How Flour Is Made At A Traditional Watermill

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  • čas přidán 28. 11. 2018
  • At Lurgashall Watermill at Weald and Downland Museum in West Sussex, flour is still made using traditional methods. When grinding, it turns at about six revolutions per minute. Each complete turn is powered by 200 gallons of water.
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    How Flour Is Made At A Traditional Watermill

Komentáře • 152

  • @andreanalee445
    @andreanalee445 Před 5 lety +225

    Wow no bad music and not a lot of repeating clips
    This is quality content

  • @RayMak
    @RayMak Před 5 lety +165

    Bread made from these flours are heavenly

  • @jbradshaw4236
    @jbradshaw4236 Před 3 lety +42

    Aged 8 I painted that mill on a school trip. Later in life became a member, proud to say I then married at the museum .. a national treasure. Can't attend the museum without buying a biscuit or two from the mill!

    • @soapbox187
      @soapbox187 Před 3 lety +1

      Thats an amazing story!
      Hope you saved that painting.

    • @jbradshaw4236
      @jbradshaw4236 Před 3 lety +1

      @@soapbox187 alas I was only 8 so I don't have it anymore but still vividly remember it. After the wedding we had some nice photos by the mill... If you get the chance visit the museum. A wonderful place.. atb

  • @MoxieBeast
    @MoxieBeast Před 5 lety +63

    this is really neat! and very picturesque. i would love to purchase a bag 😍

  • @zimbatron552
    @zimbatron552 Před 5 lety +33

    That place its beautiful. I'd love to have a restaurant there

  • @solochristo65
    @solochristo65 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I looked this up because I was watching an episode of Escape to the Country with my 90+ year old parents and in that episode they showed a man that spent 14 years refurbishing a 17th century windmill and they also use it for making flour. This was great

  • @watermill4854
    @watermill4854 Před 2 lety +3

    This is a really excellent overview of all the watermill stages in milling. Excellent

  • @NutMunchy
    @NutMunchy Před 5 lety +26

    My school went on a Field trio in 4th grade and we got to make flour

    • @lunarcorpse
      @lunarcorpse Před 3 lety +5

      My class went to a cheese factory, fresh cheese is so delicious. After the cheese factory we went to a chocolate factory. I was only in second grade then, but I don't remember everything that happened. All I remember is the taste of the cheese.

    • @gavnonadoroge3092
      @gavnonadoroge3092 Před 2 lety

      free child labor

  • @cawaidesne
    @cawaidesne Před 3 lety +9

    God bless you for keeping tradition alive!

  • @tastethejace
    @tastethejace Před 2 lety

    Fascinating video. Thank you for sharing

  • @thecomputer9722
    @thecomputer9722 Před 5 lety +3

    Thank you, very cool.

  • @anthonylatour8493
    @anthonylatour8493 Před 5 lety +9

    God video still going making iteresting videos congratulation from panama🇵🇦

  • @q6k
    @q6k Před 5 lety +6

    now this is epic.

  • @alejandromarquez3514
    @alejandromarquez3514 Před 3 lety

    Great educational video!

  • @muhammadafzal3865
    @muhammadafzal3865 Před 3 lety

    love for your work

  • @jflo6830
    @jflo6830 Před rokem +1

    Truly a beautiful site. One poor man like me from Texas can only image of such a place.
    Thank you for sharing 🙏 "when it feels right It is right". Love it

  • @takagikiana4924
    @takagikiana4924 Před 2 lety

    Wow, that’s so cool and amazing!

  • @Exoclypse
    @Exoclypse Před 4 lety +22

    Since you have to pump the water back into the pond, you might as well save a lot of energy and use an electric motor.
    I know they want to show how it worked back then so I hope they only make it work during visits.

    • @rocketmik65
      @rocketmik65 Před 2 lety +5

      @dev null I mean, it's not only a watermill but a museum as well, showing how it was done in ye olde days, wouldn't be very educational if they just did it with a motor.

    • @Rohandutt
      @Rohandutt Před 2 lety

      then it wOuld end the motive of it which is showing the visitors how it works without electricity

  • @pineapplelord2422
    @pineapplelord2422 Před 5 lety +10

    West *SUSSEX*

  • @sophieparker4574
    @sophieparker4574 Před 3 lety +1

    This is beautiful 😍

  • @Varunkm110
    @Varunkm110 Před 3 lety

    Excellent

  • @WillysToys
    @WillysToys Před 5 lety +17

    CARBS!

