The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

Fineness of Flour

amberartisan's picture
amberartisan

Fineness of Flour

I have a retsel mill-rite right now which takes ten minutes to mill 125g of white whole wheat flour on the finest setting that does not glaze the stones or jam the mill. The flour is AMAZING. It feels like silk, except for a few course particles of bran (which I sift off). I can feel little to no granularity, its finer than the Bob's red mill stuff I can buy from the store.

Q: Komo grain mill can mill about 8 times faster than retsel at the fastest setting (assuming the figure that Komo provides, Fidibus 21). I am thinking about buying that mill. However, I want to make sure that it mills as fine a flour as my retsel on the finest setting- that is, silky, with very little granularity.

 

Does anyone have experience with this mill on the finest setting?

Thanks, Walker

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

that how fine a a mill can grind flour has anything to do at all with making great bread.  But it is a personal thing. I would posit that finely milled flour,  is about the worst flour one can use to make great tasting bread - especially oi you soft out the good parts afterwards.   But that is just me and my reflection on my own milling experiences to date which is quite sort at a a couple of years.  It all depends on what kind of bread and taste you like I'm guessing,

Happy baking

amberartisan's picture
amberartisan

But can the Komo mill really fine?

PiPs's picture
PiPs

I have both a Komo Mill and a Grainmaker 116 manual mill. The flour from the Komo always has a gritty/sandy feel even on the finest setting with the stones clashing together whereas I can wind the Grainmaker mill very close and get silky fine flour with flaky pieces of bran.

The fineness does make a difference to the final product in my opinion and if I am doing 100% wholegrain breads I would choose flour from the Grainmaker every time. If just adding to milled flour to a larger mix of white flour then the Komo is great (and fast)

 

Cheers,
Phil

amberartisan's picture
amberartisan

I am making Ken Forkish style breads with 50% whole-wheat flour and Tartine-style loaves with 20-30% flour. Thanks so much! Do you know of any other mills that make a silky flour?

 

Also, you make GREAT bread!! You  are, IMO, best baker on TFL.

PiPs's picture
PiPs

Thanks ... so many great bakers on TFL ... i'm just another guy covered in flour :)

If you want silky flour for home you probably need to find a manual mill with either steel burrs or stones i.e. Grainmaker, Country Living or Diamant (none of these are cheap) The Grainmaker and Country Living mills can also be set up with motors. 

The microniser mills probably do really fine flour but I have never used one so can't comment on that.

The problem with getting silky flour off a small electric mill is that the stones are so small and spin so quickly that the grain is in and out of the stones before it is ground down to fine flour–there is also no option to slow them down. Hence the large stone mills run slower and have a larger surface area for the grain to travel and reduce down to flour.

Perhaps look at some mill specification and try and find one with the largest stones and slowest RPM's.

Good luck

Phil

amberartisan's picture
amberartisan

I also hear that impact mills can make really fine flour?

 

amberartisan's picture
amberartisan

I looked at the grainmakers, and they are WAY pricey. I might just have to stay with my Retsel.

amberartisan's picture
amberartisan

Right now the nutrimill looks good, as I am planning to bake 4-loaf batches and hand-grinders/ retsel are really slow for that purpose.

clazar123's picture
clazar123

It can grind a very fine flour but it does have a tendency to heat the flour up especially at the finer settings. I compensate by measuring out my grain in 8 cup batches (hopper capacity) and putting them in the freezer overnight and grinding right from the freezer. Otherwise, at the finer settings, it heats the flour to 130-140F. This can cause considerable starch damage and the flour is probably good only for chapatti and pancakes.

barryvabeach's picture
barryvabeach

Walter, The Lee Household Flour Mill makes a very fine flour, the models I have used are pretty slow, though it does not heat the flour any where near as much as an impact mill, like the Whisper Mill.   The Lee has one of the best adjustment for fineness, compared to most stone mills, since in essence it it keeps milling until the flour is fine enough to pass through an adjustable opening.  For a stone mill, to make it fine, you need to have the stones set so that rotate in a perfectly parallel plane, and can be adjusted to just barely kiss.  The problem with some of the stone mills is that if there is any wobble in the stones, or either is not perfectly flat, you will get mostly fine flour, but a little will pass through the wobble area that is coarser than the rest.   You can usually get a good price on a used Lee,  new is pretty expensive.  

amberartisan's picture
amberartisan

How fast does the Lee mill grind 125g of flour? And is it like SILK?

Also, is the WONDERMILL any better than the NUTRIMILL?

 

Thanks,

Walker

subfuscpersona's picture
subfuscpersona

125 g of flour is about 4.4 ounces. This is a small amount of flour, but you  don't say what kind of grain you're  milling

Assuming you're milling hard wheat, I would guess about 3 - 4 minutes  (though this will depend on the model).. Softer grains (rye, spelt, etc) will take less time.

I don't know what you mean when you ask "is it like SILk". If you're asking whether the Lee mill can mill whole grain to a fineness similar to commercial whiite flour (which does not contain bran or germ) then YES, It will give you a flour of similar fineness.

