Re: [Collab] Mechanization of fonio processing (Re: Collab Digest, Vol 31, Issue 4)

You're welcome, Gary, and thanks for your kind remarks and additional information. I mentioned the "Décorticage du fonio" (Dramé, et al 2004) document to Joni in a call earlier, and she wondered about translating it. This work is interesting in that it discusses different approaches. It might be interesting to recapitulate the main points of this and some related documents for a renewed overview of approaches to dehulling fonio, maybe in both French and English. Then taking a step further, would a collection of articles on challenges, experiences, and solutions for dehulling various milllets in a book form help advance work in post-harvest processing? Such a project might ideally be led by someone in the field of agricultural engineering. Regarding terms and aspects of the processing of fonio described in these works: * "son" in French is indeed bran; I'm not aware of any nuance of distinction between "son" & "bran" * "blanchiment" corresponds in this context to pearling, as far as I understand it; however, in the English translation of Cruz et al's 2011 book, they use the literal translation of "whitening," which, while descriptive of the color of the final product one sees, does not seem to me to be ideal for discussing the process (I do, however, see that "whitening" is accepted as a term alongside "pearling" - for example in the database at https://isl.ics.forth.gr/bbt-federated-thesaurus/FoodEx2Matrix/en/page/?uri=... ) The fonio I consumed regularly in Futa Jalon, Guines ('85-'87), and occasionally in Bamako, Mali (2000) all appeared to be pearled (whitish in color). Not sure why pearling is so closely associated with dehulling in practice, as reflected in the document links shared, but there would be cultural as well as technical reasons. On the other hand, the fonio I consumed regularly in southern Togo ('79-'81), and occasionally in Niamey, Niger ('00-'04), through a Togolese connection, was always a light brown, due to the heating process used to facilitate dehulling. No info on how much of the bran was preserved or lost in that process, which also involved pounding in a wooden mortar. Cleaning of fonio might yield higher proportions of extraneous matter than what you note for proso, especially if traditional methods of threshing are used. One FAO expert noted in a 2022 correspondence that some fonio imported into Italy was rejected there because of the presence of extraneous materials such as feathers and stones mixed with the grains, evidently due to poor cleaning (no further info on that story). One recent webpage missing from my collection of references is about the CAA / Terra Ingredients facility in Dakar, Senegal.: "Bill Gates Takes Note of Fonio, Recognizing its Potential for Positive Impact," Terra Ingredients, 26 May 2024 https://www.terraingredients.com/news/bill-gates-takes-note-of-fonio-recogni... That webpage article is kind of a counterpart to Bill Gates' widely circulated blogpost from April 2024. In the video embedded in this page (and also Gates' original posting), CAA managing director Laura Layousse mentions that they take a new automated approach to mechanical dehulling of the grains, inspired by traditional methods, and will be able to process 5 tons in 8 hours. Again, I am not aware of any technical documents on their methods that are available to the public, but such would be a useful addition to the discussion. All the best, Don DO, EL, MI, US NAMA On Wed, Aug 7, 2024 at 8:48 AM Gary Wietgrefe via Collab < collab@lists.millets2023.space> wrote:
Your fonio hulling summary is excellent--by far the best summary I have ever seen. Though in French, Decorticage du fonio (Hulling of Fonio) decorticage_Cruz JF.pdf (cirad.fr) <https://agritrop.cirad.fr/607531/1/ID607531.pdf> walks through various steps, process, and results of several methods of hulling from raw seed to final stage "white hulled" fonio. Everyone considering hulling any grain, especially millets, should read this! What I found extremely interesting on that report was page 3 documenting a waste stream of 23% hulls, 9% "son" (must be inside bran) leaving 68% white fonio. Since proso has a clean interior after the hulling stage, I suggested earlier hulled proso yield of 75-80% is good and seems to track fonio reported cleanout. (Keep in mind, whether fonio, proso, or other millets all must go through a cleaning stage to take out harvested chaff, weed seed, dirt, and other inert materials which could range from 3-20% before entering the huller.) Thank you Don! Very good report....Gary Wietgrefe
On Wed, Aug 7, 2024 at 6:01 AM <collab-request@lists.millets2023.space> wrote:
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Today's Topics:
1. Mechanization of fonio processing (Re: International Fonio Day - July 27) (Don Osborn)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message: 1 Date: Tue, 6 Aug 2024 13:42:22 -0400 From: Don Osborn <don@milletsalliance.org> To: collab@lists.millets2023.space Subject: [Collab] Mechanization of fonio processing (Re: International Fonio Day - July 27) Message-ID: < CA+RHibVjp8Zdh8gSqv+j8waDuDVW9okYm1GGESvs7ds1hGtBVw@mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
In an offlist response to my post on Fonio Day (7/27) David Brenner asked if there was more information about Sanoussi Diakité's fonio dehulling machine. Well, I found all that and a lot more - all but the first and the last two in French only. Per the title of this email, I'll broaden the scope slightly to mention mechanical threshing of fonio (which is still typically harvested by hand, as far as I know), but still focus on dehulling.
Since we're now in August, with fonio as the millet of the month, I'll summarize this information below as a matter of record, for those who have an interest in dehulling technologies for fonio and in general (it's not as simple as one might think). In the process, a picture emerges of how the fonio dehulling technology has continued to develop, especially since the early 1990s, and what its impact has been on fonio production.
A good starting place is within a book on fonio from the 2010s, first published in French, and then in English translation. See chapter 6 on improving post-harvest technologies, which mentions early interest in mechanizing fonio processing - in Guinea during the early 1900s..Mechanical dehulling is discussed in a section of that chapter beginning on page 93 in the English edition, and page 106 in the French. The "Sanoussi" dehuller is the one originated by Mr. Diakité. * Cruz, Jean-François, Famoï Beavogui, & Djibril Dramé, "Le fonio, une céréale africaine," Éditions Quae, 2011. https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/31535 (2 options to download) * Cruz, Jean-François & Famoï Beavogui, with the collaboration of Djibril Dramé and Thierno Alimou Diallo, ""Fonio, an african cereal," CIRAD & IRAG, 2016. https://agritrop.cirad.fr/582085/1/ID582085.pdf
For deeper dives into the design and operation of various dehullers, there are a number of shorter documents. First, one from 2004: In it, several dehullers ("décortiquers"), and indeed approaches to dehulling, are discussed. Diakité's was evidently the first (dating back to the 1990s), and is called here by his first name "Sanoussi." Other dehullers apparently use different methods Dramé, Djibril, Claude Marouzé, Gouyahali Son, Francis Loua, & Jean-François Cruz, "Décorticage du fonio : Rapport de synthèse," Projet CFC/IGG - (FIGG/02) - Amélioration des Technologies Post-récolte du Fonio (CIRAD-IER-IRAG-IRSAT), Juin 2004 (31 pages) https://agritrop.cirad.fr/607531/1/ID607531.pdf
Then there is a 2005 book by some of the same authors about an improved dehuller, built on the experience of the earlier machines: GMBF evidently stands for the four countries involved in the design: Guinea, Mali, Burkina (Faso), and France Marouzé, Claude, Djibril Dramé, Francis Loua, Gouyahali Son, & Patrice Thaunay. Décortiqueuer à Fonio GMBF: Dossier de fabrication. Projet Fonio CFC/ICG - Amélioration des Technologies Post-récolte du Fonio. L'Harmattan, 2005.
https://www.editions-harmattan.fr/livre-decortiqueur_a_fonio_gmbf_dossier_de...
So, from the mid-2000s it seems that the GMBF dehuller was the focus of attention, at least in Guinea, Mali, and Burkina Faso. See for example a 2016 study report: Ferré, Thierry, Jean-François Cruz, & Ignace Medah, "La mécanisation du décorticage du fonio au Mali et au Burkina Faso : Étude de cas," ImpresS (Impact of Research in the South), Juin 2016.
https://agritrop.cirad.fr/586750/1/Etude_de_cas_%C3%A9quipement_fonio_IMPRES...
The latter document reports that farmers credit dehullers with saving fonio from abandonment as a crop. This, because of the time and labor previously necessary to dehull it (mostly on the part of women).
This is a theme mentioned also in a short video featuring Mr. Diakité. "Sanoussi Diakité, inventeur de la décortiqueuse de fonio," BBC Afrique, 16 April 2022 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PxB3vyhUZPE . Given the date of this video, one has the impression that Mr. Diakité continues work on his dehuller, and that it is very much still in use in Senegal, at least.
A 2018 article discusses fonio dehulling technology from the point of view of innovation and diffusion. From this, you get a sense of the background of some of the work. Interestingly, it notes that two Malian women discussed mechanization of fonio dehulling with CIRAD researchers in 1993 - the same year of Mr. Diakité's invention in Senegal. This brief piece does not give a sense of other initiatives or how they figure in current usage, nor does it go into details about the technology itself, but is another piece of the story: Ferré, Thierry, Ignace Medah, Jean-François Cruz, Marie-Hélène Dabat, Pierre-Yves Le Gal, Matthieu Chtioui & Agathe Devaux-Spatarakis, "Innover dans le secteur de la transformation agroalimentaire en Afrique de l'Ouest," Cahiers Agricultures, 27 1 (2018) https://doi.org/10.1051/cagri/2018004
Despite the impression one might get from the above that mechanical processing of fonio (and especially dehulling) is becoming more widespread in West Africa, it is apparently unknown to some growers. This 2020 article about the work of Minnesota-based Terra Ingredients mentions women in a co-op they work with, processing fonio by hand (the traditional way), and that ""the fonio soon will not be processed by hand." It further mentions that "The company spent 12 months on what he [Terra Ingredients director Peter Carlson] said was an 'R&D nightmare' as it worked to create a mechanized way to process fonio." There is no mention of how the abovementioned efforts fit in their research and development process. Terra Ingredients is the major importer of fonio in the US, and supplies various enterprises with the grain; the source of this article; North Dakota-based Stone Mill is one of their partners for late-stages of processing fonio.) "Terra's quest to bring fonio out of Africa and onto shelves around the world," Stone Mill, 6 March 2020
https://www.stonemill.net/terras-quest-to-bring-fonio-out-of-africa-and-onto...
What Terra Ingredients and their Senegalese partner CAA are bringing to the processing, and in particular dehulling, of fonio are developing is larger-scale processing, both for export and local urban markets. For more on CAA, see: https://caa.sn/about-us/ . For mention of the Terra Ingredients - CAA partnership "to build a modern processing facility in Dakar, Senegal for processing and dehulling," along with how Stone Mill in ND fits into the supply chain, see: https://www.terraingredients.com/fonio/supplychain/ . (Possible details on their approach to dehulling will have to wait for a later posting...).
Anyway, there's clearly a lot going on in the "fonio space" in West Africa, the US, and internationally. It seems that the small scale dehullers that began to come on the scene in the 1990s were revolutionary, both for local producers and for beginning the local commercialization of fonio (I saw some of that in Bamako in 2000). That foundation has permitted more ambitious efforts, including exports (by enterprises such as Yolélé), as well as the most recent larger-scale efforts mentioned above.
From a North American perspective, ths may be interesting information for consumers and vendors. Further technical details may be of interest for discussions of dehulling of small millets in our region, as David suggested. I personally wonder whether there is a potential for small scale dehullers for artisanal producers of alternative grains.
Don
DO, EL, MI, US NAMA
On Sun, Jul 28, 2024 at 11:12 PM Don Osborn <don@milletsalliance.org> wrote:
Somehow missed this, but there has been an International Fonio Day on July 27 for some years.
Evidently it was proposed by a Senegalese, Sanoussi Diakité, who dates his invention of a fonio dehulling machine to 27 July 1993./1 Mr. Diakité won a Rolex award for this invention, based on its impact on local fonio processing and benefits to rural communities - especially women who are traditionally tasked with processing it by hand - in fonio-producing areas./2
NAMA has fonio as the "millet of the month" in August this year, but could consider possibly switching it to July in 2025.
However, it will also be good to check about other dates associated with fonio. Noting for example "Ovazu" (Ɔvazu), or fonio festival, of the Akposso and Akebou in southern Togo, celebrated after harvest, later in the year,/3 often on the second Saturday of December./4
Similarly, I'd like to check for other such observations connected with various millets, before considering further possible changes in the millet of the month calendar.
Don Osborn, PhD (East Lansing, MI, US) North American Millets Alliance
Notes: 1. "International Fonio Day - 27 July," by Nicole Gregoire, Image-i-nations, 26 July 2016 https://image-i-nations.com/international-fonio-day-27-july/ 2. "Sanoussi Diakité: Grain of Hope," Rolex Awards 1996 https://www.rolex.org/rolex-awards/applied-technology/sanoussi-diakite 3. Ovazu Foundation - About, https://www.ovazufoundation.org/about 4. "Ovazu (Fête des moissons en pays Akposso et Akebou)," Togo Tourisme
https://togo-tourisme.com/culture/fetes-traditionnelles/ovazu-fete-des-moiss...

Don, I was so impressed with your fonio hulling summary especially that French paper (and I certainly cannot read French), that I agree with you that it should be translated to English. Obviously, someone would need to get permission to make the translation, but I would personally pay for translating (assuming that it would not cost more than $1000). If we are going to move North American millets into food products, millets must be hulled. Otherwise, we must assume that they will continue to be used for birdseed, and occasionally poultry, hog, and cattle feed, mushroom beds, and for ethanol--none of which add value. Furthermore, you are correct we need to take it a step further. It would be good to put together a booklet, and YouTube video by an engineer to demonstrate current proso millet hulling schematic along with proposed modifications to process various sized millets [especially proso, foxtail, and pearl (Japanese may require a different process)] using the same principles as fonio. A lab scale demonstration operation would be the next step. An agricultural engineer may be okay, but not necessary. For example, a food processing engineer (or graduate student food engineer) may be better prepared to move a raw product into the food chain. Let's start with getting the French paper translated to English. Once we understand that paper, we will have a better idea of how to move to the engineer-to-food processing stage....Gary On Thu, Aug 8, 2024 at 9:21 AM Don Osborn <don@milletsalliance.org> wrote:
You're welcome, Gary, and thanks for your kind remarks and additional information.
I mentioned the "Décorticage du fonio" (Dramé, et al 2004) document to Joni in a call earlier, and she wondered about translating it. This work is interesting in that it discusses different approaches. It might be interesting to recapitulate the main points of this and some related documents for a renewed overview of approaches to dehulling fonio, maybe in both French and English. Then taking a step further, would a collection of articles on challenges, experiences, and solutions for dehulling various milllets in a book form help advance work in post-harvest processing? Such a project might ideally be led by someone in the field of agricultural engineering.
Regarding terms and aspects of the processing of fonio described in these works: * "son" in French is indeed bran; I'm not aware of any nuance of distinction between "son" & "bran" * "blanchiment" corresponds in this context to pearling, as far as I understand it; however, in the English translation of Cruz et al's 2011 book, they use the literal translation of "whitening," which, while descriptive of the color of the final product one sees, does not seem to me to be ideal for discussing the process (I do, however, see that "whitening" is accepted as a term alongside "pearling" - for example in the database at https://isl.ics.forth.gr/bbt-federated-thesaurus/FoodEx2Matrix/en/page/?uri=... )
The fonio I consumed regularly in Futa Jalon, Guines ('85-'87), and occasionally in Bamako, Mali (2000) all appeared to be pearled (whitish in color). Not sure why pearling is so closely associated with dehulling in practice, as reflected in the document links shared, but there would be cultural as well as technical reasons. On the other hand, the fonio I consumed regularly in southern Togo ('79-'81), and occasionally in Niamey, Niger ('00-'04), through a Togolese connection, was always a light brown, due to the heating process used to facilitate dehulling. No info on how much of the bran was preserved or lost in that process, which also involved pounding in a wooden mortar.
