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FLOUR MILL MILLING INDUSTRY

Flour milling is a mechanical manufacturing process which produces flour (MAIDA, SOOJI (RAVA), ATTA) from wheat through comprehensive stages of grinding and separation.

Many varieties of wheat exist for use in making flour. In general, wheat is either hard (containing 11-18% protein) or soft (containing 8-11% protein). Flour intended to be used to bake bread is made from hard wheat. The high percentage of protein in hard wheat means the dough will have more gluten, allowing it to raise more than soft wheat flour. Flour intended to be used to bake cakes and pastry is made from soft wheat. All-purpose flour is made from a blend of soft and hard wheat. Durum wheat is a special variety of hard wheat, which is used to make a kind of flour called semolina. Semolina is most often used to make pasta.

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Wheat to Bread

The Manufacturing Process

Flour Milling: Text

Grading the wheat

Wheat is received at the flour mill and inspected. Samples of wheat are taken for physical and chemical analysis. The wheat is graded based on several factors, the most important of which is the protein content (gluten) and sedimentation. The wheat is stored in silos with wheat of the same grade until needed for milling.

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Purifying the wheat

  • Before wheat can be ground into flour it must be free of foreign matter like stick, stones, mud balls, by using cockle cylinder. This requires several different cleaning processes. At each step of purification the wheat is inspected and purified again if necessary.

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  • The first device used to clean the wheat is known as a separator. This machine passes the wheat over a series of metal screens. The wheat and other small particles pass through the screen while large objects such as sticks and rocks are removed.

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  • The wheat next passes through an aspirator. This device works like a vacuum cleaner. The aspirator sucks up foreign matter which is lighter than the wheat and removes it.

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  • Other foreign objects are removed in various ways. One device, known as a disk separator, moves the wheat over a series of disks with indentations that collect objects the size of a grain of wheat. Smaller or larger objects pass over the disks and are removed.

  • Another device, known as a spiral seed separator, makes use of the fact that wheat grains are oval while most other plant seeds are round. The wheat moves down a rapidly spinning cylinder. The oval wheat grains tend to move toward the center of the cylinder while the round seeds tend to move to the sides of the cylinder, where they are removed.

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  • Other methods used to purify wheat include magnets to remove small pieces of metal, scourers to scrape off dirt and hair.

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Preparing the wheat for grinding

  • The purified wheat is washed in water and placed in a centrifuge to be spun dry. During this process any remaining foreign matter is washed away.

  • The moisture content of the wheat must now be controlled to allow the outer layer of bran to be removed efficiently during grinding. This process is known as conditioning or tempering. Several methods exist of controlling the amount of water present within each grain of wheat. Usually this involves adding, rather than removing, moisture.

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