10/04/2026
It’s that time of the year, when India reaps gold 🌾
In Barwah, amidst fields of Sonamoti wheat, you come across a variety that farmers have been growing and holding on to for generations, especially in regions nourished by the Narmada. The river has always been a steady support here, and even today, some farmers consciously choose to grow this wheat without using chemicals or pesticides, simply trusting the land and the way it has worked for them over the years.
Sonamoti, often referred to as a heritage wheat, is known for its small, pearl like grains. It may not look as bold as modern varieties, but it carries real nourishment, with naturally higher fibre and a character that comes from slow, patient growth.
What unfolds here during harvest is not just a process, it’s something that has been practiced over time. People cutting the crop by hand, carefully bundling it, and laying it in lines under the sun, without machines, without rush, just sincere hands doing things the way they have always known.
Our founder spent time in these fields, speaking with farmers and understanding not just how this wheat is grown, but why they continue to grow it this way.
And that is exactly why we are choosing to work closely with such farmers, to learn, to preserve, and to bring this honesty forward in the most real way possible.
We’re getting closer to all of this, step by step, and if this is the kind of food you believe in, you can stay connected with .in🌾
(sonamoti wheat, barwah farms, heritage grains, narmada region farming, chemical free cultivation, traditional harvesting, farmer sourcing, natural food)