Cleaning of fonio might yield higher proportions of extraneous matter than what you note for proso, especially if traditional methods of threshing are used. One FAO expert noted in a 2022 correspondence that some fonio imported into Italy was rejected there because of the presence of extraneous materials such as feathers and stones mixed with the grains, evidently due to poor cleaning (no further info on that story).
One recent webpage missing from my collection of references is about the CAA / Terra Ingredients facility in Dakar, Senegal.: "Bill Gates Takes Note of Fonio, Recognizing its Potential for Positive Impact," Terra Ingredients, 26 May 2024
https://www.terraingredients.com/news/bill-gates-takes-note-of-fonio-recogni...
That webpage article is kind of a counterpart to Bill Gates' widely circulated blogpost from April 2024. In the video embedded in this page (and also Gates' original posting), CAA managing director Laura Layousse mentions that they take a new automated approach to mechanical dehulling of the grains, inspired by traditional methods, and will be able to process 5 tons in 8 hours. Again, I am not aware of any technical documents on their methods that are available to the public, but such would be a useful addition to the discussion.
All the best,
Don
DO, EL, MI, US NAMA
On Wed, Aug 7, 2024 at 8:48 AM Gary Wietgrefe via Collab < collab@lists.millets2023.space> wrote:
Your fonio hulling summary is excellent--by far the best summary I have ever seen. Though in French, Decorticage du fonio (Hulling of Fonio) decorticage_Cruz JF.pdf (cirad.fr) <https://agritrop.cirad.fr/607531/1/ID607531.pdf> walks through various steps, process, and results of several methods of hulling from raw seed to final stage "white hulled" fonio. Everyone considering hulling any grain, especially millets, should read this! What I found extremely interesting on that report was page 3 documenting a waste stream of 23% hulls, 9% "son" (must be inside bran) leaving 68% white fonio. Since proso has a clean interior after the hulling stage, I suggested earlier hulled proso yield of 75-80% is good and seems to track fonio reported cleanout. (Keep in mind, whether fonio, proso, or other millets all must go through a cleaning stage to take out harvested chaff, weed seed, dirt, and other inert materials which could range from 3-20% before entering the huller.) Thank you Don! Very good report....Gary Wietgrefe
On Wed, Aug 7, 2024 at 6:01 AM <collab-request@lists.millets2023.space> wrote:
Send Collab mailing list submissions to collab@lists.millets2023.space
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You can reach the person managing the list at collab-owner@lists.millets2023.space
When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of Collab digest..."
Today's Topics:
1. Mechanization of fonio processing (Re: International Fonio Day - July 27) (Don Osborn)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message: 1 Date: Tue, 6 Aug 2024 13:42:22 -0400 From: Don Osborn <don@milletsalliance.org> To: collab@lists.millets2023.space Subject: [Collab] Mechanization of fonio processing (Re: International Fonio Day - July 27) Message-ID: < CA+RHibVjp8Zdh8gSqv+j8waDuDVW9okYm1GGESvs7ds1hGtBVw@mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
In an offlist response to my post on Fonio Day (7/27) David Brenner asked if there was more information about Sanoussi Diakité's fonio dehulling machine. Well, I found all that and a lot more - all but the first and the last two in French only. Per the title of this email, I'll broaden the scope slightly to mention mechanical threshing of fonio (which is still typically harvested by hand, as far as I know), but still focus on dehulling.
Since we're now in August, with fonio as the millet of the month, I'll summarize this information below as a matter of record, for those who have an interest in dehulling technologies for fonio and in general (it's not as simple as one might think). In the process, a picture emerges of how the fonio dehulling technology has continued to develop, especially since the early 1990s, and what its impact has been on fonio production.
A good starting place is within a book on fonio from the 2010s, first published in French, and then in English translation. See chapter 6 on improving post-harvest technologies, which mentions early interest in mechanizing fonio processing - in Guinea during the early 1900s..Mechanical dehulling is discussed in a section of that chapter beginning on page 93 in the English edition, and page 106 in the French. The "Sanoussi" dehuller is the one originated by Mr. Diakité. * Cruz, Jean-François, Famoï Beavogui, & Djibril Dramé, "Le fonio, une céréale africaine," Éditions Quae, 2011. https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/31535 (2 options to download) * Cruz, Jean-François & Famoï Beavogui, with the collaboration of Djibril Dramé and Thierno Alimou Diallo, ""Fonio, an african cereal," CIRAD & IRAG, 2016. https://agritrop.cirad.fr/582085/1/ID582085.pdf
For deeper dives into the design and operation of various dehullers, there are a number of shorter documents. First, one from 2004: In it, several dehullers ("décortiquers"), and indeed approaches to dehulling, are discussed. Diakité's was evidently the first (dating back to the 1990s), and is called here by his first name "Sanoussi." Other dehullers apparently use different methods Dramé, Djibril, Claude Marouzé, Gouyahali Son, Francis Loua, & Jean-François Cruz, "Décorticage du fonio : Rapport de synthèse," Projet CFC/IGG - (FIGG/02) - Amélioration des Technologies Post-récolte du Fonio (CIRAD-IER-IRAG-IRSAT), Juin 2004 (31 pages) https://agritrop.cirad.fr/607531/1/ID607531.pdf
Then there is a 2005 book by some of the same authors about an improved dehuller, built on the experience of the earlier machines: GMBF evidently stands for the four countries involved in the design: Guinea, Mali, Burkina (Faso), and France Marouzé, Claude, Djibril Dramé, Francis Loua, Gouyahali Son, & Patrice Thaunay. Décortiqueuer à Fonio GMBF: Dossier de fabrication. Projet Fonio CFC/ICG - Amélioration des Technologies Post-récolte du Fonio. L'Harmattan, 2005.
