 
By Cindy Green
Milan, Minn. — A charming red Cape Cod style chicken coop,
an old barn filled with goats and dome-shaped brooder houses
neatly frame Mark and Wendy Lange’s farmyard, surrounded by
wheat and corn fields. Near the farmhouse, a shed door opens
to a flour-milling facility with gleaming white
walls and stainless steel equipment.
The fourth-generation farm is the Langes’ realized dream —
to sustain a living with a small, diversified operation.
Mark and Wendy started milling the organic wheat, corn and
oats they grow on their 80-acre farm in October 2003. Then,
they packaged flour in brown paper bags and delivered it to
local homes and grocers. Today they have expanded to a
region-wide business with the Dry Weather Creek Farm label.
The Langes’ customer base now includes grocery stores,
co-ops, restaurants, bakeries and direct-delivery stops
within a 50-mile radius of their farm, located in
Minnesota’s heartland — Chippewa County. And they’re
negotiating with natural foods stores in the Twin Cities.
Besides their own grains, the Langes have started marketing
whole and ground flax, rye and other organic grains from
area farmers. “We want everything to be Minnesota grown,”
Mark says. They produce about 400 pounds per month of wheat
flour and 100 pounds of the other grains.
There are only three other stone mills in Minnesota — in
Freeport, Cook and Middle River. Dry Creek’s flours are
being requested by artisan bread makers more than 100 miles
away, but shipping costs are prohibitively expensive.
Enter AURI
As Dry Weather Creek’s business has grown, so has the need
for nutritional labels, shelf-stable products and convenient
bread and baked-good mixes. Charan Wadhawan, AURI food
scientist, has helped the Langes develop from a home-based
to a commercial business. She’s offered “anything and
everything they want to know about flour and mixes — the
difference between hard and soft wheat, what is good for
cake, what’s good for bread,” Wadhawan says.
Wadhawan has primarily tested Dry Weather Creek’s flour
protein, fat and moisture. “Flour can’t be too wet; that
will reduce the shelf stability … But because of the heat
production during stone grinding, they’re actually more
stable than commercial milled flours.”
She is also designing nutritional labels for the flours and
mixes even though that’s only required for food products
with 50,000 or more sale units per year. “It’s a good idea
because a lot of people are looking at nutritional labels,”
Wadhawan says. “And they don’t have to hide anything bad
about whole grains … the trace minerals that our bodies need
are in whole grains and not in refined flour.”
The
grinding way
The milling process starts with a cleaner that shakes
out the chaff and seed. The grain is then piped into a bin
where it is stored until ready to grind. Only red spring
wheat, Dry Creek’s main product, is stored in the main bin.
Other grains are milled as needed. When the wheat is ready
to package, it is piped into
a scouring machine, then to one of two mills. The primary
mill grind grinds whole wheat flour and unbleached white,
which requires a separate process to shake out most of the
bran, sold separately. The second mill grinds wheat into
coarse flour used in crackers and whole grain breads for a
“nutty” texture.
Though stone grinding sounds like a labor intensive, Old
World process, the mills are modern and automated. Grinding
stones are not visible. Both the top spinning stone and
lower stationery stone disk — that work much like a mortar
and pestle — are enclosed in stainless steel. As the wheat
grinds, the flour works itself to the outside of the stone
where it falls into a canvas-covered bin.
In smaller separate mills, the Langes process organic corn
and oatmeal that they grow and rye and flax
purchased from organic farmers. “The bags are stamped and
logged so we can track everything
back to when it was made,” Mark says.
The Midwest Organic Services Association certifies both the
Langes’ organic grain production and milling operation. Dry
Weather Creek is also licensed and annually inspected by the
State of Minnesota.
Farm
history
Though Mark and Wendy did not farm until six years ago, the
farm has been in Mark’s family for nearly a century. “This
farm was originally purchased by my great-great grandparents
in 1910,” Mark says. His grandparents owned it when Mark was
growing up in Montevideo, just 12 miles away.
“This is where I played as a kid; I spent a lot of time
here,” Mark says. When his grandfather died in 1988, Mark
purchased the farm. But because he made a living as a tool
and dye maker in Montevideo, he rented the crop land to
conventional farmers, lived in the farmhouse and raised
horses.
In 2000, Mark met and soon after married Wendy. Both in
their early 40s, they decided to farm Mark’s land themselves
and return it to its original, natural condition. “We didn’t
want to get into conventional farming with the high costs;
our farm is too small,” Mark says. “And we like the organic
way, the natural (farming methods) with all the advantages
to soil and water.”
The Langes enrolled in a local Land Stewardship Project
course called Farm Beginnings, “that did wonders for us,”
Wendy says. The program for new sustainable farmers helped
them write a business plan and figure out how to make an
income on small acreage.
In 2002, they started to turn land that had been farmed
conventionally for decades into organic production. “We had
one section that qualified organic the first year because it
had been in alfalfa,” with no chemical additives, Wendy
says.
They also wanted to incorporate some small-scale dairy and
livestock production. “We wanted to choose enterprises that
compliment each other. We tried chickens and omega-3 eggs
for awhile, thinking that would fit in. It didn’t.” They
found more enjoyment in 13 South African Boer goats.
“Through trial and error, we decided goats are our livestock
of choice.” They want to eventually expand a 50-goat herd to
a dairy with 175 does.
Growing
steady
“Every year income from the mill goes up,” Mark says.
He would soon like to leave the tool and dye
business to be a full-time farmer. “That’s not the end of
our goals, but it is one of them,” says Wendy
who quit her secretarial job at the Milan elementary school
three years ago because “someone had
to be home when the goats were kidding.”
Mark and Wendy both emphasize that the past six years
building a farm operation with biological diversity has not
been easy. “It’s taken a lot of work to get the land back to
organic … to recover from
its chemical addiction,” Mark says.
“We still have a long ways to go,” Wendy says. But when the
day comes that the Langes, who have
no children, are ready to retire, they want an operation
that could be sustained for generations. “When we’re ready
to leave, another young farmer can stay in farming through
Farm Beginnings, so all our hard work is not wasted.”
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