  • @ShinKyuubi
    @ShinKyuubi Před 4 lety +1

    Very near where I live there is an old mill..the river dried up years upon years before I was born and the mill is in disrepair..I haven't been by it in years..the road it was on used to be dirt and gravel but I think they paved it in the years since I was a kid so the mill may be gone..there are a few other mills in my state but I don't know if any make flour or cornmeal..if they did I'd buy some from local markets but they keep that stuff very close to the mill if not outright in it as a specialty item..I got a local outdoor market..might have to see if there is any stone ground flour there..that would make some dang good homemade bread..

  • @joeydr1497
    @joeydr1497 Před 4 lety +3

    I’ve been here there building a bakery next to it so they can make bread and cookies for tourists

  • @darrenchan7652
    @darrenchan7652 Před 5 lety +10

    Holy crap I didn’t know this was an insider video until I noticed the insider logo....
    They have gotten so much better with their content....

  • @farahpriem7193
    @farahpriem7193 Před 5 lety +1

    So cool

  • @Stephen_Strange
    @Stephen_Strange Před 2 lety

    I like it!

  • @aleatorioemais5168
    @aleatorioemais5168 Před 5 lety +2

    Kiss from Brazil! 😘

  • @thechitchanman
    @thechitchanman Před 6 měsíci

    Yeah, you grind that flour! Grind it good!!

  • @Jasynatics
    @Jasynatics Před 2 lety +1

    Me when answering hard question in exams:
    If it feels right, it is right

  • @snotnosewilly99
    @snotnosewilly99 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Same way the Romans made flour 2,000 years ago with stone mills powered by water.

  • @masonallen3916
    @masonallen3916 Před 5 lety +4

    When i used to live in West Virginia there was a an old mill that sat along a beautiful river. It is sad to seee how people have ruined it with graffiti and vandilism.

  • @nonovaey3652
    @nonovaey3652 Před 5 lety

    This is the best flour.

  • @Ignisan_66
    @Ignisan_66 Před rokem +1

    So it's basically an electric mill with extra steps since all of the energy for grinding comes from electric water pumps which circulate the water between the two ponds. This is not how it was done for "generations" cause old watermills used natural flow of a river to power them.

  • @jesseolson109
    @jesseolson109 Před 4 lety +2

    I think I found what I want to do in 40 years after I retire

  • @dr.omeganebula1529
    @dr.omeganebula1529 Před 5 lety +1

    I live in the watermill country (the Netherlands)

  • @karv9445
    @karv9445 Před rokem +2

    If you're pumping water from the lower to the upper reservoir arent you losing energy? It would be more efficient to use the energy put into pumping to turn the wheel instead. The only benefit would be the fact that the upper reservoir serves as a battery to keep the mill running if the pump is shut off. I'm assuming the original site of the mill was along a river and the system currently in place for the sluice gates was with new materials made to look period appropriate.

    • @beatar.1130
      @beatar.1130 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Undershot water wheel is indeed less efficient than overshot one (when water pours down from upper reservoir) but it's just the oldest version of the vertical water wheel sooo I assume people used it until they invented better wheel

    • @Ottoschmitz-hi
      @Ottoschmitz-hi Před 3 měsíci

      It's history not an energy efficiency competition you dolt

  • @misterfunnybones
    @misterfunnybones Před rokem

    The issue is the grain & the time between milling and consumption. Industrialized food production creates mutant seeds, dead soil, & chemically induced production. At the very least we need to return to local milling to grind the whole grain without removing all the constituent parts & reduce the time between milling & consumption to avoid spoiling the milled product. Mass produced bread is now a baked extruded foam product.

  • @diptyabhashgagoi5727
    @diptyabhashgagoi5727 Před 7 měsíci

    I'm fearing about the crasher dusts of those two stones 😮

  • @unlucky_2nd897
    @unlucky_2nd897 Před 5 lety

    wow

  • @cosmicallyderived
    @cosmicallyderived Před 3 měsíci

    I’m sorry was there any footage of the actual mill stone which all that machinery is used to power? I only saw footage of the hand mill stone. We saw flour coming out the full size one why no detailing the scale of the actual millstone. Seems like a gaping omission.

  • @Nina-fg1ym
    @Nina-fg1ym Před rokem

    This is how they did it in RuneScape

  • @venividivivi
    @venividivivi Před 5 lety +5

    They can make one Amberlynn Reid of flour a day.

  • @Cyberphunkisms
    @Cyberphunkisms Před 3 lety +2

    I thought this was cool.. until the part about constantly pumping water to maintain an artificial river to accommodate the mill... that was ridiculous considering, it was an energy-saving device. But I guess this is the long history about how everything led up to 2020.

