Wegmans store installs mill to grind local grainsWegmans store installs mill to grind local grains
February 6, 2016

Wegmans Food Markets announced its Pittsford, New York, store now boasts a mill near the bakery that will be used to grind local, organic grains to make into bread.
Initially, Wegmans plans to grind organic einkorn and rye—sourced from a farm one hour from Pittsford—to make Einkorn Rye bread, a moist, dense loaf shaped like a brick. Flour from the mill will be mixed into dough immediately. The Einkorn Rye loaves will sell for $5.50.
The Osttiroler Getreidemühlen (Tyrolean combination mill), which measures 10 by 4 by 7 feet, was made in Austria.
“Baking with flour made from locally-sourced grains, right out of the mill, is a very special experience,” Nick Greco, Wegmans’ bread artisan, said in a press release. “There are flavor notes, and a subtle sweetness you can taste in a really fresh loaf that aren’t there if a few weeks have passed since the flour was milled. I compare it to the difference between tasting an apple that’s been in cold storage to a ripe apple you pick from the tree.”
Wegmans plans to try other types of flours once its bakers grow accustomed to the process.
According to the retailer, its mill is likely the first of its kind in a supermarket. Wegmans’ hometown of Rochester, N.Y. was the largest flour-producing city in the U.S. in 1838.
This piece originally appeared on supermarketnews.com, a New Hope 360 sister website. Visit the site for more grocery trends insights.
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