- Grinds grain into flour
- Adjustable grind for coarse or fine flour
- Sleek laminated bamboo design
- High speed milling
- Flour mill rate: 6-7 oz/min
- Ceramic-corundum burr material
- Many trim color options
$449.00
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NutriMill Harvest
With its laminated bamboo cabinet, the NutriMill Harvest grain mill offers unique styling. Its synthetic
stone burrs grind a full range of textures from cracked grain to fine flour, with adjustments controlled
by a knob located at the bottom of the hopper.
The NutriMill Harvest mill will grind soft or hard wheat, oat groats (dehulled oats), rice, triticale, khorasan, spelt, buckwheat, barley, rye, millet, teff, quinoa, amaranth, sorghum, and dent (field) corn. It will also grind lentils, dry beans (pinto, red, garbanzo/chickpeas, kidney & more), and dried, non-oily spices. It isn't suitable for spices, herbs, oilseeds like flax or sesame, popcorn, fibrous materials, beans.
The manufacturer states that milling should be done for a maximum of 10 minutes at a time, but this is dependent on various factors including the grain you’re grinding, how fine you’re trying to get the flour, and others. Many customers are able to grind longer with no problem, and if glazing does happen, running a couple handfuls of white rice through the mill will remove it.
For more details please see the specs tab, above.
WHOLE GRAIN NUTRITION: HARVEST THE BENEFITS!
Imagine that for years, your children ate mainly candy. Imagine that you did, too. Imagine an entire nation on a candy diet. Imagine the health consequences.
Natural whole grains contain a myriad of health-essential nutrients, from proteins to vitamins and amino acids. But "white flour" consists only of the starchy endosperm of the wheat kernel. In its natural form the endosperm provides wholesome energy, but it's the least nutrient-rich part of the grain. Removed are the nutrient-packed bran, wheat germ, and wheat germ oil. Then to make it extra white, industrial processors go further, chemically bleaching it, and returning just enough of a few vitamins to stave off beriberi and rickets. They're allowed to call the end product "Enriched Flour" but a truthful label would read "Impoverished Flour." This snow white, denutritionalized substance is a commodity worth billions of dollars annually to its merchandisers because of a commercially useful trait: Unlimited shelf life. No matter how long it sits in the mass distribution channel, it can't go bad precisely because there's actually nothing left in it that can go bad. Nutritionally, it's bad when bagged. A few companies have grown enormously rich marketing this pseudo-food on the basis of convenience, ease, and its dazzling white appearance. But a blind eye was turned to the consequences of replacing real whole grain flour with something that looks special, yet is virtually devoid of nutrition. In essence, candy. So widely has this nutritional travesty become accepted that we call it—and think of it as—wheat flour. But to depart further from natural grain flour would scarcely be possible. Then to make matters worse, artificial sweeteners, flavors and colors, appetite stimulants and preservatives are added to many of our foods. "Artificial" tells you those things aren't naturally food. But have you ever wondered what they actually are , then ? Did you know some of them are actually petroleum derivatives? And what unintended side effects might those complex counterfeit compounds have on us?
The human body is an absolute marvel; scientists have a long way to go to understand a tenth of how we work. But as capable and as resilient as our bodies are, common sense and history teach that we need wholesome, nutritious food to remain healthy and strong. The denatured byproducts being mass marketed today don't provide what we need, because they've been profoundly altered by processes in which real nutrition is considered last, or not at all.
There's a great solution to this problem. By grinding grains in your kitchen and using the whole grain
flour while it's fresh, you get the nutrition needed for strength and health. You also get far tastier
food, with genuine character—incomparably more satisfying than today's mass marketed pretenders. After
transitioning to whole grains, putting out a plate of white styro-bread will elicit comments like "Why
are you giving us
this
... and where's the
good stuff
?". Even flour labeled as "whole grain" in stores falls far short of what you can easily grind yourself,
because unless it's ground while you wait, the essential Vitamin E in true whole grain flour would go
rancid in days (meaning that it's probably been removed), and all nutrients begin steadily oxidizing-away
from exposure to oxygen as soon as grain is milled. What's in those bags is
not
whole grain flour if it's been sitting on a shelf for even a few days; that's literally impossible.