  • @farhanhossain3867
    @farhanhossain3867 Před 5 lety +1

    Mitochondria is the power house of the cell.

  • @brd8764
    @brd8764 Před 4 lety +1

    A flored worker is all we know here about a flour mill. In a common four mill there is a lot of flour dust.

    • @brd8764
      @brd8764 Před 3 lety +1

      I want to know about splitting pulses tradition.

  • @sanzidakhannargis986
    @sanzidakhannargis986 Před 5 lety +3

    Isn't the flour gritty in the end

    • @jbradshaw4236
      @jbradshaw4236 Před 3 lety

      Surprisingly not. The flour is very fine actually. This natural milling process retains more nutrients than modern flour making process.

  • @abeonthehill166
    @abeonthehill166 Před 2 lety +1

    But can you solve this in less than ten minutes .....?
    A miller ground out 336 pound of wheat into flour .
    Enough to fill 128 bags ; some were 2 (Ib) and others were 7 (Ib) bags of Flour.
    How many 2 (Ib) bags and 7 (Ib) bags of Flour were filled ?
    If a 2 (Ib) bag is sold for £2 each and a 7 (Ib) is £6 each; how much were all 128 bags sold for ?
    If only 25% of the total selling price of the Flour was profit ( after expenses ), how much profit did the Miller have for the 336 (Ib) of Flour sold that day ?
    Regards.......Abe

    • @Anzar_riffi
      @Anzar_riffi Před 5 měsíci

      To fill up 128 bags with 336 lb flour. You’ll need 112 bags of 2 lb. And 16 bags of 7 lb.
      112 bags of 2 lb
      Profit: 112 bags • £2= £224 total
      224•0,25= £ 56,- profit
      16 bags 7 lb
      Profit: 16 bags • £6 = £96,- total
      96•0,25= £ 24,- profit
      So the total profit would be 56+24= £80,-

  • @lobsterdad6051
    @lobsterdad6051 Před 5 lety

    That lady sounds like David firth

  • @sfbluestar
    @sfbluestar Před 4 lety +2

    do the two pieces of grindstones touch each other? If no, how is the top piece suspended? If yes, wouldn't there be a lot of sand in the flour? And how do the grains get forced between the grindstones?

    • @dhruvatri8894
      @dhruvatri8894 Před 3 lety

      Yes, the two pieces touch each other. There is no sand in flour because grindstones are made out of very hard rock.

    • @marcusaurelius652
      @marcusaurelius652 Před rokem +1

      The do not touch each other. Educate yourself

  • @ashasalian9887
    @ashasalian9887 Před 3 lety +1

    It's tradition of India

    • @LeuBlue
      @LeuBlue Před 3 lety

      It didn't originated in india

  • @jesusdiedforyouproofjohn3.16

    Praise the LORD for creating flour!

  • @abeonthehill166
    @abeonthehill166 Před 5 měsíci

    Tom can complete a job in 60 minutes; Jerry can do the same job in 50 minutes and Bob can do the same job in 40 minutes !
    How long will it take Tom and Bob to do the job working together ?
    How long will the job take if all three work together ?
    Can you solve in Ten minutes ……?

  • @irem-xh5rr
    @irem-xh5rr Před 5 lety

    8.

  • @canethings91
    @canethings91 Před rokem

    still operational until this time?

  • @flowstate6769
    @flowstate6769 Před 3 lety

    Doesn’t it take more energy to pump all that water than it takes to make the floor in the first place?

  • @skyy3852
    @skyy3852 Před 4 lety +2

    Advertisement?

  • @danarthur771
    @danarthur771 Před 5 lety +2

    my dreams(wheat) + society(watermill) = reality(flour)

  • @loam6740
    @loam6740 Před 3 lety

    If they have to pump the water back to the top its not even really water powered is it?

  • @guyeshel9316
    @guyeshel9316 Před rokem

    I wonder how the flour is

  • @harjitsingh6962
    @harjitsingh6962 Před rokem

    💪🏋️🤗👍

  • @JustYourAverageGirl2002

    Didn't they also use mules and what not back in the day to grind flour?

    • @polishedmeat6399
      @polishedmeat6399 Před 3 lety

      yep but this was more efficient. no need to feed mules and care about them

  • @aridroutsas3786
    @aridroutsas3786 Před 3 lety

    All I learnt was that wheel spins and then flour. No further information passed that.

  • @gavnonadoroge3092
    @gavnonadoroge3092 Před 2 lety

    rule of thumb

  • @julianbernard6183
    @julianbernard6183 Před rokem

    Holy crap I thought they created power like a windmill 🤦🏽🤦🏽I feel so uneducated

  • @fortfish8190
    @fortfish8190 Před 5 lety +1

    I'm going to make a Go Fund me page.

