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Food

Shavuot, the perfect time to revisit barley

A cheap and comforting grain which is fashionable once again after years in the gastronomic wilderness

May 28, 2009 09:59
Barley

By

Ruth Joseph

2 min read

As a reader I’ve always been captivated by good narrative, and surely one of the most beautiful romances occurs in the Bible between Ruth the convert and Boaz. She is always pictured gleaning the barley harvest — Boaz tells his young men to leave her some full sheaves and at the end of the day she has all the barley she needs. And the story of Shavuot continues.

And certainly barley (hordeum distichon) — said to be the earliest grain — was hugely important in Biblical times. Although a staple, it was never considered as valuable as wheat. In fact, it was often used as cattle fodder and was deemed a last-resort food in times of famine. The Talmud says: “When the barley is gone from the jar, strife comes knocking at the door.” (Proverbs. Papa Talmud Baba Metzia 59a).

Perhaps this was because the barley flour, with its low gluten content, made a heavy loaf. Nevertheless, barley played an essential role in feeding the Biblical Jewish soldiers and in Exodus 9:31-32, we are told how the plague of hail ruined the barley and flax harvests, “Now the flax and the barley were ruined, for the barley was in ear and the flax was in bud.”

After growing wild in Southern Persia, its cultivation began about the fifth Egyptian dynasty, continuing through the seventh and 17th.