Over the past week or so I've been experimenting with making bread from the grains I'm sprouting. Sometimes by using the sprouted grain in it's wet state to make dough - sometimes after drying it first then milling it. I started this really having very little baking skills. The bread I made before was just store bought flour used in a bread machine. The flour bought at the store isn't brought through the germination process or even stared to (by soaking), and therefore contains anti-nutrients like phytic acid so it is worthless to me unless there is a way to get rid of that by soaking the flour (?).
Anyway, I've had success making flat breads, mostly with the barley and wheat I've sprouted then dried and milled. Risen breads so far have not been successful.
A few different reasons I suspect they are failing, and one of them is the flour I am milling is not fine enough. I have been sprouting, then drying the grains, then milling, and still the flour (with the equipment I'm using) isn't fine enough.
During the past week I learned that the protein content (along with vitamin content) grows with each day of sprouting. However, the carb content decreases as the starch is used in the growing process. I'm not looking for a dough with a high protein content and low starch content, so I decided use up most of my remaining multiple day sprouting grain and try something new: Blend up all but a few of the remaining sprouted (wet) barley I had real well, then dehydrate it. That was done over the last day and today I milled it again as a newly dehydrated grain that was previously wet milled.
So far, as far as fine flour is concerned, this method of wet milling then dehydrating and milling turned out better than milling dry grains - with less time and no sifting. The next batch of flour will be made with Day 1 or Day 2 grain, for more carbohydrate content.
Note: Sprouted Grains are without the natural defences of their unsprouted counterparts. I'm taking the advice and keeping the grains I've brought through the process frozen.