  • @tangoraven
    @tangoraven Před měsícem

    Pump the water up and then let the water flow back to turn the mill. That can't be energy efficient.

  • @lylethahawkins1150
    @lylethahawkins1150 Před 5 lety +3

    *starts at **2:08*
    ^-^ you’re welcome

  • @seezie
    @seezie Před 5 lety

    why not just... use the electricity to grind the flour instead of digging out a lake and pumping water into it?

  • @AnggaTirtaFL
    @AnggaTirtaFL Před 3 lety

    From what i saw, we need pigeon in making a flour.

  • @likeconvideodicaniSAM
    @likeconvideodicaniSAM Před 5 lety +1

    Versace on the flour

  • @neobind4079
    @neobind4079 Před 4 lety +1

    4:33 people eat that food!!

    • @notjalyn2162
      @notjalyn2162 Před 4 lety +2

      Ben Kellner Its really unhealthy to eat raw flour, i doubt it

    • @JohnDoe-vw4zf
      @JohnDoe-vw4zf Před 3 lety

      Ok.

    • @notjalyn2162
      @notjalyn2162 Před 2 lety

      @dev null hello i find this so funny because i have no recollection of commenting this (mostly because it’s from a year ago) anyways, i have no idea what a “carcinogen” is, would you be so kind as to inform me what it is :D ??

    • @notjalyn2162
      @notjalyn2162 Před 2 lety

      @dev null ahh that makes sense, thank you :)

  • @C.Ezra.M
    @C.Ezra.M Před 5 lety

    The 51st!

  • @nataliabalazs7355
    @nataliabalazs7355 Před 5 lety

    😶

  • @dumitrulangham1721
    @dumitrulangham1721 Před 3 měsíci

    😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮

  • @nancysmith5587
    @nancysmith5587 Před 4 lety

    B

  • @fatoshalimi3703
    @fatoshalimi3703 Před měsícem

    wheat flour has gluten in the mill with water

  • @BobMcCoy
    @BobMcCoy Před 5 lety +9

    *Windmills are memes!*

    • @kimjunoof8143
      @kimjunoof8143 Před 5 lety +3

      _Bob McCoy Lisa Guerrero would confront that windmill

  • @fep_ptcp883
    @fep_ptcp883 Před 3 lety

    Gimme that gluten

  • @mia-qf5ml
    @mia-qf5ml Před 5 lety +1

    2nd

  • @annaandersson630
    @annaandersson630 Před 5 lety

    1

  • @esa2419
    @esa2419 Před 3 lety

    :)

  • @omaxiee
    @omaxiee Před 4 lety

    Coronavirus [lil baby voice]

  • @kelpfrming8512
    @kelpfrming8512 Před 3 lety +1

    so glad native British are there to tell us about their history

  • @ENEN-tz6eg
    @ENEN-tz6eg Před 5 lety

    More like how a watermill works

  • @xyhmo
    @xyhmo Před 4 lety

    Here because of Kingdom Come.

  • @empire23singh28
    @empire23singh28 Před 4 lety

    Sorry

  • @lalakakakaka
    @lalakakakaka Před 5 lety

    6th commenter❤️💖

  • @nehreenkana8356
    @nehreenkana8356 Před 5 lety +1

    Early

  • @victorasprem6252
    @victorasprem6252 Před 5 lety +1

    First

  • @WhyDoThat
    @WhyDoThat Před 2 lety

    This seems pointless. If you are pumping the water back up to make the wheel turn then you might as well just having it powered by electricity.. Energy can be changed into another form but additional energy isn't going to be created. First Law of Thermodynamics If anything it will take more energy to spin the wheel and the evaporation loss from water pumped up.

  • @anonymoustoes7623
    @anonymoustoes7623 Před 3 lety

    And they say we dont have culture.

  • @user-pl5oj1hr8n
    @user-pl5oj1hr8n Před rokem

    Look at the grinder. It us made of stone. In the end you will have bread with stone that will grind your teeth. Sometimes older does not meen better

  • @27nadira
    @27nadira Před 5 lety

    21st

  • @mytinplaterailway
    @mytinplaterailway Před rokem

    This would be so much better without the awful music.

  • @nayotorres111
    @nayotorres111 Před 5 lety +2

    0:30 she kinda looks like Trump 😂

  • @josephsmith1893
    @josephsmith1893 Před 4 lety

    What a waste of time and effort... These people need to get a life!

  • @lovelychuikira8417
    @lovelychuikira8417 Před 5 lety +1

    1