 

barryvabeach's picture
barryvabeach

Walker,  actually,  I have given it some thought, and don't know how we can measure how fine the flour is, unless I had sieves of different sizes. My impression is that the Lee is the most uniform one I have used and gets the finest flour.  The others let some coarser bits through.  I have owned a Whispermill  AKA  Wondermill - and took it apart,  I don't have the Nutrimill, but understand it uses a similar design - fixed "teeth" and rotating teeth, and as the berries move through they get exploded by the teeth.  The coarsness adjustment on the Whispermill just puts the berries in the impact chamber earlier or later ( so more or less impacts ).  In contrast, the All Grain mills have a fixed stone and a rotating stone, you adjust the stones to get them closer together, the berries drop into the center of the stone, and as they move outward, the upper stone is tapered so it gets closer to the bottom stone as the berries move outward, and in theory, can make extremely fine grain- though on the one I have, the stones are not perfectly aligned, so there is a variation..  I will check the Lee on timing and let you know, though the speed depends on how fine you set it, and I have the lower end model, the one with a bigger motor is supposed to be quicker. 

barryvabeach's picture
barryvabeach

Walker,  I tested my Lee Mill, which is the old model 6, and it took about 20 to 25 minutes to grind around 525 grams of hard red spring wheat, set one click above the finest setting.  It is hard to know precisely when it is done, although the hooper is clear, the lower neck is solid aluminum,  so just because the hopper is empty does not mean it is done, and the noise is no where near as loud as the WhisperMill, but the sound of the mill changes a little when it is completely done. .

subfuscpersona's picture
subfuscpersona

I just milled 34 ounces (964 grams) hard red winter wheat. It took about 15 minutes, though the last 2 minutes the grain hopper was empty, with a few errant grains jumping around in the hopper (that's due to the amazing wind velocity that's generated in the milling chamber).

When I clean the mill I save the fine flour that is left in the milling chamber and also the flour that clings to the inside of the cloth flour bag. Starting with 2 lbs, 2oz of grain, my flour yeild was two pounds (907 gram). The remaining 2 oz / 57 gr was whole or cracked grain plus coarse bran.

The flour was only slightly warm to the touch when milling was finished. The flour itself has no visible bran flecks and is as fine to the feel as any commercially milled white bread or all-purpose flour..

I have the model S-600 of the Lee Household Flour Mill, which is adjustable from fine to coarse. I milled the wheat with the flour finess adjustment lever set to about 1/4" from "F" (the finest setting).

This TFL thread has a lot of excellent info on the Lee Mill from a number of dedicated owners (myself included) if you want further information - http://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/13634/lee-household-flour-mill

SweetMK's picture
SweetMK

I guess I have a question, regarding the importance of fine flour.

My wife makes whole wheat bread (and has been since 1977), Our grinder is produces a coarse flour, nothing close to silky. BUT, the bread is perfect.

When I say perfect, I am comparing it to either store bought bread, or bread she has made with commercially ground flour.

I attribute her success to using the Hobart N50 mixer. Prior to the N50, the KA she was trying to use just resulted in disaster. The KA had some success with white flour, but, zero success with ANY whole wheat,,,

I was just wondering if anyone had factored in kneading, when considering grinder selection??

David Esq.'s picture
David Esq.

Phil, what do you see the difference being when using a finer flour for your 100% whole grain bakes?

I thought that the finer the flour, the more refined it was, the more it ought to be avoided. On the other hand, the coarser the grind, the more dense the bread, all other things being equal -- which is why, I thought, coarser grinds may require a sponge or mash to soften any of the hard bits (or a longer autolyse, perhaps?).

I am surprised to see that a manual mill can make a finer grind than an electric. Everythingkitchens.com states, "But however fine the bread flour may be, be advised a manual mill will not produce flour as fine as an electric mill. The Country Living Mill is no exception to this rule."

But maybe they were just comparing to impact/micronizer electric mills.

I wonder if you put the flour through the komo for a second pass if it would be softer?  I hate the noise of the grinder and wouldn't do that unless I thought it would make a softer bread.

antalie25's picture
antalie25

Hi David,

I know a fair bit of time has passed since your post but did you experiement with second passes in your mill? How were the results? I've got a Hawos Billy which I believe shares some similarities with the Komo and am interested in whether a second pass would lead to finer flour.

Thanks.

David Esq.'s picture
David Esq.

I use the grinder regularly and have baked a lot of bread since buying it.  But, I have never seen the need to run ground flour through the mill for a second pass.  I have some concerns with doing so, like that I might mess up the mill if I did it because it is not intended to grind flour and maybe it'll make a big mess of things if I try.

The flour I get is more akin to sand than talc, but I make great bread with it and certainly don't notice anything bad about it in the baked product. 

kozulich's picture
kozulich

Late to this thread but I use an all-grain a33x which is an air cooled electric stone mill.  It mills absolutely SILKY fine whole flour from hard red or white wheat kernels or rye.  I would say its even finer than store-bought AP flour, more like pastry flour.  No sifting necessary.  It takes about 30 minutes to mill 1 kg of flour on the finest setting.  Coarser grinds go significantly faster.  It's amazing to be able to bake a whole wheat bread, with full nutritional integrity, but with the texture of fine flour.  It reminds me very much of the high extraction flour breads I always loved in Europe.  I generally also mill a small amount of malted barley into the flour while I'm at it to improve yeast activity.

I have also used this fine whole wheat flour for crepes, pancakes and waffles, which come out beautifully, though a little more tender than when using commercially milled AP flour.

Incidentally, I will occasionally buy a bag of commercial whole wheat flour and run that through the all-grain on its finest setting.  Works like a charm, and relatively quickly, though there is more clean up to do afterwards.  That, is the only major downside to the all-grain, in my opinion.  Being air cooled, it does create some fugitive flour dust during milling.  I usually get around this by operating the mill outside, but that's tough over the winter months.  I might be inclined to try it in the garage this year.  We'll see. 

AndyPanda's picture
AndyPanda

I've been using an old MagicMill III for ages - it is the concentric rings of metal teeth that don't touch each other but the grain gets pulverized as it goes through.  It will produce very fine, silky flour on its finest setting. And the bran gets milled pretty fine too.

The main drawbacks are that it is very high pitched whine (like a woodworker's router) and you do get flour dust all over.  I generally grind outdoors on the porch or in the garage otherwise there is dust everywhere.   

But mine has ground a lot of wheat over the years (at least 1000 pounds)  and keeps on going fine.