You should grind your own flour
Why would someone have a mill?
A mill?
Like for grinding corn and flour… at home… in your kitchen…??
Did you know that home grain mills disappeared from kitchens the same time coffee bean grinders did?
Mind Blown.
Yes, normal people did grind their own wheat into flour. And it is still happening in kitchens all over the world. It is as simple as grinding up coffee beans and will change everything you bake.
Yes. I have an electric food mill. It’s a NutriMill. It is small (kinda). It is easy to use. It is handy. I also have a cute hand crank model that I never use.
I’ve been grinding my own grains and assorted things since 2004.
Why?
One word: Health
Here are the 4 main reasons I grind my own wheat:
By the way, this post discusses pooping – if you don’t like to talk about pooping you may want to skip reason #4.
ONE: GRINDING YOUR OWN FLOUR IS MORE NUTRITIOUS
Allow me to blow your ever-lovin’ mind…
Fresh milled wheat berries contain 40 of the 44 essential nutrients (that come from food) needed to sustain life.
From Bread.
If my kids don’t eat their turnips, broccoli, kale or peas it’s OK. I just feed them a slice of bread. I don’t know of another food that comes this close to being life-sustaining by itself.
I suppose this is why bread is called the “Staff of Life.”
Just eat bread. This can be in the form of:
- Bread, buns, rolls
- pizza crust
- cinnamon rolls
- cinnamon raisin bread
- muffins
- even desserts! Just think how healthy your cookies and cakes will be!
Freshly milled flour is a different animal than the flour sold in stores. When I grind my own wheat I am eating the germ, endosperm, bran and the hull.
“Grains are the seed-bearing fruits of grasses. The fact that grains are the seeds of the plant as well as the fruit and that life-giving nutrients are contained and perfectly stored within, make grains an incredibly nutritious food. In fact, of the 44 known essential nutrients needed by our bodies and naturally obtained from foods, only 4 are missing from wheat–vitamin A, B12, and C, and the mineral iodine.” – Sue Becker (Source)
“Whole wheat” flour or bread from the store is not the same.
“The majority of what is marketed in the USA under the name “wheat bread” has very little whole grain content and is made primarily of white flour, with caramel coloring added to them to give an illusion of a higher whole wheat content.[3]” Source
In order to prolong the shelf life of flour sold in stores, they remove the bran and germ (the portion of the wheat berry that goes rancid – which is also the portion of the wheat berry that contains the bulk of the nutrition). Grinding up endosperm and hulls makes a fluffy white flour with a long shelf life. Great for stores, bad for us.
What do they do with the bran and germ that they take out of our wheat? They make animal feed with it. Yup, the cows are eating better than us.
Of course, when the Millers (the folks running the mills) first took the bran and germ out of the flour (years ago) people started to suffer from health issues due to the lack of nutrition. People started coming down with things like Beriberi and Pellagra due to the loss of vitamins that were no longer in the flour. Health officials tried to get the millers to put the good stuff back into the flour, but it was too late. Grocers loved the flour with the longer shelf life and the Millers loved the cattle feed business, so they “enriched” our flour.
Unfortunately, the “enrichment” does not come close to putting in everything they took out, nor is the “enriched” version of a vitamin the same as when it is naturally sourced from real food.
The bread, rolls, pitas, bagels, tortillas, buns, crusts, crackers, pretzels, doughs, baked goods, flours or grains sold in most stores are all junk food. Sorry.
Even the healthiest, nuttiest, branniest bread sold at stores can be imposters. There are a few out there grinding their own wheat and using the entire berry, but most are not. At best, they are separating the entire wheat berry, grinding it, processing it (for longer shelf life) then putting ‘enough’ of the entire berry back together into that bag of flour in order to qualify for the much-coveted “whole wheat” caption on the front of their bags. No, it is not necessarily the “whole” wheat berry. Our wonderful food system in America decided how much and what part of the wheat kernel must be put back into the bag in order to qualify for “whole wheat.”
I don’t think it should ever be “separated” and reunited in the first place. Just grind the dang thing up & bag it. BUT that would mean flour in the refrigerated section of the grocery and short shelf life and rapid loss of nutrients and all sorts of problems that supermarkets (and Mills) don’t want.
This leads to the unfortunate truth that if you want true “whole” wheat, fully intact, at the peak of nutrition, you might will need to buy a food mill.
TWO: GRINDING YOUR OWN FLOUR CAN MEAN FEWER TRIPS TO THE DOCTOR
I DON’T LIKE SEEING DOCTORS (nor do I enjoy taking my kids to see them)
It just makes sense that if your diet is healthier (insert a slice of bread) then your body will be healthier, which means you’ll be making fewer (if any) trips to the doctor. Alleluia.
