[Sca-cooks] Almond Mill?

Johnna Holloway johnnae at mac.com
Mon Feb 21 03:31:53 PST 2011


They still exist. You can do an image search on mandelkvarn, almond  
mill, or Mandelmuel and turn them up. One catalog lists them as : 6350  
180 mm

Mandelkvarn Almond grinder Mandelmühle

They were mentioned back in 2001 and that post is in the Florilegium.


From: Carolbarke at aol.com

Date: Fri, 19 Oct 2001 01:32:23 EDT

To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org

Subject: [Sca-cooks] Re: Almond mill
'>>almond mill' (Mandelmuel) as a common

 >kitchen implement (though it makes allowance for

 >cooks not having one, telling them to use a mortar

 >instead). Given the prevalence
Gee I'd really like to see a picture or the real thing of one of these

Mandelmuel's.<<
The latest catalog from king Arthur Flour has a nut mill in it.  It  
looks a

lot like a meat grinder, only slightly smaller

Aethelthryth (re-lurking)

Johnnae



On Feb 20, 2011, at 2:31 PM, wheezul at canby.com wrote:


> I'm trying to put together a rudimentary index for the 16th century
> cookbooks I have access to, mostly because I am tired of trying to
> remember 'where *did* I read that'...
> I've been looking through Staindl's "Ein Sehr Künstlichs vnnd  
> nutzliches
> Kochbüch" found on google books.  The facsimile is a bit smeared and  
> hard
> to read, but the very first recipe referenced what I think is an  
> almond
> mill, something I haven't found elsewhere (yet).snipped
> Has anyone else see a reference to an almond mill elsewhere?  I've  
> found a
> picture of a 16th century mustard mill, but I'd love to know more.  It
> seems that this mill would grind the almonds very fine.



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