The wheat is picked from the fields it's grown in and then is ground down to fine pieces.
You take your chosen graih, be in wheat, barley, corn, etc, and grind it up until it reaches a powder form. From there it may be bleached, and preservatives added, as well as raising agents.
on a field...
It is called a mill.
The variation in strengh is minimal; winter flour means that the wheat plants are planted in the winter and harvested in the summer. Whereas summer flour is planted in the summer but harvested in the winter. This means that both crops get a similar amount of time in the sun, so flour strengh is not significantly affected.
It;s made mostly of wheat that is harvested for flour. The flour & eggs combined in a factory make the pasta.
Flour and grains will hatch worms after a while. They are harvested with worm eggs on them, and none of the processing kills the eggs. To avoid getting worms in flour, freeze it for 24 hours or more or put bay leaves in it.
Wheat is a plant. It grows in the ground. Wheat seeds are called grains. Wheat used in food is either whole wheat, cracked wheat or wheat flour. Whole wheat is the grains of the wheat plant. When whole wheat is crushed, it becomes cracked wheat. When whole wheat is ground into powder, it is wheat flour.
there are harvested in the spring
harvested
Oil is not harvested, crops are harvested. Oil is explored and is normally pumped out of the ground.
It's not harvested, it is made in a factory!
It is conventionally harvested in Sep. or Oct.
It is stored in the farmer's grain bins until it can be sold to companies that mill it and enable it to be made into flour, pasta, bread and other food items. Some wheat is used as livestock feed.
Seahorses are not harvested commercially. They are, however, important food in the chain for many of the commercially harvested fish.
When is squash harvested? How and why was this important to the survival of the early colonist?