We visited the Bale Grist Mill in Calistoga last weekend. It's an 1840's era stone flour and corn mill that has bee renovated by the CA state park system. It's an authentic water wheel powered mill built from redwood and fir, and two mill stones imported from France.
The tour is great for a hobby baker, and the guides describe everything from the mill construction and renovation to the theory behind the mill. Like a modern olive oil mill in Italy, the miller kept a percentage of the flour (1/16th in this case) in exchange for milling flour. The mill ran under the 1880s, when it was replaced by a modern mill and the fact that winter wheat grown in the Dakotas and Canada was better for bread than the locally grown wheat.
They were milling the day we were there, and we came home with 5 2lb bags of flour -- 2 whole wheat bread flour, 1 rye, 1 pastry flour and 1 spelt. The mill also had a sorting facility based on the fineness of the grind, it that hasn't been restore yet. I'm baking with the whole wheat and rye in the next day or two and I'll let you know how it goes.
I was thinking that we could sell the flour through the FB Store, and donate all of the profits back to the mill restoration fund.
Who would be interest in getting some great flour? The wheat berries come from Giustos (yes, the great flour company), where the pastry wheat comes from Idaho and the bread flour and rye are grown in the Dakotas.
This is really cool and I can't wait to see how the bread comes out. I wonder how fresh the flour is? Oh, wait. I saw them mill it. :-) Charlotte, daughter #2, helped them set up the gears and ran the hopper while the mill was running.
Let me know what you think.
James
The tour is great for a hobby baker, and the guides describe everything from the mill construction and renovation to the theory behind the mill. Like a modern olive oil mill in Italy, the miller kept a percentage of the flour (1/16th in this case) in exchange for milling flour. The mill ran under the 1880s, when it was replaced by a modern mill and the fact that winter wheat grown in the Dakotas and Canada was better for bread than the locally grown wheat.
They were milling the day we were there, and we came home with 5 2lb bags of flour -- 2 whole wheat bread flour, 1 rye, 1 pastry flour and 1 spelt. The mill also had a sorting facility based on the fineness of the grind, it that hasn't been restore yet. I'm baking with the whole wheat and rye in the next day or two and I'll let you know how it goes.
I was thinking that we could sell the flour through the FB Store, and donate all of the profits back to the mill restoration fund.
Who would be interest in getting some great flour? The wheat berries come from Giustos (yes, the great flour company), where the pastry wheat comes from Idaho and the bread flour and rye are grown in the Dakotas.
This is really cool and I can't wait to see how the bread comes out. I wonder how fresh the flour is? Oh, wait. I saw them mill it. :-) Charlotte, daughter #2, helped them set up the gears and ran the hopper while the mill was running.
Let me know what you think.
James
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