Ancient Grains & Gluten — What You Should Know

1. Ancient grains generally have less gluten than modern wheat

Modern wheat has been selectively bred for:

  • high gluten strength
  • high elasticity
  • high yield

Ancient grains, by contrast, were never bred for industrial baking.
Many of them contain lower quantities of gluten, and often a weaker gluten structure.

⭐ Examples:

GrainGluten ContentNotes
Spelt (Épeautre)Lower & more fragile glutenEasier to digest; breaks down faster during fermentation
Einkorn (Petit Épeautre)Extremely low glutenOne of the easiest wheats to digest
Khorasan (Kamut)Lower gluten than modern wheatRicher flavour; less elastic dough
RyeContains gliadin but almost no gluteninTechnically gluten, but forms almost no gluten network

2. Their gluten is structurally different

Even when gluten is present, it is:

  • weaker
  • more fragile
  • less elastic
  • broken down more easily by fermentation and enzymes

This is why many people who struggle with modern wheat tolerate ancient grains much better.


3. Long fermentation makes ancient grains even more digestible

When ancient grains are fermented using your method:

  • lower pH
  • more phytase activity
  • reduced phytates
  • pre-digestion of gluten
  • easier mineral absorption

This matches perfectly with Christian Rémésy’s philosophy and the Respectus Panis© method.


4. Important note

Ancient grains are NOT gluten-free (except certain varieties like millet, sorghum, buckwheat), but:

Their gluten is gentler on digestion and breaks down faster during long fermentation.

This is why breads made with a mix of T80, spelt, rye or einkorn feel:

  • lighter
  • easier on the stomach
  • less inflammatory
  • more natural

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