Making real food is more than doable, it's downright fun with help from Pleasant Hill Grain! A grain mill is the place to start. And to make whole grain bread quickly, easily and with consistently wonderful results, nothing beats a quality stand mixer that's capable of mixing and kneading bread that's ready to pop in the oven—quickly and without hand kneading. These machines make it easy to turn the corner to a far better and more enjoyable way of eating!
Highly Recommended Whole Grain Cookbooks & Videos!
Don't miss our treasury of cookbooks for whole grain cooking & baking! We have old favorites and exciting new titles, full of tasty and nutritious recipes. These resources will open up new worlds of whole grain adventure for you, whether you're an old hand or just beginning the journey. Whole grain wheat, beans & alternative grains are all covered!
Click for cookbooks & DVDs.
See bulk whole grain wheat and many other grains.
Click for info on grinding fibrous materials and nuts.
Grain Mill Accessories & Replacement Parts
Click to see Grain Mill & Flaker Attachments or Grain Mill & Flaker Replacement Parts.
COMPARE ELECTRIC GRAIN MILLS |
Click to see our electric grain mill comparison table. We offer a wide selection of grain mills: Click to see our category page of all grain mills! |
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1 - 10 of 46 reviews
I've owned this grinder for over a year now and have put about 500 pounds of wheat through it. It works quite well as a wheat grinder as long as you can accept a slightly coarser than commercial flour texture.
In general it has one design flaw, in that there is a screw holding one of the grind stones down that can back out. When it comes out, the adjustable grind knob refuses to stay in one position if you don't hold it. It took me a while to realize what was causing this annoying behavior.
Another flaw is that the bottom stone does not actually come out of the grinder as it is supposed to. Not sure how I am going to be able to change stones as they wear out.
DO NOT buy this grinder if you expect to grind corn, beans, or basically anything larger than oats. It lacks a feed auger for large seeds so seeds slowly and irregularly drop into the stones, causing the machine to buck and jump around. I get through about 2 cups of corn before the machine overheats and shuts off completely. I've given up on grinding corn until I get a different mill.
Knowing what I know now, I probably would not have bought this since it is not nearly as versatile as it is advertised. It makes great wheat, oat, and buckwheat flour. I haven't tried rice but I'd expect it to work well. I have not tried very small grains like amaranth, quinoa, or teff.
I have used a KitchenAid attachment mill, and it mostly works. Slowly. My mind was blown when I ran the first batch of grain through the NutriMill. Wow! Blazingly fast, not too loud, and resulted in a very consistent flour. I immediately put the flour into a batch of sourdough I had waiting, and had bread later that afternoon. The flavor of freshly-ground flour compared to even the highest quality pre-ground is incomparable.
I've only used 3 grains so far. All have ground well. The adjustment knob is pretty straight-forward, although it does take a firm turn. I didn't find the lack of a coarse or fine indicator to be an issue - I just felt the flour to see if it was what I wanted. I like that this mill offers a range from fine to coarse. It is perfect for me, but if you need a super-fine flour, you may want a different type of mill. I am looking forward to playing with different flour combinations for baking. I suspect the mill will never make it into its storage area.
Update: 3 months later, I still love the mill for most flours. It does take 2 or 3 passes to get a very fine, pastry-type flour, and it struggles a bit with field corn (4 or so passes to get cornmeal, adjusting finer each time) and a few whole kernels stay in the hopper. Overall, still a good investment.
