I’ve had a couple of inquiries lately about people interested in either promoting their products or wanting to know about products for grinding your own wheat to make flour so I thought I would ...
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X From the fields of wheat along the rolling hills of Chester, Montgomery and Delaware counties to a ...
When you think of lowering your grocery bill with homegrown food, wheat probably isn’t the first thing that pops into your mind. Tomatoes, lettuce, and perhaps a flock of backyard chickens often make ...
Baking and cooking with freshly ground grains is a guarantee that you’ll enjoy more flavorful and more healthful food. You may be surprised by how much of a difference you’ll notice in the flavor and ...
As I’m writing this, I’m stuffing a delicious piece of toast into my face and crunching on it rather happily. That might not seem like a big deal for most people, but for those of us who have to ...
Here in the Southeast, we locavores have it pretty good. In a land where a bounty of food grows year-round, it’s a heck of a lot easier to eat locally than it is in, say, Minnesota. Even so, there are ...
At Lurgashall W atermill at Weald and Downland Museum in Singleton, West Sussex flour is still made using traditional methods. It supplies to small bakers and farm shops around the Singleton village.
Life in the kitchen can be a real grind — and, in this case, that’s a good thing. By grinding your own whole-grain flour, you open the door to a new world of tastes and textures, with the added ...