Look no further than one perplexed doctor to bring this into focus…..
When my children were younger, we saw the doctor on occasion. After we moved out to the country we changed doctors.
On one of our first visits, she looked into my daughter’s mouth and asked when she had had her tonsils removed.
I said: She hasn’t had them removed.
Doctor: [diving further down my child’s throat searching for tonsils] Wow. I can’t even see them.
We went back for another ailment sometime later and she saw another one of my children.
After looking in his mouth she asked if he had his tonsils removed.
I said: Nope, he still has them.
Doctor: Weird. Your kid’s tonsils are practically not there.
A year or two later I was in there for something when she checked my throat and said, “You don’t have any tonsils either.”
Maybe it’s hereditary, or maybe it’s health.
Turns out that tonsils are one of the body’s first lines of defense against sicknesses. When someone has a healthy gut and healthy immune system their bodies can fight bugs and such, so the tonsils don’t have to. When the body is weak or compromised, the tonsils can be forced to work overtime. Turns out that inflamed tonsils can be a sign of a weakened immune system. Likewise, if your child’s tonsils have disappeared, you can bet they are probably eating a healthy diet.
I’ve always been an 80/20 mom who lets her little ones eat Chick-fil-A and milkshakes from Dairy Queen. I’m no poster mom for healthy kids so I’m thanking that bread for keeping my kids healthy.
THREE: GRINDING YOUR OWN FLOUR WILL SAVE YOU MONEY
My whole wheat bread is simple and contains just a few necessary ingredients: wheat berries, yeast, oil, honey & salt.
A 50-pound bag of whole wheat berries costs me anywhere from $20 – $27 depending on the grain I’m buying. When I add up all the ingredients I need to make my fresh bread it all comes to a grand total of about 25 cents per loaf. That’s all it costs me to make my own bread.
The savings are undeniable. Yes, it does cost me time to bake my own bread. It’s worth the time sacrifice to me when I consider what I am getting: nutrition, long-term health benefits, and cost savings.
To work breadmaking into my busy life, I usually plan a day every few months and have a bake-a-thon. I pick a day at home when there is not much going on & bake away. I usually bake 24 loaves (this is 4 batches of 6 loaves in each batch) on that day. I freeze them and they will last us a couple of months.
FOUR: GRINDING YOUR OWN FLOUR PROMOTES REGULARITY
Let’s talk about poop! Sorry if you don’t like to talk about poop. Sorry if the word poop offends you. Anyone who knows me in real life will tell you that this is my favorite subject. Have you pooped today? Was it big? What color was it? Can I see it?
My kids love this about me… NOT. LOL.
Talking about pooping has never bothered me. Talking about our bodies, puberty, weird stuff, and even the birds and the bees has never bothered me either. My family would tell you that there is no subject too sacred for Mom (that’s me) to discuss. If you want to talk – I’m your gal. AND even if you don’t want to talk about it, if I’m your mom – we’re going to hash it out.
My favorite time to bring up topics my teenagers hate is in the car. They can’t go anywhere. They can’t get away. These things need to be discussed if they are going to grow into big, productive, knowledgeable people. Yes, my children are leery of going on long road trips with me.
Back to pooping… It’s part of life. It’s healthy. Everybody does it! It’s good to poop!
Well, if you have children, this may not be the first time you’ve read, discussed, or contemplated the issue of pooping. It seems like if you have at least one child & have been a parent for any length of time, you will at some point have dealt (or you will eventually have to deal) with a constipated child. They don’t eat enough fiber. They don’t drink enough water. They are too dang busy building playing with Legos to go to the bathroom.
So they end up stopped up and miserable.
I’ll never forget the day Mamaw looked at me and said, “Candi, I’ve been constipated for as long as I can remember.”
That, my friends, cannot be healthy.
All I’m going to say is that if you grind fresh wheat berries you will never have constipation in your home again. No more stool softeners. No more glasses of prune juice. No more Activia. No more glycerine. No more tummy aches.
If you eat fresh-milled wheat products your main bathroom will never smell nice again.
Just sayin’.
Back to bread…..
Yeah, OK, that all sounds great….. but what does the bread TASTE like?
I don’t know how to explain it… it’s super soft. It’s slightly sweet. It’s moist. It’s wheaty and nutty in a GREAT, AWESOME way. I’ve never eaten bread from a store that tastes like my bread. Homemade bread from fresh ground wheat is going to be different because of all the natural oils and protein found in the whole wheat berry. The baked bread is not hard, dry or crumbly. It’s beyond soft and moist.
You just have to taste my bread…. you’ll want to eat it forever.
If you want to grind some of your own wheat berries but don’t want to invest $200 on an electric mill, you could get a hand crank model pretty cheap and give it a try.
I’ve been grinding things for over a decade, so I don’t think much about it anymore. If we want pasta, we grind some flour. If we want pizza crust, we grind some flour. If we want muffins, we grind some flour. Bagged flour may be easier, but the health benefits are worth it for me to grind my own flour.
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Stay healthy Everyone!
-Candi
Sandy
06/23/2016There is no transition between you talking about poop and how it tastes. It took me a second to realize we were back to the bread and not talking about the poop. Oh my. ?
Candi
06/25/2016Ha!
Incidentalfarmgirl
06/23/2016Yum! I’ve considered buying a mill for years now, and I make almost all our own baked goods and breads already, I just don’t grind, we may have to give this some serious though again after reading this!
Dorie
06/23/2016I really enjoy your blog. We have a lot in common and that helps to find a kindred spirit in today’s society. Keep it up,love you Candi!
Dorie
06/23/2016Sorry got carried away there I do actually have a question. What kind of wheat do you use?
Candi
06/23/2016Hi Dorie!
Thanks for the note. You are too sweet!
I have 5 favorites: Hard Red, Hard White (Prairie Gold), Spelt, Kamut & Soft white. Spelt & Kamut are “super grains.” Very healthy. Hard red & hard white are great for loaf-style bread. When I make my loaf bread I use 4 C hard red, 4 C hard white & 2 C Spelt. I use soft white wheat berries for anything light or sweet – like rolls, cakes, cookies, etc, Sooo good.
XO,
Candi
strivingacres
06/23/2016Candi, where do you buy your wheat berries? Also, you need to do a post on your mill and step by step directions on how to use it. Actually, I could see an entire week of posts on this (where to get the berries and which types you use for what, where to get mills and why you have the one you do, step by step how to use your mill, and then recipe posts for bread, buns, etc.)!
Candi
06/23/2016So funny!
YOu are keeping me busy girl! I am a nut case who buys groceries from a wholesale food supplier who delivers them to me by semi truck. It’s crazy & not for normal people. My last order weighted over 900 pounds.
YOu can get wheat berries in smaller quantities from any wholefoods stores if you just want to get your feet wet.
www.incidentalfarmgirl.com
06/24/2016hmmm….I want to know about this supplier who delivers to your door! Please do tell, is it a convenience or a money saver? or both? I do have a HUGE crew to feed here! Do tell your secrets you wise sage!!!
Candi
11/09/2016Yes mam! Lots of great info:
the mill
the supplies
how to make bread
Thanks!
cj
jamie marie
06/23/2016I wish I liked the taste of the wheat berry’s I grinded into flour, I don’t know if I did something wrong or what. Any tips or recipes?
Candi
06/23/2016The most mild flavored (I think) are soft white wheat berries. Soft white should taste more like what you’re used to. Fresh milled wheat will be “heartier” and “wheatier” there’s just no way around that. I will tell you that if you make the jump to milling all your own flour in a month you won’t even notice the “wheaty” flavor – it will just taste like pie!
I use my fresh milled flour in any recipes just like regular flour.
Hope that helps!
Nancy W
06/29/2016Love your post and I totally agree with all four reasons! Thanks for sharing your post on Our Simple Homestead Blog Hop! As one of the co-hosts I will be featuring your post tomorrow! Stop by and share another great post!
– Nancy ( Nancy On The Home Front )
rolanda
02/01/2017This is great, thanks so much for sharing. I’ve had my mill for several years and stopped making bread because I was too concerned with carbs etc. I have seen the light and have recently started milling again, looking forward to trying your recipe!
Candi
02/01/2017Rolanda,
Glad to hear it! Wheat has gotten a bad rap in recent years…. It’s the bagged stuff from the stores that is the problem – not the fresh stuff. Happy to have you back on the bread wagon.
I have sooooooo many readers who wish they had your mill – I couldn’t survive a week without mine. Well, I couldn’t happily survive. LOL
-cj
Robin Wilson
05/07/2020In an online piece on grinding flour you mentioned how food processors are not good at grinding dry wheat berries which I agree. However I sprout hard winter wheat in a gallon glass jar which takes two or three days and then grind it in my food processor when the grain has sprouts are about 1/4 inch long. I add the yeast or sour dough before I grind them up in the food processor. The sprouting process changes some of the starch in the grain to sugar which the yeast thinks is a great idea. The texture is like graham flour which I like but if you need a lighter flour you could mix the ground up sprouts with a lighter flour.
CJ
05/08/2020Cool! Thanks for sharing.
cj