I graduated from a manual mill to the Nutrimill Harvest mill and I am so happy! I have only made 5 loaves of bread so far but this mill is totally effortless with easy adjustment so you can get a pretty fine grind. Excellent for whole wheat or rye bread. Also no dust to speak of and you can use any container which is really handy. The only improvement I can think of would to improve the lid design so it snaps on. If you try to use it while grinding, it just vibrates and makes the whole thing noisier. This is not a problem for me but it would improve the overall function.
The mill looks great as a countertop appliance and the delivery from pleasant hill was quick. My only other comparison is the old impact type magic mill 2.. the harvest mill is much quieter, creates zero dust, and has cooler flour temps but does not mill quite as fine. I may have to adjust my baking technique to get an adequate loaf of bread with the coarser grind. Time will tell
I’ve had my mill a little over a week and have done hard and soft wheat, and spelt. I am happy with the quality. I wish the adjustment knob indicated specifically how finely or coarsley I am grinding, but I assume with practice I will figure that out. It is beautiful and sturdy, but not so Heavy as to be cumbersome.
My wife has been wanting to mill her own flour predating the pandemic, so bad timing on my part for trying to buy a mill when thousands of other Americans are having the same idea due to not being able to purchase flour at the local grocery store. We had been saving up for the Komo Classic, but alas it was out of stock. Reviews consistently seemed to suggest that the NutriMill Harvest was up to par with the Komo, perhaps differences being only in style when push comes to shove. I believe that the motor is stronger/faster in the NutriMill. Folks, it does not disappoint. The mill looks smart on the countertop (although I wish the black rimmed version was in stock vs the ivory one we ended up with) and it mills fast, evenly, and with not as much noise as I was expecting. We do mill with the lid off (rattle rattle whirll.... no thanks) but we store it with the lid on. PLEASE NOTE: Make sure you follow the instructions on seasoning the stones before first use. There is an entire procedure that must be followed for it to work right. Do it. Takes just a few minutes and then you're off and running. The adjustment knob is fantastic and we are making our own flour every day... which has a taste that is incomparable even to top shelf flour like Bob's Red Mill. Komo, eat your heart out; I got a fantastic mill for a fraction of the cost. Sure, it's not made in Europe. Sure, it doesn't have an obscenely long warranty. But she's a keeper even if she's not a looker.
The NutriMill Harvest has been a 5-star mill for me.
I tried to edit my original review, but couldn’t find it. I’m actually changing my rating from 4 stars to 5 stars. I still think it needs more instructions, but just play with it and you can easily figure it out.
I have finally perfected my wheat grinding techniques. It’s much faster for the mill to grind soft white wheat, but it still does a great job with hard red wheat.
After the first pass for wheat, you get this strange mix of fine flour mixed with bran. At this point I sift my flour, and leave the fine flour out. This is the flour for making bread. I like to run the bran through on the finest setting 2 more times, sifting the smallest flour out each time. Then I use it to make whole wheat bread.
I have milled corn. No problem for the mill. Same as wheat, just needs sifted. 1st pass comes out as fine cornmeal, mixed with coarse corn, and bran. 1st sift is cornmeal, 2nd sift is grits 3rd sift is the hull for my chickens.
The only thing I couldn’t successfully grind was black beans. It was a disaster. The grinder couldn’t just mill them into flour the first try, so I put it on the most coarse setting to crack open the beans. then, tried to run them through on a finer setting, but they wound up just turning into paste on my blades. I called pleasant hill and the told me to let the stones cool, run a cup of rice through on a coarse setting and it would clean the stones. WORKED like a charm! You don’t want to do it because it’s a hassle. But it ended up fine!
The Nutrimill Harvest works great. It is loud. I have only milled wheat berries so far, but everything I have made has been delicious. The Nutrimill arrived quicker than expected and I have used it everyday.
I love the Nutrimill Harvest because it works great and grinds wonderfully and it also fits in my small kitchen, I have had other mills and this is by far the prettiest. It grinds very fast and makes great flour. I would highly recommend this product,