Common Oat - Avena sativa L.

Common Oat

Synonyms: Oats

Scientific Name: Avena sativa L.

Family: Poaceae (grass family)


Habitat

Asia Minor



Constituents

Silicic acid, saponins, zinc, avenin, phytosterols



Description

During a walk in the countryside one of the most frequent questions asked when passing a cornfield is “What type of grain is growing here?” The easiest crop to identify is Common Oat, which reaches a height of up to one metre and has seed heads quite different to those of wheat, rye or barley. Common Oat is a cultivated plant belonging to the panicle-forming grasses. This means that its grains do not grow in compact ears, like wheat, but are loosely grouped at the tip of the stem, where they blow in the wind. Little spikelets of two to four florets are attached by short stems to the loose panicles. The oat grains develop from the self-pollinating flowers which blossom between June and August, and are loosely enclosed by two firm, pointed bracts known as glumes. A widely branching network of roots allows the undemanding oat to grow in poor soils.



Interesting Facts

The scientific name Avena probably derives from the Sanskrit word avasa = foodstuff. The epithet sativa is Latin and means cultivated – referring to the fact that Common Oat is a purely cultivated crop. It is the result of crossing the wild species Wild Oat (Avena fatua), Winter Wild Oat (Avena sterilis) and Slender Oat (Avena barbata).

Oat remains from Bronze-Age lake-dwellings in Switzerland (from the end of the 3rd to the beginning of the 1st millennium BC) confirm that this nourishing cereal was already in use then. According to Pliny (23-79), the Germanic tribes were also fond of oats. Up until the Middle Ages they were regarded as a poor person’s food. The Greeks and Romans used them primarily as animal feed or for medicinal purposes. In the Middle Ages oats were also used in the brewing of beer. Several customs arose around oats. For example, English peasants laid out bundles of oats over Christmas to protect their animals against disease in the coming year. If dew fell on the oats the protection was thought to be especially effective. In some places lads threw oat grains over young girls on St Stephen’s Day (26 December). This custom, known in German as Steffeln, was a fertility rite. The more grains of oat got caught in the girl's clothes, the more children she would later bear. Bridal couples were showered with oats for the same reason. In addition, a bowl of water was placed on the bridal table for guests to throw oat grains into. If they sank this was regarded as a bad omen for the marriage.

Oats are among the most nutritious cereals in Central Europe: in addition to their high protein content (12 percent) they contain many vitamins, especially B-complex vitamins, and minerals. Oatmeal cannot be used for baking, because it contains too little gluten. Rolled oats, porridge and oat milk do enjoy widespread popularity, but by far the greatest amount of the oats produced is fed to horses, cattle and chickens.



The plant from another perspective

Oats have an affinity with both air and water. Of all our native cereals they need most water to thrive. Their inflorescences, in contrast, are the most airy in form. The propensity of the oat for binding these two elements together is apparent from its saponin content. Saponins form a soapy foam when shaken in water. One could say they combine air with water. If the rhythm of binding and releasing which takes place between the mental and the physical in the human organism is disturbed this can lead to insomnia. In such cases, oats have a regulating effect.



The plant in our products

Oats is together with wheat and rye part of a lacto-fermented extract which is rich in enzymes and minerals and is beneficial to cleansed skin. Lactic acid is a component of the natural hydrating factor of the skin. This extract is part of: