






๐พ Elevate your baking game with artisan precision and style!
The NutriMill Harvest Electric Stone Grain Mill combines a robust 450-watt motor with near diamond-hard Corundum milling stones to effortlessly grind a wide variety of non-oily grains and legumes. Featuring a patented texture control knob, it offers customizable flour textures from ultra-fine pastry flour to coarse cracked grains. Designed with sustainable bamboo and assembled in the USA, this compact yet powerful mill is perfect for health-conscious home bakers seeking fresh, nutrient-rich flour with a stylish countertop presence.









| ASIN | B00OGIXMKM |
| Best Sellers Rank | #12,822 in Kitchen & Dining ( See Top 100 in Kitchen & Dining ) #2 in Grain Mills |
| Brand | Nutrimill |
| Brand Name | Nutrimill |
| Capacity | 5 Cups |
| Color | Gold |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 970 Reviews |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 7"L x 7"W x 13"H |
| Item Weight | 18.7 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | NutriMill |
| Manufacturer Part Number | 789010 |
| Material | Aluminum , Bamboo |
| Material Type | Aluminum, Bamboo |
| Model Number | 789000 |
| Power Source | AC adapter |
| Product Dimensions | 7"L x 7"W x 13"H |
| Recommended Uses For Product | Home |
| Style | Gold |
| Style Name | Gold |
| UPC | 636702789105 798837983794 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Voltage | 120 Volts |
| Wattage | 450 watts |
T**W
Beautiful, functional piece of art in a grain mill
Where to begin... This little gem is so beautiful, it's more like a work of art than an actual milling machine, but it is a milling machine and a fantastic one at that! It grinds with perfection. It is so easy to use, even someone like me, a beginner to the whole homemade bread from freshly milled wheat berries group can figure this out! When I first saw this on Amazon, I hesitated..bad move on my part. It quickly became unavailable. A week later I was searching again and there it was! Available again so I grabbed it. Lucky for me I did because this strong, beautiful working piece of art sold out within a day. If you happen to catch this available you should pick it up right away - they sell out quickly! It fits perfectly on my counter and doesn't take up a lot of space. it is heavy duty and can grind from fine to coarse. It's a bit pricey, but is well worth it for it's beauty and ability!
S**W
Harvest vs Classic year review
I've had my nutriminal Harvest and Classic Grain Mill for over a year. I bought both last year during the Black Friday sale, because I didn't know which one would grind flour the best Stone Mill vs Impact Mill. My findings; I need not have worried on that account they both grind fine flour superbly, both are quality built. I had no mechanical issues with either one, both continue to run perfectly. Pros Classic Impact Mill: *If you want a high quality Grain Mill at the lowest price you cannot beat the Classic Impact Mill during a Black Friday sale. * The Classic Grain Mill can mill large batches of grain with more ease then the Harvest. Particularly helpful for people who are making four or more loaves of bread or other big batches of baking at one time. *The plastic exterior is a nice solid plastic, not flimsy. Cons Classic: Impact Mills are notoriously noisy not good for your ears either wear ear protection or step far enough away while milling. Pros Harvest Stone Mill: *It is a beautiful Grain Mill with its wooden exterior and no visible plastic. Between that and it's compact size it can stay out on my counter no lugging it back and forth in-between uses. It's there ready for me to use whenever I need it. The beauty and convenience for me is what puts the Harvest over the Classic. * The Harvest is better equipped to give you a larger cut grain if you choose that option so it's perfect for making cream of wheat or other large cut grain for hot cereal. This was important for our family the ability to make freshly milled hot cereal on cold mornings. Cons Harvest Stone Mill: *Cost *Flour dust Flour dust and mess: The Harvest with a open spout is more likely to produce a fine dust. For me it is not excessive or goes everywhere I do a light wipe around the Harvest after use. For me personally the Classic has been more of a problem even though it's self-contained when you pop open the tightly sealed lid I end up getting flour mess on my counter tops. The Harvest wins this category for me. Cleaning: both are easy to clean, but the Harvest again takes the lead in this category with just simply brushing out the spout and a quick exterior wipe down. If your stone produces a glaze the solution is to simply run a cup of rice through your mill and it cleans the stones nicely. I have found the Classic takes a little bit more work, because it is bigger and has large gaskets with crevices for the flour to get stuck in needing to be brushed out. Either mill is a good quality product that will produce a fine flour. My preference is the Harvest for it's convenience, size, aesthetics and ease of cleaning. One last thing go ahead if you are new to freshly milled grains purchase a cookbook specifically for baking with freshly milled flour there is a learning curve here. It's not your regular AP or even a store-bought bag of whole flour. I hope this review helps you with your purchase. Wishing you good baking โบ
S**L
Still going strong after about three years.
Got this a few months before the pandemic. Having it and a supply of wheat berries on hand turned out to be very handy, and it got a lot of use. I don't usually review appliances shortly after receiving them, since durability is an important factor to me. But I've had this for 30-odd months now, and have used it at least a few times each week. I've had no issues and it is still in regular use. I don't use it as an all purpose augur or grinder so I can't speak to every use case such as grinding beans or oily seeds, I just use mine for grinding various types of fairly similar cereal grains such as wheat, barley, and barley malt, mostly for the purposes of making bread, cereal, and beer. On its finest grind, it can make perfectly usable pastry flour from soft wheat, on its most wide-open grind, it manages to crack malted barley just perfectly for small-batch brewing. In-between gets pretty much any fineness needed for any kind of flour or porridge. I wouldn't use this mill for processing industrial quantities, I doubt if you can get a doppio zero grind now matter how many times you run flour through, and I can believe that running large beans or oily items through could potentially damage it, but I never assumed that those kind of uses were a reasonable expectation for this mill and haven't attempted them. What I have done is run probably about 10 to 20 pounds of grain through on any given week, which has been more than enough to keep my family well-supplied with fresh cereal, artisan bread, all-purpose flour, and delicious ales and lagers. The machine sits out all the time because it looks nice, and because its likely to get used on any given day. It doesn't create much dust and I find it easy to keep clean. The quantities and grains I use have never seemed like they were stressing the machine and I see no likely reason for it to fail anytime soon, so I am going to go ahead and give this my recommendation for people whose usage is likely to be similar to mine. Hope it helps.
K**D
Love it!!!
I just got my nutrimill harvest and must say it is great!! I ground hard winter wheat berries, rye berries, and dried sweet corn picture included after grinding the corn. Awesome little machine it does have a little bit of a learning curve as far as adjustments for flour but I caught on fairly fast but I did alot of research before buying. Well worth the money and the company claims to give a five year manufacture and workmanship warranty. So far I would recommend it to anyone looking for a stone grind mill will update if I have any issues. UPDATE: Easy to clean they give you a brush and the mill hopper bowl comes off and you can remove top stone and brush the stones off. Great customer service. The bottom stone can be unscrewed to fix and jams but I haven't had any trouble with this. I have used my mill daily for a couple months now and it still works like new. I even ground my own corn. I would definitely recommend this to anyone looking for an electric stone grind mill.
S**Y
Extremely good mill
When buying this mill and looking at the other reviews I was a bit questionable about the quality and production amount from the grains. But donโt worry as this machine produced way more flour than you would expect. It worked very well and fast, it was super reliable, it wasent loud at all, it fits perfectly into the kitchen and looks very pretty. It was the easiest assembly ever. The grind speed was almost instant I would say it took about 5 seconds to grind what you put in. I love this machine. I have also attached a picture of my sourdough starter after just 2 days using this machine to mill up some organic einkorn berries I found on Amazon. Honestly perfect I would recommend ๐
D**R
Nice
Verry nice pretty color and apprentice
N**N
Worth the wait
So glad I waited to buy the one I really wanted. I totally understand why these go in and out of stock so frequently. As a new to FMF, this grain mill has made it such an easy transition. The machine not only looks nice, is easy to clean but grinds my grains perfectly.
C**N
Beautiful, effective, and very very dusty in the kitchen
I love baking my own bread, and there's nothing better than stone-ground grain for doing that. My family likes to experiment with different flours (spelt, emmer, einkorn, rye, etc) to see how they change the nature of the sourdough starter and the flavor of the resulting loaf. The idea of grinding my own and getting exactly the mix I wanted was very appealing, and also the best way to acquire the natural yeasts and bacilli that grown on organic grains. I've been hankering after grinding my own for awhile, looked at getting a grinding attachment for my KitchenAid but most of those use metal rollers and I really wanted to try an actual stone. This mill uses carborundum stones for grinding, so I let my wallet groan a bit and gave it a try. It really works, although if you're expecting finely ground pastry-style flour you'll probably be disappointed the finest grind I can reliably get is a little coarse. That's not a problem for me--I like it that way. I also like that you can adjust the grind for breakfast cereals (we love cracked wheat) as well. The mill itself is not all that large, but it's certainly a presence on a kitchen counter; it's encased in wood and very attractive. You'll want to read the directions thoroughly before using it: It can't grind oily or very wet grains, seeds, and nuts--they'll quickly clog up the works and become a pain to clean. Also, you do not just dump your grain into the hopper and turn the unit on--it won't turn if you do that. Instead, you turn the machine on and get it grinding, THEN pour your grain into the hopper and watch the grind falling into your container. You'll want to adjust the grind by turning the dial in the hopper, and it sometimes help if you grind very hard grain in two passes, the first to break it into large chunks, the second to pulverize into flour. It's very quick, which is good--there's a large warning sign on the mill telling you to only grind for ten minutes, then let the machine rest 10 minutes to avoid overheating. It's also very VERY messy; on my first attempt the entire kitchen was covered in a fine rye dust within 60 seconds, and I was coughing a bit. You may want to grind outside, and wear a facemask. Fine flour particles floating in the air can be a safety hazard, not only because you breathe them but mostly because they're flammable. If you're really filling the air and there's a pilot light around, they can potentially cause a fire. We improvised a hook over the flour chute from cardboard and a dishtowel, and eventually will fashion a more permanent hook to keep the flour in the bowl. That works really well, and we don't need to mop the whole kitchen after a grind. Cleaning the mill, not surprisingly, is also a dusty affair. It comes with a brush to clean the rollers and such and it's not difficult to do, but it does take some work. I don't want to contaminate different grinds with leftover flour, so I Overall, though, it's a great addition for any home baker and recommended.
W**.
Plugged in went up in smoke
I was so excited to finally get this item in my kitchen counter. I liked forward to the day I will make fresh flour from wheat grains since I bake bread every week. I plugged it in the power n it went up in smoke. I still have my whole grains in the pantry and still awaiting for a refund.
N**E
Absolute Love! :-)
I've been planning on purchasing a grain mill for months but was torn between this Nutrimill Grain Mill and the Kitchenaid Mill attachment, and I'm so happy I decided to save money for a few months and went with this Nutrimill instead. I was also torn with this purchase because I already own a Vitamix equipped with the dry container but again, so happy I decided to go with the Nutrimill for the following reasons: (1) Nutrimill over Vitamix: As noted, I saved for a few months and simultaneously did quite a bit of research before choosing to go with the Nutrimill. I don't mean to get too scientific here lol ;-), but although a Vitamix can technically create "flour" there seems to be a significant difference between the nutritional, physical, chemical, structural, thermal properties of slowly milling grains (i.e. what the Nutrimill does) compared to bursting the grain which is what a blender/Vitamix does. Additionally, I found Vitamix made the flour feel more dense vs the Nutrimill flour which came out more fluffy and the bread had better results. (2) Results: I used mine immediately and was incredibly pleased with the consistency of the flour and was able to bake a bread right away. The flour milled much quicker than I had initially thought. From youtube reviews, they kept saying "it may take longer than other mills" but this speed was pretty excellent to me. I had 5 cups of flour in 3 mins. (3) Nutrimill over Kitchenaid attachment: From my research, although the Kitchenaid can mill grains and is much cheaper, the flour isn't very fine and fluffy, and you're left having to clean an entire messy attachment after. I love my Kitchenaid but cleaning the attachments can be tedious. (4) Quality: Sturdy, well-made, and just gorgeous! :-) (5) Instructions: I was very pleased with all the instructional cards and details that were included. I was able to read and feel quite comfortable in using the mill within 15 mins. The only thing I would say is, on youtube, some reviewers recommended milling about 2 to 3 cups of rice and discarding for the first use to ensure the mill is "cleaned". The instructions didn't say this, so I'm not sure if it's actually necessary or not, but I chose to. Expensive, but highly recommend :-) I'm so happy with my purchase!
R**Z
buena compra
Sรฉ la calidad de harina que consumo
M**L
Powerful grinder
I was pleasantly surprised after reading some of the reviews after I had ordered it. Itโs heavy, grinds grain quick and efficiently. Iโve used it every day since I got it and Iโm very happy with my grinder. Sits on the counter just waiting to make my next loaf of bread
M**W
Greatest kitchen gaget
Love Love Love. There is a little dust, but nothing like I was expecting it to be. The flour is lovely. I use it every day. It is a little loud, so I don't run it when my babies are napping.
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