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Nope. Not whole grains. Mash is a consistency and a good mash shouldn't have any whole grains, though some might have slipped through depending upon how finely they set the grind. I added whole grains to my layer mash, so whole grains visualized there were added to finely ground mash feed from the local feed mill. A mash is something similar to gruel or porridge and these mash consistency feeds were meant for feeding as a wet feed.
The crumbles and pellets are merely the same ingredients found in a mash but are steamed to form the crumbles, and steamed, extruded and cut to form the pellets. In order for them to be processed in this manner, they have an even more fine grind than do the mash consistency feeds. Some mills fine grind their mash, some do a larger cut on the grains that allow some oats and smaller grains to escape being ground fully but it is all according to that particular feed mill's preference.
Nope. Not whole grains. Mash is a consistency and a good mash shouldn't have any whole grains, though some might have slipped through depending upon how finely they set the grind. I added whole grains to my layer mash, so whole grains visualized there were added to finely ground mash feed from the local feed mill. A mash is something similar to gruel or porridge and these mash consistency feeds were meant for feeding as a wet feed.
The crumbles and pellets are merely the same ingredients found in a mash but are steamed to form the crumbles, and steamed, extruded and cut to form the pellets. In order for them to be processed in this manner, they have an even more fine grind than do the mash consistency feeds. Some mills fine grind their mash, some do a larger cut on the grains that allow some oats and smaller grains to escape being ground fully but it is all according to that particular feed mill's preference.