https://www.editions-harmattan.fr/livre-decortiqueur_a_fonio_gmbf_dossier_de...
So, from the mid-2000s it seems that the GMBF dehuller was the focus of attention, at least in Guinea, Mali, and Burkina Faso. See for example a 2016 study report: Ferré, Thierry, Jean-François Cruz, & Ignace Medah, "La mécanisation du décorticage du fonio au Mali et au Burkina Faso : Étude de cas," ImpresS (Impact of Research in the South), Juin 2016.
https://agritrop.cirad.fr/586750/1/Etude_de_cas_%C3%A9quipement_fonio_IMPRES...
The latter document reports that farmers credit dehullers with saving fonio from abandonment as a crop. This, because of the time and labor previously necessary to dehull it (mostly on the part of women).
This is a theme mentioned also in a short video featuring Mr. Diakité. "Sanoussi Diakité, inventeur de la décortiqueuse de fonio," BBC Afrique, 16 April 2022 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PxB3vyhUZPE . Given the date of this video, one has the impression that Mr. Diakité continues work on his dehuller, and that it is very much still in use in Senegal, at least.
A 2018 article discusses fonio dehulling technology from the point of view of innovation and diffusion. From this, you get a sense of the background of some of the work. Interestingly, it notes that two Malian women discussed mechanization of fonio dehulling with CIRAD researchers in 1993 - the same year of Mr. Diakité's invention in Senegal. This brief piece does not give a sense of other initiatives or how they figure in current usage, nor does it go into details about the technology itself, but is another piece of the story: Ferré, Thierry, Ignace Medah, Jean-François Cruz, Marie-Hélène Dabat, Pierre-Yves Le Gal, Matthieu Chtioui & Agathe Devaux-Spatarakis, "Innover dans le secteur de la transformation agroalimentaire en Afrique de l'Ouest," Cahiers Agricultures, 27 1 (2018) https://doi.org/10.1051/cagri/2018004
Despite the impression one might get from the above that mechanical processing of fonio (and especially dehulling) is becoming more widespread in West Africa, it is apparently unknown to some growers. This 2020 article about the work of Minnesota-based Terra Ingredients mentions women in a co-op they work with, processing fonio by hand (the traditional way), and that ""the fonio soon will not be processed by hand." It further mentions that "The company spent 12 months on what he [Terra Ingredients director Peter Carlson] said was an 'R&D nightmare' as it worked to create a mechanized way to process fonio." There is no mention of how the abovementioned efforts fit in their research and development process. Terra Ingredients is the major importer of fonio in the US, and supplies various enterprises with the grain; the source of this article; North Dakota-based Stone Mill is one of their partners for late-stages of processing fonio.) "Terra's quest to bring fonio out of Africa and onto shelves around the world," Stone Mill, 6 March 2020
https://www.stonemill.net/terras-quest-to-bring-fonio-out-of-africa-and-onto...
What Terra Ingredients and their Senegalese partner CAA are bringing to the processing, and in particular dehulling, of fonio are developing is larger-scale processing, both for export and local urban markets. For more on CAA, see: https://caa.sn/about-us/ . For mention of the Terra Ingredients - CAA partnership "to build a modern processing facility in Dakar, Senegal for processing and dehulling," along with how Stone Mill in ND fits into the supply chain, see: https://www.terraingredients.com/fonio/supplychain/ . (Possible details on their approach to dehulling will have to wait for a later posting...).
Anyway, there's clearly a lot going on in the "fonio space" in West Africa, the US, and internationally. It seems that the small scale dehullers that began to come on the scene in the 1990s were revolutionary, both for local producers and for beginning the local commercialization of fonio (I saw some of that in Bamako in 2000). That foundation has permitted more ambitious efforts, including exports (by enterprises such as Yolélé), as well as the most recent larger-scale efforts mentioned above.
From a North American perspective, ths may be interesting information for consumers and vendors. Further technical details may be of interest for discussions of dehulling of small millets in our region, as David suggested. I personally wonder whether there is a potential for small scale dehullers for artisanal producers of alternative grains.
Don
DO, EL, MI, US NAMA
On Sun, Jul 28, 2024 at 11:12 PM Don Osborn <don@milletsalliance.org> wrote:
Somehow missed this, but there has been an International Fonio Day on July 27 for some years.
