Popcorn Cleaning Round II

As promised I will detail a bit more about cleaning popcorn. Usually when I talk to someone about this they wonder if I’m lathering and rinsing the seeds. I am not. The more appropriate name for the process would probably be classifying. Like panning for gold. I only want the gold.

To do this we start with a machine called a screener / scalper. It is commonly referred to as a ‘Clipper’. It takes in the shelled popcorn, scalps out the larger debris with the top screen and screens out the smaller debris with the bottom screen. This model is based after an older A.T. Farrell machine called an M2B Clipper. Commodities International in Trilla, Illinois manufactures this replicate. They call it the ‘Eliminator 224’.


The Eliminator does a great job getting rid of a whole bunch on unwanted debris and chaff. But it cannot get rid of debris the same size as popcorn like a stone or a pea. Density is not its concern. For that you need a gravity table.

Gravity tables of this small size are not commonly made anymore. This Forsberg #6 gravity table was manufactured in the 1950’s in Thief River Falls, MN. It was a bit of a rare find so we jumped at the opportunity to add it to our process. It shakes and blows air through an elevated deck causing the grain to ‘float.’ The action of the deck causes light objects (cull) to fall downward and the heavier objects to flow up towards the discharge spout. It has many knobs and adjustments and has a pretty steep learning curve to get it to do what you want. But I’m sure by the end of 22,000 lbs of popcorn anyone would feel pretty comfortable.

So now we have ourselves some pretty clean popcorn. The only thing left are seeds and other debris with the same size and density. For now we pick those out by hand. But the ideal next step is something amazing called a ‘color sorter.’ We might have our eyes on one…you can be sure I’ll tell you about it if so. 

I’ll sign off with a picture of my father’s beloved Farmall 560 which ran the hydraulic auger for the entire duration. Thanks!

 

 

A visit to the Biosphere

While we were in the Tucson area, we made a pilgrimage to the hippy-nerd mecca of Biosphere 2. You may remember the news sensation this experiment caused in the 90s, or maybe you only know and love it from the Pauly Shore movie Biodome. How there has not been a more serious film treatment of this story I have no idea, because it’s just about the greatest story ever told.
 Basically, a science-oriented theater troupe teamed up with a Texas billionaire to build a Mars colony on Earth: a totally self-contained 3 acre greenhouse. The troupe would live in it for a year, growing all their own food (I don’t believe they planted popcorn) and recycling all their air and water, as if they were on the surface of another planet. The project had every kind of problem you could imagine, from the oxygen slowly disappearing, to a lack of food, ant infestations, to the Biospherians splitting into warring factions that wouldn’t talk to each other. All the glory and dread of the experience is very well told in Jane Poynter’s book the Human Experiment.
 The media edified the project, then eviscerated it as a scam. But hey- this thing really happened, even if many mistakes were made. It was asking a really important question: can you create a sealed off ecosystem that survives long-term? There isn’t much work being done to answer this now, so far as I know. The scale of the experiment is prohibitively large. We do know the answer is yes on the scale of the Earth, since life has survived here for billions of years. Earth might be considered materially closed because it really only gets sunlight in, and releases heat out to space. But Earth’s biosphere is just a thin film coating on a massive dynamic rock, with volcanoes bringing gases and soils up to the surface all the time, so maybe it’s silly to call it a closed system. Here’s a recent article questioning if life needs a planet with plate tectonics. I’m both attracted and repulsed by the idea of living in domes, but fortunately we don’t have to. Still, wouldn’t it be neat to know if we could?
Also, Carl Zimmer wrote a great NYTimes piece on Biosphere just last weekend.
The mechanical lung, to prevent the windows from exploding or imploding as the building heats and cools.