Thanks for sharing! I bought the same thing for my kitchen aid last year. It works great. Took me a few runs to get the settings right but now running smooth. Ground up some Jimmy Red corn we grew and made cornmeal and grits. It is delicious!
Mine was ordered through Walmart, it's a KitchenAid accessory, you will need a KitchenAid stand mixer to power it with. They generally run around $150.00 I caught mine on sale thankfully
Great video aa always Brandon. I've never tried making my own fresh cornmeal before and I was wondering what type of corn is the best to try or would any type of corn work. Thank you and God Bless you and your family and God Bless Everyone and Let's all pray for peace and no war the world is in a bad place now. 🙏
I have never tried grinding sweet corn, one thing that's important with these mills is not using a seed or grain that is oily or moist. I'm not sure about the oil or moisture content in sweet corn. If it's too high it will gum up the meal
A disc harrow would work great, I'm not sure what you're planting but cut it up good with a disc, and for field peas, clover and things I would sow it and drill it in with the disc, as for a spreader I'm not familiar with any on a tractor, I usually use a ground driven push type like spreading grass seed, a go over it once with the harrow. That is a double gang harrow to btw, we sow our greens like that in the fall and have never had a problem.
Thank you, Each paddock is 5 acers . I will be planting a mix of alfalfa, wild radish, Austrian peas, red/white clover , orchard grass ,Meadow brome, perennial rye grass, tall fescue. I hope my cows will like it. I was thinking a JD model B but I dont want rows , I would like a full cover. Thanks for taking the time to help I do appreciate it.
Yes you can, I sift it to separate the coarse from fine, I've found it works better to grind it coarse first then do a second grinding on a finer setting and sift it to separate the grits from the cornmeal.
I have seen a video on UA-cam showing just that, it is a hard kernel corn which is what you need for grinding. I have never tried it but I don't see why it wouldn't work
Thanks for sharing! I bought the same thing for my kitchen aid last year. It works great. Took me a few runs to get the settings right but now running smooth. Ground up some Jimmy Red corn we grew and made cornmeal and grits. It is delicious!
Thanks for sharing my friend. This process is very interesting. Looks great. 👍🏻🙌🏻
Thank you Brother for sharing this! I would love to grind fresh corn!! God bless you!! 🤗🙏
Wow! That looks great. Bet the cornbread will be really good. Thanks.
Outstanding look corn meal. I bought a hand crank grinder I hope to try some on it this year.Thanks for the video.
I just bought a grinder so it will be awhile before i find some corn. I am very excited to try it. I am in eastern NC. Tks for this video.
Thank you for sharing this Godbless and have a blessed weekend 🙏🏼
Looks great 👍🏻
That looks so good!! Where did you get your machine & is it expensive!!?? Thank you!! 🤗🙏
Mine was ordered through Walmart, it's a KitchenAid accessory, you will need a KitchenAid stand mixer to power it with. They generally run around $150.00 I caught mine on sale thankfully
@@1972BRJ Thank You!! 🙏
Would like to see that please the bread making
Great video aa always Brandon. I've never tried making my own fresh cornmeal before and I was wondering what type of corn is the best to try or would any type of corn work. Thank you and God Bless you and your family and God Bless Everyone and Let's all pray for peace and no war the world is in a bad place now. 🙏
Any Field corn or dent corn will work, I have seen people use popcorn as well. Sweet corn is not used because it will shrivel up when it dries
@@1972BRJ Thank you for the information.
I have a nutrition mill I usually grind rice and want to try corn but I grow peaches and cream corn I wonder if I can dry and grind that
I have never tried grinding sweet corn, one thing that's important with these mills is not using a seed or grain that is oily or moist. I'm not sure about the oil or moisture content in sweet corn. If it's too high it will gum up the meal
I just bought my first Ford.. 1949 8N . Im going to use it for a food plot for my cattle. Could you recommend a seeder/ cultivator?
A disc harrow would work great, I'm not sure what you're planting but cut it up good with a disc, and for field peas, clover and things I would sow it and drill it in with the disc, as for a spreader I'm not familiar with any on a tractor, I usually use a ground driven push type like spreading grass seed, a go over it once with the harrow. That is a double gang harrow to btw, we sow our greens like that in the fall and have never had a problem.
Thank you, Each paddock is 5 acers . I will be planting a mix of alfalfa, wild radish, Austrian peas, red/white clover , orchard grass ,Meadow brome, perennial rye grass, tall fescue. I hope my cows will like it. I was thinking a JD model B but I dont want rows , I would like a full cover. Thanks for taking the time to help I do appreciate it.
If you grind it coarser could you have homemade grits?
Yes you can, I sift it to separate the coarse from fine, I've found it works better to grind it coarse first then do a second grinding on a finer setting and sift it to separate the grits from the cornmeal.
Wow I can’t wait to try that what kind of corn did you use?
@@tylerdurham9679 I used Hastings prolific field corn. It's a white corn, Mr Joey @jtwes UA-cam channel gave me the seeds.
Thank you good luck on your garden this year from S.C.
Could you grind popcorn? Is that type of corn basically the same?
I have seen a video on UA-cam showing just that, it is a hard kernel corn which is what you need for grinding. I have never tried it but I don't see why it wouldn't work
@@1972BRJ Thanks for your insight!!