For those of you who like non-GMO stuff, there is an outfit here in South 
Carolina called Anson Mills that sells non-GMO heirloom grains if you wanna 
check it out.

http://ansonmills.com/ http://ansonmills.com/

Here is an interesting tid bit from their site, talking about the guy who 
started Anson Mills:

 The research began with corn. In 1995, Glenn explored rural back roads looking 
for the famous white Carolina mill corn that was revered in Antebellum 
plantation inventories and recipes for its high mineral and floral 
characteristics and its creamy mouthfeel. 

 

 He found this corn in a bootlegger’s field near Dillon, South Carolina in 
1997, and planted and harvested his own first crop of 30 acres in 1998. Known 
as Carolina Gourdseed White, the single-family hand-select dated back to the 
late 1600s.
 

 Glenn passed the Gourdseed grits around to chefs in Charleston and Atlanta, 
and they all went crazy.
 

 The discovery of Carolina Gourdseed White, and of other nearly extinct 
varieties of Southern mill corn, fueled Glenn’s efforts to preserve nutrition 
and flavor in heirloom corn. But he knew the corn would have to be milled as 
carefully as it was grown.
 

 Returning to historic documents, Glenn read about an heirloom that had been 
bred to blow down in late fall for hand harvest under snow in deep winter. The 
corn, an 1850 yellow dent of Appalachian provenance called John Haulk, was 
known to have made the “finest cornbread and mush.” 

 

 The fact that it was milled under freezing conditions after full field 
ripening and drying puzzled Glenn until he froze and milled his own Gourdseed 
White. The flavors of the cold-milled corn were stunning. With this experiment, 
Glenn “rediscovered” cold milling and, in so doing, found a way to offset the 
heat damage grains experience between two stones. He also found a perfect place 
to store his seed corn: in the freezer.

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