Evidently it was proposed by a Senegalese, Sanoussi Diakité, who dates his invention of a fonio dehulling machine to 27 July 1993./1 Mr. Diakité won a Rolex award for this invention, based on its impact on local fonio processing and benefits to rural communities - especially women who are traditionally tasked with processing it by hand - in fonio-producing areas./2
NAMA has fonio as the "millet of the month" in August this year, but could consider possibly switching it to July in 2025.
However, it will also be good to check about other dates associated with fonio. Noting for example "Ovazu" (Ɔvazu), or fonio festival, of the Akposso and Akebou in southern Togo, celebrated after harvest, later in the year,/3 often on the second Saturday of December./4
Similarly, I'd like to check for other such observations connected with various millets, before considering further possible changes in the millet of the month calendar.
Don Osborn, PhD (East Lansing, MI, US) North American Millets Alliance
Notes: 1. "International Fonio Day - 27 July," by Nicole Gregoire, Image-i-nations, 26 July 2016 https://image-i-nations.com/international-fonio-day-27-july/ 2. "Sanoussi Diakité: Grain of Hope," Rolex Awards 1996 https://www.rolex.org/rolex-awards/applied-technology/sanoussi-diakite 3. Ovazu Foundation - About, https://www.ovazufoundation.org/about 4. "Ovazu (Fête des moissons en pays Akposso et Akebou)," Togo Tourisme
https://togo-tourisme.com/culture/fetes-traditionnelles/ovazu-fete-des-moiss...

Thank you, Gary, for this generous and forward-looking offer. Please let's talk about this off-list, as well as the longer term strategy. This opens up some exciting possibilities. In the meantime, I can check with the authors in case there might already be a translation somewhere that doesn't come up in internet searches. If not, my impression (from a quick test) is that a very usable translation could be generated with automatic tools (which are getting very good between major languages), plus some quick post-editing where technical terms are used. This would not be suitable for publication, but should answer immediate questions. Then a formal translation could be arranged. Again, thanks and looking forward to speaking with you, Don DO, EL, MI, US NAMA On Thu, Aug 8, 2024 at 12:31 PM Gary Wietgrefe <gww374@gmail.com> wrote:
Don, I was so impressed with your fonio hulling summary especially that French paper (and I certainly cannot read French), that I agree with you that it should be translated to English. Obviously, someone would need to get permission to make the translation, but I would personally pay for translating (assuming that it would not cost more than $1000).
If we are going to move North American millets into food products, millets must be hulled. Otherwise, we must assume that they will continue to be used for birdseed, and occasionally poultry, hog, and cattle feed, mushroom beds, and for ethanol--none of which add value.
Furthermore, you are correct we need to take it a step further. It would be good to put together a booklet, and YouTube video by an engineer to demonstrate current proso millet hulling schematic along with proposed modifications to process various sized millets [especially proso, foxtail, and pearl (Japanese may require a different process)] using the same principles as fonio. A lab scale demonstration operation would be the next step.
An agricultural engineer may be okay, but not necessary. For example, a food processing engineer (or graduate student food engineer) may be better prepared to move a raw product into the food chain.
Let's start with getting the French paper translated to English. Once we understand that paper, we will have a better idea of how to move to the engineer-to-food processing stage....Gary
On Thu, Aug 8, 2024 at 9:21 AM Don Osborn <don@milletsalliance.org> wrote:
You're welcome, Gary, and thanks for your kind remarks and additional information.
I mentioned the "Décorticage du fonio" (Dramé, et al 2004) document to Joni in a call earlier, and she wondered about translating it. This work is interesting in that it discusses different approaches. It might be interesting to recapitulate the main points of this and some related documents for a renewed overview of approaches to dehulling fonio, maybe in both French and English. Then taking a step further, would a collection of articles on challenges, experiences, and solutions for dehulling various milllets in a book form help advance work in post-harvest processing? Such a project might ideally be led by someone in the field of agricultural engineering.
Regarding terms and aspects of the processing of fonio described in these works: * "son" in French is indeed bran; I'm not aware of any nuance of distinction between "son" & "bran" * "blanchiment" corresponds in this context to pearling, as far as I understand it; however, in the English translation of Cruz et al's 2011 book, they use the literal translation of "whitening," which, while descriptive of the color of the final product one sees, does not seem to me to be ideal for discussing the process (I do, however, see that "whitening" is accepted as a term alongside "pearling" - for example in the database at https://isl.ics.forth.gr/bbt-federated-thesaurus/FoodEx2Matrix/en/page/?uri=... )
The fonio I consumed regularly in Futa Jalon, Guines ('85-'87), and occasionally in Bamako, Mali (2000) all appeared to be pearled (whitish in color). Not sure why pearling is so closely associated with dehulling in practice, as reflected in the document links shared, but there would be cultural as well as technical reasons. On the other hand, the fonio I consumed regularly in southern Togo ('79-'81), and occasionally in Niamey, Niger ('00-'04), through a Togolese connection, was always a light brown, due to the heating process used to facilitate dehulling. No info on how much of the bran was preserved or lost in that process, which also involved pounding in a wooden mortar.
Cleaning of fonio might yield higher proportions of extraneous matter than what you note for proso, especially if traditional methods of threshing are used. One FAO expert noted in a 2022 correspondence that some fonio imported into Italy was rejected there because of the presence of extraneous materials such as feathers and stones mixed with the grains, evidently due to poor cleaning (no further info on that story).
