Resources for whole wheat and grains, grain milling, training, and kitchen supplies

Monthly Archives: February 2012

Do some of these convenience food mixes grace your shelves at home?

  • Quaker Instant Flavored Oatmeal.
  • Eggo Frozen Waffles.
  • Aunt Jemima’s Frozen Pancakes.
  • Jiffy Muffin Mix.
  • Bisquick.

If so, for your health and the health of your family please take the time to read this article.

The most recent class I taught was on how to make each of these foods at home into a convenient mix-type method using whole grains and real, healthy ingredients.  It occurred to me, while teaching class that many of us have picked these (or similar) items up out of habit or based on budget.

The truth is, we can make the mix itself at home, quickly with far healthier ingredients (omitting many of the killer ingredients) at a fraction of the cost. With home-made, whole grain, convenience mixes and making ample extras to freeze, you can increase the nutritional value of each serving and still save money without sacrificing time. After all, isn’t that why you’re using the convenience mix? To save time?

Each of the foods listed above include ingredients intended to extend the shelf-life.  Become a label detective and take a look at what is hiding in the boxes that have a picture of real food on the cover.

Here are some of the top offenders you can omit by using a home-made mix:

  • Enriched White Bleached Flour (Elmer’s Glue for the colon)
  • Lard
  • Hydrogenated Lard (as if Lard were not bad enough)
  • Artificial Colors/Dyes
  • Aluminum
  • Artificial Flavor
  • Partially Hydrogenated Soybean or Cottonseed Oil
  • Calcium Carbonate (also known as chalkboard chalk)
  • Sodium Sulfite
  • “Fruit” is often sugar -bits with artificial flavoring (the list of fake ingredients is too long)

 

The more box foods eaten, the sooner you’ll be in a box of your own.

It is almost impossible to put into one blog post the best way to tackle this issue!!  WE WANT TO HELP YOU!  This is going to be a topic for several of the Free Online Classes!  So if you are on our newsletter list (and you have the newsletter email in your approved contacts) you’ll be getting notices SOON of these Free Online classes! If you’re not sure if you’re on the Newsletter list, or you’ve changed email – go HERE.

It is my desire to show you just how simple some of these changes can be. They are cost effective and healthy changes that you can do easily at home and enJOY the journey!





Maybe you’ve stopped by and wondered what is going on at Millers Grain House!?!  Things look a little different and there is a new logo at the page top.

Don’t worry, Millers Grain House has not changed hands – we’re doing some house keeping to serve you better.  We are growing and we are getting busier.  With that, we also want to be sure to give you the best possible service we can!  We’ve put everything that was once in different places across the web in a more user friendly one stop place: http://www.millersgrainhouse.com

And more than offering whole grains, wheat, grain grinders and mills – we want to be able to serve you with in other areas as well.

Some of the changes already  include:

  • Easy access to the last 3- 6 months archives of m weekly radio show: Encouragement in the Kitchen.
  • An ever expanding FAQs and Knowledge Base section that covers everything from which whole grain to use to questions about grain mills/grinders and how to store grain and other food.
  • A brand new Support Team that will not only organize your questions so they are answered in a more timely fashion, but by asking – you help grow the Knowledge Base!
  • Clearer categories to get you where you want to go:  Main Store – Bulk Delivery Route – Classes
  • As always, a way to  stay in the loop! Subscribing to the Newsletter (risk nothing and get a Free Recipe each month while we stay connected!)
  • YOUR Testimonials are running along the bottom of the home page! Thank you! (o:

 

But wait!   There’s more!    NEW things coming  SOON:

  • Free Webinars with live lessons, question & answer sessions and recipes!
  • A Jazzed up YouTube channel with some new faces to continue Free Videos for you!
  • A Discussion Forum to share your whole food and whole grain trials and triumphs!
  • Recipe Sharing!
  • The Member’s  Group with perks of its own with exclusive online classes, exclusive discounts, exclusive downloads and discounted merchandise.

 

It is our desire to serve you the best best we possibly can! With these new and exciting additions and the ones we’ve organized in place already – it is our hope that you will settle in and join the ‘family’ here at Millers Grain House. We’d love to have you share with us!

Best Blessings and enJOY the journey!

