more about BULGUR
Try these tasty, nutritious cereal grain recipes: Boiled Bulgur, Bulgur Stuffed Peppers, Bulgur Swedish Cabbage Rolls, Bulgur Jambalaya, and Scotch Broth With Bulgur.
Whole wheat, most of us agree, is fine food ... but not
everyone enjoys it cooked "as is". Back in MOTHER NO. 20,
Betty Warner urged cereal lovers to try the parched and
cracked variation known as bulgur (and described how to
make and use that product at home). As some of us have
learned from following Betty's directions, this Middle
Eastern specialty—also called bulgor, bhulgar,
burghrol or boulgour, depending on what part of that area
the speaker hails from—keeps well, cooks more quickly
than the whole grain and takes on a pleasant crunchy
texture and nutty taste from the roasting.
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The traditional way to make bulgur is by boiling and
sundrying whole wheat and partially cracking the kernels
with stones (see MOTHER NO. 20 for more complete
directions). Those of us who do roughly the same thing in
our own kitchens (with more advanced equipment) may not be
aware of this country's large-scale bulgur industry, which
has been turning out parched wheat by mass-production
methods for the last 20 years. This is the subject of an
informative booklet called Bulgur ... A New Wheat
Food recently sent to MOTHER by Protein Cereal
Products International, an association which promotes the
use of the product in the U.S. and overseas.
The American interest in bulgur dates from the 1950's
(back when we had a food surplus, remember?) and grew out
of a combined effort by wheat growers, millers and
government agencies to find an easily stored cereal product
that would be acceptable both on the open market and in
various domestic and foreign aid programs. The ancient
technique of parching and cracking turned out to be a
satisfactory answer, and bulgur labeled "Made in U.S.A."
became a fairly common article on the shelves of
well-stocked supermarkets.
Fortunately, the product that was once thought of as a good
use for surplus wheat may turn out to be just as well
suited to a time of scarcity. It won't be long now before
many of us feel a need to dig out our copies of Diet
for a Small Planet (which we conscientiously bought
but never got around to using) and take a hard look at
possible sources of adequate protein from the correct
combination of plant and dairy foods. Those who wisely set
aside part of their land for small-scale cereal growing,
and those who can buy good whole wheat or commercial bulgur
locally, may be especially interested in Frances Moore
Lappé's suggestions for making the most of that
grain.