In A New Space Behind Pane Bianco, Hayden Flour Mills Is Back In Action

Categories: Locally Grown

hayden11.jpg
Shelby Moore
Loaves just-baked for a farmers market.

Last August, a large wooden crate arrived at the sandwich shop Pane Bianco. In the crate -- bearing an Austrian return address -- was a 1600 pound stone mill and sifter: the sole piece of machinery that would revive Tempe's century and a half-old Hayden Flour Mills brand for which Mill Avenue was named.

Transparency is key for the owner of Hayden Flour Mills, Jeff Zimmerman, who is seeing the operation through from farm to flour by teaming up with local producers like Ramona Farms in the Gila River Community, planting heritage grain in existing farms, and milling the wheat pre-industrial era style alongside his daughter, Emma. Some flours they package themselves to sell at markets, but much is now the base for Chris Bianco's award-winning pizza doughs, breads and, most recently, the polenta and meatballs dish (for example) served at his new Italian Restaurant in Central Phoenix. The stone mill allows Zimmerman to grind their flour as fine as they please, and to fill specific orders for the chefs at Bianco who like the polenta so coarse it takes a couple extra hours to cook.

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Shelby Moore
Milling some polenta, Emma Zimmerman adjusts the coarseness on the Austrian-born stone mill.

Many know of Hayden Flour Mills for the enormous white boarded-up factory off of Mill Avenue (for which it was named) in Downtown Tempe, but little know that Maricopa County once had a thriving wheat and milling industry over a century ago, right up until the days where Hayden Flour Mill's Arizona Rose brand flour badge of honor for food quality and a household staple (just ask your grandparents). Zimmerman, who grew up on wheat farms himself, decide to register the Hayden Flour Mill brand name, which hadn't been renewed since it last changed hands several years ago and the factory closed down in 1998.

"It lets me tell that story," says Zimmerman, with regards to Charles Hayden, whom he admires for originally using stone mills to grind local grain, and Arizona Rose. "A story that is so rich and which involves the local food movement."

Shortly after purchasing the brand name, Zimmerman met another man interested in sourcing local wheat and milling in-house for his restaurants -- Chris Bianco. Bianco himself had once been lent a hand for a space to start his pizzeria, so he extended a similar offer to Zimmerman and the team was born, and Zimmerman started planting and sourcing wheat and corn shortly after.

Of all places, it turns out that Italy owes a bit more than you'd think to Maricopa County and the farmers who produce Arizona-variety golden duram wheat. Seventy percent of what a farm like Ramona Farms grows is shipped directly to Italy, because today the wheat is still praised for its taste and partly for being grown by irrigation, where farmers can control the percent of water that ends up in the final grains, narrowly specified by the Italian buyers (if you're paying by the pound, water weight makes a difference).
It's what gives their pasta that signature golden color, and "they consider it to be some of the best in the world," said Marco Bianco, a chef for the Chris Bianco-owned restaurants who heads the dough-making for their breads and pizzas.

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Shelby Moore
Chef Robbie at Pane Bianco shows off some freshly rolled dough, made from a Hayden Flour Mills pizza dough blend.

Zimmerman is also successfully bringing heritage grains (varieties that existed before the genetic cross-breeding of the 1960, which led to shorter plants and heavy use of pesticide) back from the dead, in some cases from wheat collectors' freezers. Hayden's white Sonoran wheat is a heritage grain that the Pima indians planted heavily, and which Charles Hayden milled predominately in Hayden Flour Mills' heyday a century ago. And, as Emma puts it, "They were doing local before local was the thing to do."

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Shelby Moore
White Sonoran wheat, which produces a white wheat bread, was originally farmed by Pima indians and heavily milled by Charles Hayden.

Under the Zimmermans, the Hayden Flour Mills' new project is growing quickly, selling a number of flours like the Arizona golden durum and semolina, all-purpose, and whole wheat to mixes for bread and pastries. Milling organic yellow corn, they sell packages of their fine and coarse polenta (or blended with wheat germ or buckwheat), as well as cornmeal and corn flour. Between May and June Zimmerman will be harvesting Hopi white, Navajo blue, and Floriani red corn (which will be milled for polenta).
"This is one of the biggest opportunities people in Arizona have to experience really fresh grain," said Zimmerman.

Packaged products are currently sold at the front of Pane Bianco, as well as at the Singh Family Market on Saturdays, the Downtown Phoenix Public Market, and FnB's new Bodega market.

To find original and adapted recipes, and to see what Hayden Flour Mills is currently up to, check out their blog.

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Shelby Moore
Where the packaging happens.

Location Info

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Hayden Flour Mill

4404 N. Central Ave., Phoenix, AZ

Category: Restaurant

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Trattoria Bianco

4743 N. 20th St., Phoenix, AZ

Category: Restaurant

Pane Bianco

4404 N. Central Ave., Phoenix, AZ

Category: Restaurant

Singh Farms

8900 E. Thomas Road, Scottsdale, AZ

Category: Restaurant

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Bodega

7121 E. 5th Ave., Scottsdale, AZ

Category: General

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2 comments
Ella
Ella

um, so some guy steals a family's last name and grinds some corn in the back of a restaurant?  I don't get it, Mr. Zimmerman. It doesn't look like you got permission or an endorsement of the Hayden family. Is it like domain squatting for good family names?  I'm think I'll make myself a Rockfeller! Its also really STRANGE that you give any interviews at all on what's going on at the physical actual location of the Hayden Flour Mill on Mill Ave...since you never had anything what-so-ever to do with it...NEVER. Can someone explain why stealing a family's name and putting it on some ground corn is super cool?  So, a French mill stone powered by the current of a running river grinding the local indian corns and wheats is the same as your australian grinder stuffed in the back of a restaurant  getting grain from sourced locations around...where exactly? You're calling it "Arizona golden durum" but since you're calling yourself "Hayden Flour Mill" where's it actually from?

Kristin Heggli
Kristin Heggli

Very cool to see that the tradition of Hayden Flour Mills is being revived!

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