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Amazon description (ready to paste)Grain doesn’t have to come from annual grains.
Grain Without Grain: Perennial Starches and Pseudocereals for Food Independence shows beginner homesteaders, small‑space growers, and preparedness‑minded families how to fill the “carb gap” with resilient, low‑input crops that come back year after year.
Instead of fighting for annual wheat and corn, you’ll learn how to grow, harvest, and use four powerhouse crops: sunchokes (Jerusalem artichokes), groundnuts, arrowhead, and grain amaranth. These underused roots, tubers, and seeds quietly store energy underground or in hardy seedheads—giving you dependable calories even when weather, pests, or supply chains don’t cooperate.
Inside you’ll learn how to:
Choose and grow perennial and self‑reseeded starch crops that thrive in home gardens and small spaces
Plant, tend, and harvest sunchokes, groundnuts, arrowhead, and amaranth step by step—even if you’re brand new to gardening
Work with sun, shade, and temperature to get reliable yields in a wide range of climates
Use containers, tight beds, and vertical space so renters, balcony growers, and urban homesteaders can still grow serious calories
Clean, dry, and store roots, tubers, and grain for a stable, long‑lasting pantry
Turn unconventional starches into familiar foods with simple recipes for flatbreads, porridges, skillet “bakes,” and hearty side dishes
Mill small seeds and dried roots into flour using hand mills, small electrics, and DIY methods, without ruining your equipment
You’ll also find troubleshooting tips for common problems—like sunchokes spreading too enthusiastically, or amaranth lodging in the wind—plus guidance on digestion, flavor, and how to introduce these foods to picky eaters.
Whether you’re on a suburban lot, a rural acre, or a sunny balcony, Grain Without Grain gives you a practical blueprint for turning overlooked plants into real food security. If you want more homegrown calories, less dependence on bought grain, and a pantry that actually backs up your self‑sufficiency goals, this book will show you where to start—one bed, one tub, and one harvest at a time.









