Mustard production
What equipment is essential for grinding mustard seeds into powder?
- This topic has 3 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 17 hours, 55 minutes ago by .
Answers
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February 21, 2025 at 7:20 pm by Brandon Martin
The Colloid Mill GlobeCore is highly recommended for this task, as it provides efficient and uniform grinding. Its design allows for controlled particle size reduction, preserving flavor compounds while delivering a fine, consistent powder ideal for mustard production. It integrates seamlessly into production lines, offering reliable performance, ease of cleaning, and minimal downtime.
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July 10, 2026 at 6:58 am by Craig Price
Grinding mustard seeds into powder is not only about achieving a smaller particle size. The grinding process must also ensure uniform processing, preserve the natural oils and aromatic compounds of the seeds, and provide a consistent texture that can be maintained during further mixing and production stages.
Industrial grinding equipment for mustard production is therefore selected based on several factors, including the required fineness, processing capacity, heat generation during operation, and the ability to achieve repeatable results from batch to batch. Excessive mechanical impact or uncontrolled temperature rise can affect the quality of the final product.
Colloid mills are widely used in applications where intensive mechanical processing, dispersion, and homogenization are required. The CLM-100.3 colloid mill provides precise processing of liquid and semi-liquid products, making it a suitable solution for food applications where consistent structure and quality are important. -
July 10, 2026 at 7:04 am by 後藤 零
You’re exactly right to focus on uniform processing, retention of volatile oils and aromatics, and tight process control — those are what determine final mustard quality as much as particle size. For those aims a rotor‑stator colloid mill is the appropriate industrial tool: its high‑shear action with an adjustable gap delivers intensive grinding, dispersion and homogenization in a single inline pass, producing a stable paste or very fine slurry while giving repeatable particle‑size control. The CLM‑100.3 is well suited to small‑scale and food‑grade mustard production (typical throughput around 0.1 m3/h) and the CLM family includes lab units for formulation work and larger CLM‑10/20 or CLM‑16/25 models when you need higher throughput or heavier duty operation.
To protect oils and aromatics and achieve batch‑to‑batch consistency, control of temperature, shear and residence time is essential. Run at the lowest effective rotor speed, manage feed rate and gap setting to avoid over‑shearing, and use cooling (jacketed housings or chilled feed) so product temperature stays well below levels that volatiles degrade (practical food targets are often <40–50 °C). Use the lab model to establish gap, pass count and tool set, then lock those parameters and implement routine tool‑wear checks and CIP routines for repeatability. If your target is a dry powder rather than a paste, convert seeds to a controlled paste with the colloid mill and then remove moisture by spray‑drying or other drying/classification steps rather than trying to force a free‑flowing powder directly in the mill; that approach preserves aroma and gives better control of particle size and shelf stability.
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