Janie’s Mill

February 26, 2025 | Ashkum, IL | Stone Ground Organic Grains

Janie’s Mill is the processing plant for the organic grains grown on Janie’s Farm. Of the 10 people on my tour, I was the only non-baker. Everyone else on the tour was looking to source fresh, local grain for their business or personal endeavours (one is looking to open a donut shop, one is starting a meal delivery business, and many are home bakers). I asked why they believe organic is important. Universally the said taste and nutrition. I asked what they are looking for in a grain supplier. These answers are more varied. In my words, it seems they are looking at Janie’s mill so they have full supply chain transparency. I also learned that many of these expert bakers will not source flour from their grain supplier. They want to buy the actual grain berries, which they will grind into flour themselves. Similar to coffee, this improves freshness and flavor - who knew?

My goal for the tour is a bit different. I simply want to observe the steps between taking wheat to the elevator and buying flour at the store. Janie’s Farm is a little different than the farm I visited in Kansas, because they do not take their grain to the elevator for payment. They take their grain from the field to a partner, who manages their silos. Their partner separates the grain into manageable portions and delivers the grains to Janie’s Mill for further processing.

At the mill, the grains are prepared for sale to the customer as raw berries, stone ground into flour, or heated and rolled into oats. The grains are portioned into sellable units (1.5lb, 3lb, 10lb, 25lb bags), labeled, and sent to distribution. There’s really very little processing, which I think is part of the nutritional promise of organic grains.

The tour ended in their retail space, where I picked up a recipe card for waffles and the required flour, cornmeal, and buckwheat.

The images below show the flow of grains through the mill.