Donna Miller





There is mounting and evidence of the health challenges associated with using refined white flour.    It is staggering to the mind when you consider the overwhelming facts showing the problems and dangers of consuming refined white flour.  I am convinced we must educate people if we are ever going to have a major impact on the health crisis that is facing the world.

Studies have been done on many ailments since the processing (stripping for shelf purposes) of whole grains in the early 1900’s. 

Gout, anemia, diabetes and depression are just a few of the ailments that are impacting people worldwide.   These health concerns can all be linked to vitamin deficiencies that are missing in refined flours after the turn of the century.  It’s a problem that we created for ourselves with the move toward the “convenience” of shelf flour.

The answer to many health issues is to use the whole grain as it was intended.    Fresh, live and whole is what is best for your health, your body, and your energy.   Most people can understand the logic that in order to improve “life” in your health, you need to consume live food.  It takes no more time to mill your own flour at home with live whole wheat, than it does to gather the ingredients for pancakes. 

Do your body and your family a favor by feeding them ALL the nutrients designed in grains rather than partial, processed and packed convenient ‘dead’ flours.





If you have read many of my articles on whole wheat and grains or have listened to my weekly radio show, you know that I am a strong advocate of using whole wheat.  Years ago, I stopped purchasing bagged flour from the store because I believe the nutritional value of whole wheat is important for my family.

When you consider what is missing from bagged flour, you will understand the reason I am so supportive of milling fresh whole grains.  Consider the following:

What nutrients are in a bag of flour that has been sitting on the shelf?  We can take into consideration the fact that we know from what has been removed, it is NOT 100% of the nutrients as if the whole kernel were consumed. Continue reading





More people are beginning to experience the goodness of using whole grains.  From the joy of smelling fresh baked breads in the kitchen, to the delicious taste of the end product, nothing quite compares to the goodness of whole grains.  But the most important part for our family is the incredible nutritional value. 

In order to get the most nutrition from whole grains there are a few very simply rules you should follow.

For Grain in the Hull:

  • Keep in an air-tight container in a cool room below 80 degrees Fahrenheit.
  • Keep free from humidity and be sure the container does not promote any condensation.
  • Keep away from a direct heat source or direct sunlight.

For Freshly Milled Whole Grain Flour:

  • Use immediately for peak nutrition
  • Store any unused freshly milled flour for up 7 days at the next best optimum nutrition and up to 6 months before its spoiled.
  • Fresh milled flour is susceptible to moisture in the air. Store immediately.

Whole Grain Flour – Store bought.

  • This flour is already stripped of many oils and nutrients to give it a long shelf life.
  • Store bagged flour in a dry place for up to one year.
  • It is not and cannot become as nutritionally sound as freshly milled flour.

Once the grain is baked into a baked good, protect that goodness with a little more attention to storage. Whole grains tend to dry out faster than bleached or processed grains. You may want to store them in the refrigerator and you certainly will want to make sure they are stored in an airtight container or package.

Usually, in our home, once the grain is milled and then used, the items are not around long enough for them to spoil – we eat them too fast! To have the goodness of whole grains for a prolonged span of time, simply requires a little planning and protection.





Oats are far more versatile than to simply be used for porridge or gruel. Whole Oats (usually Whole Rolled Oats) are a great source of protein, fiber, vitamins, and minerals. Whole oats have been proven to help reduce cholesterol levels and make a great healthy breakfast that will keep you contented all the way until lunch.

Oats are very seldom sold with the hull left on for eating. The whole oat grain is usually called “oat groats”, which is the least-processed form which can be used in the same ways you would use wheat kernels. Oat groats can be milled into flour or flaked into what we are used to as Old Fashioned Rolled Oats.

Steel Cut Oats are whole oat groats which have merely been roughly cut. Old-fashioned have been flattened and quick-cooking oats have been steamed a bit, cut and flattened to speed cooking process. Instant oatmeal has been rolled very thin and is already partially cooked. For nutrition (and some people would say for full texture), a thick rolled oat is the most full bodied option for a substantial oatmeal.

Because of their somewhat higher fat content, oats should be stored away from any heat or damp in an airtight container. The suggested storage time for oats is about three to six months.

In addition to porridge, oats can be used for stuffing, added to baked goods, or cooked whole and added to grain salads. Try using them in place of bread crumbs for meatloaf. Top a cobbler with a mixture of whole wheat flour, butter, sugar and whole oats. It’s also easy to make your own Granola!