this with my classroom. We have grown sunflowers over the summer and this wi... [more]
Very kewl....my organic farm is named "Sunflower Farm" and I'm always looking for eas... [more]
Is there an easy was to hull the seeds? Seems to me that is going to be a time consuming project. ... [more]

How to Roast Sunflowers
Make a tasty treat
By: Michelle Leise

Online Rating: (8/10)

In the September/October 2009 issue of Gardening How-To, Michelle Leise wrote about growing sunflowers. If you grow sunflowers, you may want to harvest the seeds. Here are some simple instructions for preparing them.

Let the seeds dry
First, leave the seeds on the flower to dry. You may have to add a lightweight cover, like cheesecloth, to keep nature from beating you to the goodies.

How to roast kernels
To create your own roasted seeds, remove the hulls, and place kernels in a shallow pan. A jellyroll pan works well. Roast in a 300°F oven for 30 to 40 minutes, until brown. You’ll need to stir occasionally as the nuts roast. After you’ve removed them from the oven, you may wish to stir in some melted margarine. Use about 1 teaspoon per cup of seeds. Salt seeds, if desired, and place on absorbent paper to cool. Store in a tightly covered container.

How to boil seeds in the hull
Here’s how to create the mouth-numbing salty treat from your childhood. Place the unhulled seeds in a pan and cover with salt water. For the salt water, use ¼ to ½ cup of salt for 2 quarts of water. Soak seeds overnight or bring them to a boil and simmer for two hours. Let them dry on absorbent paper. Use the seed-roasting instructions to finish the batch.

Eat up
If you need an excuse to add sunflower seeds to virtually everything you eat, here it is. Sunflower seeds are a rich source of three vitamins and minerals most Americans don’t eat enough of: Vitamin E, magnesium, and selenium. As an added bonus, they contain a big load of the phytosterols that help lower cholesterol.


MEMBER COMMENTS

emoffrankl

Location: west chester, OH
Member

Posted:8/21/2009

Member Rating: (5/10)

Can't wait to try this with my classroom. We have grown sunflowers over the summer and this will be a great way to finish the lesson.

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mporachan

Location: salisbury, VT
Member

Posted:8/24/2009

Member Rating: (10/10)

Very kewl....my organic farm is named "Sunflower Farm" and I'm always looking for easy ways to use the 50+ varieties of sunflowers that I grow. I mostly sell them at farmers markets or let them go to seed in the field and let our wildlife friends have food during the harsh Vermont winters.

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FrugalFraulein

Location: olympia, WA
Member

Posted:9/22/2009

Member Rating: (7/10)

Is there an easy was to hull the seeds? Seems to me that is going to be a time consuming project. I grew some mammouth seeds this year and they grew over 12 feet tall! I now have the heads drying and wanted to know what to do with them other than save them for the birds. The Frugal Fraulein http://frugalcanning.blogspot.com

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FrugalFraulein

Location: olympia, WA
Member

Posted:9/22/2009

Member Rating: (7/10)

Is there an easy was to hull the seeds? Seems to me that is going to be a time consuming project. I grew some mammouth seeds this year and they grew over 12 feet tall! I now have the heads drying and wanted to know what to do with them other than save them for the birds. The Frugal Fraulein http://frugalcanning.blogspot.com

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FrugalFraulein

Location: olympia, WA
Member

Posted:9/22/2009

Member Rating: (7/10)

Is there an easy was to hull the seeds? Seems to me that is going to be a time consuming project. I grew some mammouth seeds this year and they grew over 12 feet tall! I now have the heads drying and wanted to know what to do with them other than save them for the birds. The Frugal Fraulein http://frugalcanning.blogspot.com

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FrugalFraulein

Location: olympia, WA
Member

Posted:9/22/2009

Member Rating: (7/10)

Is there an easy was to hull the seeds? Seems to me that is going to be a time consuming project. I grew some mammouth seeds this year and they grew over 12 feet tall! I now have the heads drying and wanted to know what to do with them other than save them for the birds. The Frugal Fraulein http://frugalcanning.blogspot.com

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FrugalFraulein

Location: olympia, WA
Member

Posted:9/22/2009

Member Rating: (10/10)

Sorry guess I was too impatient!

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cwhelan1

Location: carlton, MN
Life Member

Posted:10/17/2009

Member Rating: (9/10)

My grandchildren and I planted sunflowers this year. We did the giant striped, teddybear, blackseed oil too. Some of them got to be 18 feet tall and the heads were 16 inches across. They were like small trees. We played in them and took lots of pictures, but the best was the bumble bees and honey bees. There were hundreds of them which helped all of the garden.

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Member tip

Sunflower Patch

If you like to attract lots of birds and have some extra space, make a high - volume, informal sunflower patch in the spring.  Buy a bag of bird - feed sunflower seeds and scatter the seed over the area.  Cover the seeds with a little soil and water them down. Thin as needed and let the seedheads mature for the birds to eat. Not all the seeds will come up, but  this will be quicker and less expensive than planting a more formal sunflower patch in garden style.

Photo
Roasted Sunflower Seeds
Roasted Sunflower Seeds  

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