Tag: flour milling

Why Sample Preparation Is the Most Overlooked Step in Grain Analysis

Laboratories invest heavily in state-of-the-art analysers — and rightly so. But the quality of any analytical result is fundamentally limited by the quality of the sample presented to that analyser. In grain and flour quality control, sample preparation is the most underinvested and underappreciated part of the testing process. The Milling Step: Why It Matters Most flour laboratory tests — Falling Number, Gluten Index, Alveograph, Farinograph — are performed on flour milled from whole wheat. The laboratory mill used for this purpose has a direct influence on results. Particle size distribution, damaged starch levels, and even temperature during milling all affect the performance of the resulting flour in subsequent tests. Standard laboratory mills for grain analysis include the Brabender Quadrumat Junior, the Bühler MLU-202, and the Perten LM 3100. Each produces a slightly different flour fraction. Comparing results between laboratories using different mills requires careful harmonisation. Dividing the Sample Representatively Before milling, a bulk grain sample must be reduced to a laboratory sub-sample without introducing bias. Hand scooping from the top of a bag is not acceptable — it will almost always over-represent lighter, lower-quality grain that has risen to the surface. A rotary sample divider or riffle box divides the sample randomly and representatively, regardless of grain heterogeneity. Conditioning Before Milling Tempering grain to a standard moisture level before milling is critical for reproducible flour yield and particle size. Most standard methods specify tempering to 15.5% moisture for one hour before milling. Skipping this step, or rushing it, introduces both between-run and between-laboratory variability that cannot be corrected downstream. Cleaning and Cross-Contamination Laboratory mills must be thoroughly cleaned between samples. Residual flour from a high-protein wheat sample will inflate the protein reading of the next soft wheat sample run through the same mill. Clean the mill with a small cleaning sample (which is discarded) between each production sample. Fuhler Labor offers pre-owned laboratory mills and sample preparation equipment from leading manufacturers, all verified to be in working order prior to listing.

A Guide to Moisture Measurement in Grain and Cereal Products

Moisture content is arguably the single most important quality parameter in the storage and trade of grain and cereal products. Too high, and grain becomes vulnerable to mould growth, mycotoxin development, and heat damage during storage. Too low, and the seller loses weight — and therefore revenue — on every tonne traded. Precise moisture measurement is not optional; it is a commercial and food safety necessity. Reference Method: Oven Drying The internationally recognised reference method for grain moisture measurement is oven drying (ISO 712 / ICC 110). A weighed sample is dried at 130°C for two hours. The weight loss expressed as a percentage of the original weight gives the moisture content. While highly accurate, the method is slow — making it unsuitable for rapid intake decisions at a grain elevator receiving hundreds of loads per day. Rapid Methods: Capacitance and Resistance Meters Dielectric (capacitance-based) moisture meters — such as the Dickey-John GAC series — measure moisture by passing an electrical field through the grain sample and correlating its dielectric properties with moisture content. Results in under a minute make these instruments ideal for rapid intake screening. They require regular calibration against the reference oven drying method for each grain type. NIR for Moisture Near-Infrared analysers can also provide rapid moisture readings alongside protein and other parameters, though they are typically less precise than dedicated dielectric meters for on-the-spot intake decisions. NIR moisture measurement excels in controlled milling and processing environments where speed and multi-parameter output are both valuable. Temperature Compensation A frequently overlooked factor in moisture measurement accuracy is sample temperature. Most rapid moisture meters require temperature compensation — measuring the grain temperature and applying a correction factor — because dielectric properties change with temperature. Cold grain arriving at intake from outdoor storage in winter can give systematically low moisture readings if temperature compensation is disabled or incorrectly applied. Fuhler Labor stocks verified pre-owned Dickey-John GAC moisture analysers and Axis laboratory balances for moisture verification — essential tools for any grain intake or processing operation.

Alveograph vs. Farinograph: Which Rheology Test Is Right for Your Mill?

Dough rheology sits at the heart of flour quality specification. Two instruments dominate this space in commercial flour laboratories: the Chopin Alveograph and the Brabender Farinograph. Both assess how dough behaves under mechanical stress, but they do so in fundamentally different ways — and each is better suited to particular applications. The Farinograph: Mixing Behaviour The Farinograph measures resistance to mixing as a function of time. A standardised dough is mixed in a temperature-controlled bowl and the torque required to maintain mixing speed is recorded continuously. The resulting farinogram reveals several key parameters: The Farinograph is indispensable for characterising flour’s water absorption and its behaviour under sustained mixing — critical information for industrial bakers optimising dough process parameters. The Alveograph: Extensibility and Tenacity The Chopin Alveograph takes a different approach. A standardised dough piece is inflated like a bubble until it bursts. The pressure-volume curve generates three key values: P (tenacity/resistance), L (extensibility), and W (baking strength — the area under the curve). The P/L ratio expresses the balance between dough strength and extensibility. Which Should You Choose? Many mills run both. However, if resources require a choice: if your customers are industrial bakers focused on process consistency, the Farinograph is typically prioritised. If you supply craft bakers, export wheat for grading, or need to match specifications from French, Spanish, or Italian buyers, the Alveograph is the standard reference instrument in those markets. Fuhler Labor stocks verified pre-owned Chopin Alveographs and Brabender Farinographs, making it practical for smaller mills to access both platforms without the capital expenditure of new equipment.

How NIR Analysers Are Changing Grain Quality Control

Near-Infrared (NIR) spectroscopy has transformed quality control in the grain and milling industry. What once required a panel of separate wet chemistry tests — each taking hours and consuming reagents — can now be accomplished in seconds with a single, non-destructive scan. Understanding what NIR can and cannot do is essential for any modern grain handler or flour miller. The Principle of NIR Analysis NIR instruments illuminate a sample with near-infrared light across a range of wavelengths. Different chemical bonds in the sample — those of protein, moisture, starch, and fat — absorb light at characteristic wavelengths. By measuring the reflected or transmitted light pattern, the instrument uses mathematical calibration models to predict the composition of the sample. The result: protein content, moisture, starch, ash, and even wet gluten estimates — all from a single measurement taking less than 30 seconds and requiring no sample preparation beyond ensuring the grain is representative. Key Applications in the Grain Chain Calibration: The Critical Factor An NIR analyser is only as good as its calibration. Calibrations are built using reference samples with known values determined by reference methods (e.g., Kjeldahl for protein, Karl Fischer for moisture). Using the wrong calibration — one built for soft wheat on hard wheat, for instance — produces systematically incorrect results. Always verify that your instrument’s calibration matches your grain type and origin. Leading Instruments on the Market Perten DA 7250, Foss Infratec, and Bruker instruments are among the most respected NIR platforms in the industry. At Fuhler Labor, we offer pre-owned NIR analysers with documented calibration histories, allowing mills to access this technology at a fraction of the new price.

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