Just googled how wheat is processed. It's not at the top, but it should be. By far, this is the best one. So simple, direct and easy to understand. Thank you.
Thanks for this. It’s so hard to find documentation on the butt-basic stuff that only professionals know about anymore. This is the gold right here, no joke.
Now, THIS is exactly what I've been looking for for several weeks! Wanted to clearly understand exactly where the wheat berry is and how it is separated. Just marvelous! Well done, sir!
I wish I would have had a teacher that taught me at least how to create Flour and all of this I feel like everyone should learn about this because everyone is always relying on other people that make this they dont ever stop and ask their self well ? well does this come from how do i do it ? what if one day I need to do this but I cant because no one taught me you never know what the future will bring and this is exactly why students should know how to farm, how to keep their crops healthy, how plot wheat and turn it into flour and etc
What the fuck. Im up at 3 am wracking my mind about this same question for the past hour, then i see your comment. I'm so glad im not the only one who thought about this
I'm a teacher at a Jewish day school and this video added a lot to our understanding of the agricultural process described in the Book of Ruth. Thank you!
Me too. Luke 6:1 brought me here. "One Sabbath Jesus was going through the grainfields, and his disciples began to pick some heads of grain, rub them in their hands and eat the kernels."
Thank you! Now I know how flour is made, which is exactly what I was looking for. I appreciate that you got right to the point and didn't make the video any longer than necessary.
This is literally exactly what I wanted to see. I don’t know if I’ve ever googled or RU-vidd something and got so accurately got what I wanted. Thank you for going through this process! I take for granted these simple things that we can get at the store.
Very cool! Clear, concise demonstration of a crop of wheat’s transformation into ground flour. I now understand this foundational process a bit better. Good to have a little insight into the practices that have sustained humanity for thousands of years.
You'd winnow on the threshing floor, using a winnowing fan (a flat pronged fork), and the aim is to collect all the chaff in a 'downwind' pile, straw in a middling pile, and all of the berries in the pile directly below the winnowing fork. The chaff and the cut straw is used to make animal feed, and as a fast/hot burning fuel for the oven. Once you have roughly winnowed the grain, the remaining berries are then cleaned on a sieve. A sifting motion is used, and again the heavier berries, the lighter chaff and the stones and pebbles are separated into different piles by the motion... and smaller weed seeds are lost through the sieve. Debris and chaff are removed by hand as they accumulate on the surface, or around the margins of the sifted pile. It used to be the case that the chaff and straw was worth nearly as much as the primary crop of grain, both that harvested and removed at threshing, and the standing straw, mown and used as bedding or ox fodder (and later spread with manure on the fields) left in the field and used for grazing to be later ploughed in, along with the resulting animal dung. Modern practices differ and the value of the straw is less than it used to be, relatively, but it still has some residual value. (Approximately a third of the grain if I recall correctly).
There needs to be more videos out here like this.. Thank you so much for your knowledge! I'm excited to understand these basic living necessitys we should have always known☺️ Cheers brother!
Thank you for posting this! My preschool kids are going to learn about "The Little Red Hen" - and I want to teach them how the wheat turns into flour at the mill. We will then make some wheat bread (just like the hen did) and make some butter too. We have a cool grain grinder at our school - but until I saw your video, I was thinking I could put the full wheat stalk through it! Learned so much! Thank you!!!
Thank You!!!! I’ve always wondered and thanks to you, I am now educated in how to. I tried watching another video and they just threw words out I’ve never said in my life once and it was the industrial 🏭 way. 🤯 thank you again for your version. Which I loved.
With this crazy time we are living in 2020 I decided to mill my own wheat berries at home. It has been a wonderful experience. I fully recommend buying a mill. Fresh ground flour has been so good. I can't believe I never did this before.
The perfect video for my homeschooled 6 yr old when she was eating toast and asked "what is this made out of? What does wheat look like? How does it become flour? " she said you are so funny and she loved the dog in the back! So grateful for you.
I am embarrassed being 37 & did not know this. I was curious about wheat since recent unfortunate events in Ukraine. I was curious about the urgency for Wheat. Now thanks to you, I now know it's very vital! Great Job on the video!!
Thanks so much for your informative video. I'm almost 70 and my granddaughter is 4. She will appreciate The Little Red Hen book so much more - and me - thanks to your video.
Thank you very much for your video!! Very instructive! I could learn a lot, and clear the doubt I had about how was wheat plant and how was the flour done. Thank you very much!
Super! We see so much in our grocery stores and have no basic understanding of what we use as food. Great basic understanding given here on wheat flour!
Hahaha bro, seriously, what the hell, this video is so cool, you are so cool :D great vid, this is exacty what I was looking for, not the huge machine doing something with wheat in it that I can't see xD great, thanks!