As with numerous agricultural products, harvesting oats will lead to
co-mingling of the oats with other components found in the
field and transportation process, and these foreign materials need
to be removed to make oats suitable for human consumption.
Cleaning removes the unwanted materials – such as corn, soybeans,
foreign material, weed seeds, wheat, or barley – from the milling
quality oats.
The oats are brought at harvest into the mill by
the growers. The miller only accepts oats that will yield flakes of
satisfactory quality, and will attempt to maximise profits by estimating
the potential yield and looking at the price of the oats and any
possible added value obtainable. The oats then cleaned and dried so that
they may be safely stored until they are needed. When the oats enter
the mill, they pass under a magnetic separator to remove foreign metal
objects, a very common practice in many food-processing operations.
The
they are cleaned, taking off straws, stones and weed seeds and are then
sent through a stream of air to remove any dust or light grains that
would be unsuitable for milling.
This is followed by a dry
stoner that removes high-density but similar-sized particles such
as rocks and other grains, such as maize.
Even high quality
oat grain will require cleaning to ensure that only sound oats are
processed. The oats must appear wholesome and clean, must be
free from extraneous material, with large and light coloured oats that
give a high yield being preferred.