One recent webpage missing from my collection of references is about the CAA / Terra Ingredients facility in Dakar, Senegal.: "Bill Gates Takes Note of Fonio, Recognizing its Potential for Positive Impact," Terra Ingredients, 26 May 2024
https://www.terraingredients.com/news/bill-gates-takes-note-of-fonio-recogni...
That webpage article is kind of a counterpart to Bill Gates' widely circulated blogpost from April 2024. In the video embedded in this page (and also Gates' original posting), CAA managing director Laura Layousse mentions that they take a new automated approach to mechanical dehulling of the grains, inspired by traditional methods, and will be able to process 5 tons in 8 hours. Again, I am not aware of any technical documents on their methods that are available to the public, but such would be a useful addition to the discussion.
All the best,
Don
DO, EL, MI, US NAMA
On Wed, Aug 7, 2024 at 8:48 AM Gary Wietgrefe via Collab < collab@lists.millets2023.space> wrote:
Your fonio hulling summary is excellent--by far the best summary I have ever seen. Though in French, Decorticage du fonio (Hulling of Fonio) decorticage_Cruz JF.pdf (cirad.fr) <https://agritrop.cirad.fr/607531/1/ID607531.pdf> walks through various steps, process, and results of several methods of hulling from raw seed to final stage "white hulled" fonio. Everyone considering hulling any grain, especially millets, should read this! What I found extremely interesting on that report was page 3 documenting a waste stream of 23% hulls, 9% "son" (must be inside bran) leaving 68% white fonio. Since proso has a clean interior after the hulling stage, I suggested earlier hulled proso yield of 75-80% is good and seems to track fonio reported cleanout. (Keep in mind, whether fonio, proso, or other millets all must go through a cleaning stage to take out harvested chaff, weed seed, dirt, and other inert materials which could range from 3-20% before entering the huller.) Thank you Don! Very good report....Gary Wietgrefe
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Today's Topics:
1. Mechanization of fonio processing (Re: International Fonio Day - July 27) (Don Osborn)
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Message: 1 Date: Tue, 6 Aug 2024 13:42:22 -0400 From: Don Osborn <don@milletsalliance.org> To: collab@lists.millets2023.space Subject: [Collab] Mechanization of fonio processing (Re: International Fonio Day - July 27) Message-ID: < CA+RHibVjp8Zdh8gSqv+j8waDuDVW9okYm1GGESvs7ds1hGtBVw@mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
In an offlist response to my post on Fonio Day (7/27) David Brenner asked if there was more information about Sanoussi Diakité's fonio dehulling machine. Well, I found all that and a lot more - all but the first and the last two in French only. Per the title of this email, I'll broaden the scope slightly to mention mechanical threshing of fonio (which is still typically harvested by hand, as far as I know), but still focus on dehulling.
Since we're now in August, with fonio as the millet of the month, I'll summarize this information below as a matter of record, for those who have an interest in dehulling technologies for fonio and in general (it's not as simple as one might think). In the process, a picture emerges of how the fonio dehulling technology has continued to develop, especially since the early 1990s, and what its impact has been on fonio production.
A good starting place is within a book on fonio from the 2010s, first published in French, and then in English translation. See chapter 6 on improving post-harvest technologies, which mentions early interest in mechanizing fonio processing - in Guinea during the early 1900s..Mechanical dehulling is discussed in a section of that chapter beginning on page 93 in the English edition, and page 106 in the French. The "Sanoussi" dehuller is the one originated by Mr. Diakité. * Cruz, Jean-François, Famoï Beavogui, & Djibril Dramé, "Le fonio, une céréale africaine," Éditions Quae, 2011. https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/31535 (2 options to download) * Cruz, Jean-François & Famoï Beavogui, with the collaboration of Djibril Dramé and Thierno Alimou Diallo, ""Fonio, an african cereal," CIRAD & IRAG, 2016. https://agritrop.cirad.fr/582085/1/ID582085.pdf
For deeper dives into the design and operation of various dehullers, there are a number of shorter documents. First, one from 2004: In it, several dehullers ("décortiquers"), and indeed approaches to dehulling, are discussed. Diakité's was evidently the first (dating back to the 1990s), and is called here by his first name "Sanoussi." Other dehullers apparently use different methods Dramé, Djibril, Claude Marouzé, Gouyahali Son, Francis Loua, & Jean-François Cruz, "Décorticage du fonio : Rapport de synthèse," Projet CFC/IGG - (FIGG/02) - Amélioration des Technologies Post-récolte du Fonio (CIRAD-IER-IRAG-IRSAT), Juin 2004 (31 pages) https://agritrop.cirad.fr/607531/1/ID607531.pdf
Then there is a 2005 book by some of the same authors about an improved dehuller, built on the experience of the earlier machines: GMBF evidently stands for the four countries involved in the design: Guinea, Mali, Burkina (Faso), and France Marouzé, Claude, Djibril Dramé, Francis Loua, Gouyahali Son, & Patrice Thaunay. Décortiqueuer à Fonio GMBF: Dossier de fabrication. Projet Fonio CFC/ICG - Amélioration des Technologies Post-récolte du Fonio. L'Harmattan, 2005.
https://www.editions-harmattan.fr/livre-decortiqueur_a_fonio_gmbf_dossier_de...
