Wheat is not a naturally occurring crop. It is the result of generations of cultivating and breeding by farmers starting with a wild grass and choosing the best seeds each cycle.
Hunter gatherers could exist in the same areas as farmers and could snack on the farmer's wheat crops. However before farmers, no wheat. So when everybody was a hunter gatherer nobody had wheat.
yes wheat does grind into flour
Yes we can grind whole wheat flour into all purpose floor Yes we can grind whole wheat flour into all purpose floor
You take the wheat (which is a grain) and grind it up.
There's really no difference. Durum wheat is the plant. Semolina is a coarse grind of the durum wheat berries. You can also grind them finer to make durum flour.
Flour
To mill wheat is to grind it (under a large stone mill wheel).
no
a mill that grind wheat into bread
Yes
Windmills are needed usually to grind corn into wheat using wind-power. The main reason of using wind-power is because to grind corn needs a huge amount of energy and it would cost more to grind the corn into wheat than the actual price of the wheat. Nowadays windmills are not used and instead other ways are use to grind corn which are more power-efficient and therefore do not need much power and so can be powered from the grid
These days we use high powered electric mills that operate at 400 degrees F. The mills grind the wheat seed ejecting the bran (fiber layer) and germ (seed), leaving just the endosperm (starchy layer).
The discovery of agriculture marked the beginning of the Neolithic Age. This included the cultivation of crops, such as wheat and barley, and the domestication of animals, such as sheep and goats. This shift from a hunter-gatherer lifestyle to settled farming communities occurred around 10,000 BCE.