The Cottage Mill | Your Complete Fresh Milled Flour Resource Library

Welcome to The Cottage Mill, your complete fresh milled flour resource library here at The Modern Day Cottage.
Whether you are just getting started or building on what you already know, you will find everything you need right here, beginner guides, flour blends, grain sourcing, tools, recipes, sourdough tips, and troubleshooting, all in one place.
Everything in this library was built with you in mind, gathered from years of learning, milling, and baking from scratch in my own kitchen.
If you’re just getting started, the How to Mill Flour at Home: A Complete Beginner’s Guide + Recipe is the best place to begin.
You don’t need to learn everything at once, start where you are and build from there.
A Note From Emily
I grew up with the sound of a mill humming in my Grandmother Nub’s kitchen, flour-dusted aprons, and the simple rhythm of fresh sourdough bread being baked.
Those memories never left me. In 1999, a conversation with a neighbor about milling flour stopped me in my tracks, and it felt like coming home. That day I came home, bought a mill and some grains, and have never looked back. Now with more than 25 years of daily practice, I carry forward the same tradition my grandmother lived by, turning whole grains into flour for bread, sourdough, cakes, and everything in between.
My hope is that you feel confident knowing you are learning from someone who has walked this path for decades. If you ever feel stuck, please reach out. I will do my very best to help you.


Wonderful, wonderful site! So glad I found it before starting my journey with fresh-milled flour. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge. ~ Mary
This was one of the most helpful and informative sites I’ve found on using freshly milled flour in baking. Thank you, Emily. ~ Tammy
Helpful Guides
Getting Started
Start here if you’re new to milling or setting up your kitchen to mill fresh flour.
Freshly Milled Flour Baking Basics
These guides help you understand how freshly milled flour behaves in everyday baking.
Freshly Milled Flour Flour Blends
Learn how to create the fresh milled flour blends for different types of baking.
Sourdough + Freshly Milled Flour
For bakers ready to combine sourdough and fresh milled flour with confidence.
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Beginner Tools for Milling Flour at Home
Every miller’s journey begins somewhere. These are the tools I first started with, and many of them I still keep in my kitchen today.
The WonderMill, KitchenAid, and manual sifters are reliable companions that can help you learn the rhythm of milling without overcomplicating the process.

The WonderMill

KitchenAid

Manual Sieves #40-#60
Advanced Milling Tools
When I invested in an on-demand stone mill, everything about my milling rhythm changed.
Quiet, steady, and built for daily use, a stone mill allows you to mill on demand, flour to proridge and everything in between that is fresh, alive, and ready for whatever you’re baking.

Mockmill Pro 200

Electric Sifter

Ankarsrum Mixer

Bread Machine
Wheat & Whole Grain Sources
Good flour begins with good grain.
Choosing wheat berries and whole grains from trusted sources ensures your flour is full of flavor and fresh.
Over the years, I’ve come to rely on a handful of growers and suppliers whose grains I trust in my own kitchen.
These are the wheats, other whole grains that I return to season after season.
What Freshly Milled Flour Is Actually Made Of
A wheat berry has three parts, and each one changes how your flour behaves in your baked goods:
Commercial refining removes some of the vitamins and minerals in the whole kernel. Enriched flour adds back some of those. Freshly milled whole grain flour retains over 40 micronutrients in their natural form.
One important distinction: when we sift freshly milled flour, we are not refining it. Sifting removes some, but not all of the bran to control texture or make fermentation more visible. The germ, endosperm, and some bran are still whole and intact. Sifting at home and commercial refining are two entirely different things.
FAQs
Have questions? Here are some FAQs to help you along.




















