We have the same mill, with both the electric and hand cranks, I think it cost us around $260 total and also had a lovely experience dealing with Pleasant Hill Grain.Theo said:I bought a Family Grain Mill from Pleasant Hill Grain. I got the hand cranked model for $139. It works great. This mill also has an option for an electric motor, and different attachments for roller milling and other tasks. It will not mill corn though. Pleasant Hill Grain was good to deal with.
We love it, and it grinds quite quickly with the electric base, ditto on Theo's hand-cranking experience--it's a bit monotonous, but you get exactly the same result as electric (just takes longer). We bake 4 loaves of bread every week and do the same as Theo--we add a cup or two of white flour (organic, unbleached, no additives) for better gluten chains.
Just a note about using it for corn though, you can grind dent corn in this mill, just not popcorn--it's too hard. Other than the wheat-type grains we've also ground rice and oats into flour with it and I'm currently on the lookout for dent corn after reading a cool article in Mother Earth News over the fall about a particular variety (called Floriani Red Flint, article was in the M.E.N. Food and Garden Series: Guide to Fresh Food All Year).
We buy organic hard red and hard white wheat locally from www.bridensolutions.ca or our local organic/health food shops, along with rice, oats, rye, spelt, and beans--50# bags or they also offer 48# in a 6 gallon bucket for a few things at Briden. We've also bought from www.incaseof.ca/store although they are a little further away (about 2.5 hours drive).
These links are both for Canadian suppliers located here in Alberta, so probably not that helpful to the OP but perhaps helpful to other Canucks reading along. Both sell organic as well as regular grains, rice, beans and other storage food and supplies (such as water storage containers, grain mills, buckets and gamma seal lids, survival kits etc.) we just prefer organic.