So, from the mid-2000s it seems that the GMBF dehuller was the focus of attention, at least in Guinea, Mali, and Burkina Faso. See for example a 2016 study report: Ferré, Thierry, Jean-François Cruz, & Ignace Medah, "La mécanisation du décorticage du fonio au Mali et au Burkina Faso : Étude de cas," ImpresS (Impact of Research in the South), Juin 2016.
https://agritrop.cirad.fr/586750/1/Etude_de_cas_%C3%A9quipement_fonio_IMPRES...
The latter document reports that farmers credit dehullers with saving fonio from abandonment as a crop. This, because of the time and labor previously necessary to dehull it (mostly on the part of women).
This is a theme mentioned also in a short video featuring Mr. Diakité. "Sanoussi Diakité, inventeur de la décortiqueuse de fonio," BBC Afrique, 16 April 2022 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PxB3vyhUZPE . Given the date of this video, one has the impression that Mr. Diakité continues work on his dehuller, and that it is very much still in use in Senegal, at least.
A 2018 article discusses fonio dehulling technology from the point of view of innovation and diffusion. From this, you get a sense of the background of some of the work. Interestingly, it notes that two Malian women discussed mechanization of fonio dehulling with CIRAD researchers in 1993 - the same year of Mr. Diakité's invention in Senegal. This brief piece does not give a sense of other initiatives or how they figure in current usage, nor does it go into details about the technology itself, but is another piece of the story: Ferré, Thierry, Ignace Medah, Jean-François Cruz, Marie-Hélène Dabat, Pierre-Yves Le Gal, Matthieu Chtioui & Agathe Devaux-Spatarakis, "Innover dans le secteur de la transformation agroalimentaire en Afrique de l'Ouest," Cahiers Agricultures, 27 1 (2018) https://doi.org/10.1051/cagri/2018004
Despite the impression one might get from the above that mechanical processing of fonio (and especially dehulling) is becoming more widespread in West Africa, it is apparently unknown to some growers. This 2020 article about the work of Minnesota-based Terra Ingredients mentions women in a co-op they work with, processing fonio by hand (the traditional way), and that ""the fonio soon will not be processed by hand." It further mentions that "The company spent 12 months on what he [Terra Ingredients director Peter Carlson] said was an 'R&D nightmare' as it worked to create a mechanized way to process fonio." There is no mention of how the abovementioned efforts fit in their research and development process. Terra Ingredients is the major importer of fonio in the US, and supplies various enterprises with the grain; the source of this article; North Dakota-based Stone Mill is one of their partners for late-stages of processing fonio.) "Terra's quest to bring fonio out of Africa and onto shelves around the world," Stone Mill, 6 March 2020
https://www.stonemill.net/terras-quest-to-bring-fonio-out-of-africa-and-onto...
What Terra Ingredients and their Senegalese partner CAA are bringing to the processing, and in particular dehulling, of fonio are developing is larger-scale processing, both for export and local urban markets. For more on CAA, see: https://caa.sn/about-us/ . For mention of the Terra Ingredients - CAA partnership "to build a modern processing facility in Dakar, Senegal for processing and dehulling," along with how Stone Mill in ND fits into the supply chain, see: https://www.terraingredients.com/fonio/supplychain/ . (Possible details on their approach to dehulling will have to wait for a later posting...).
Anyway, there's clearly a lot going on in the "fonio space" in West Africa, the US, and internationally. It seems that the small scale dehullers that began to come on the scene in the 1990s were revolutionary, both for local producers and for beginning the local commercialization of fonio (I saw some of that in Bamako in 2000). That foundation has permitted more ambitious efforts, including exports (by enterprises such as Yolélé), as well as the most recent larger-scale efforts mentioned above.
From a North American perspective, ths may be interesting information for consumers and vendors. Further technical details may be of interest for discussions of dehulling of small millets in our region, as David suggested. I personally wonder whether there is a potential for small scale dehullers for artisanal producers of alternative grains.
Don
DO, EL, MI, US NAMA
On Sun, Jul 28, 2024 at 11:12 PM Don Osborn <don@milletsalliance.org> wrote:
Somehow missed this, but there has been an International Fonio Day on July 27 for some years.
Evidently it was proposed by a Senegalese, Sanoussi Diakité, who dates his invention of a fonio dehulling machine to 27 July 1993./1 Mr. Diakité won a Rolex award for this invention, based on its impact on local fonio processing and benefits to rural communities - especially women who are traditionally tasked with processing it by hand - in fonio-producing areas./2
NAMA has fonio as the "millet of the month" in August this year, but could consider possibly switching it to July in 2025.
However, it will also be good to check about other dates associated with fonio. Noting for example "Ovazu" (Ɔvazu), or fonio festival, of the Akposso and Akebou in southern Togo, celebrated after harvest, later in the year,/3 often on the second Saturday of December./4
Similarly, I'd like to check for other such observations connected with various millets, before considering further possible changes in the millet of the month calendar.
Don Osborn, PhD (East Lansing, MI, US) North American Millets Alliance
Notes: 1. "International Fonio Day - 27 July," by Nicole Gregoire, Image-i-nations, 26 July 2016 https://image-i-nations.com/international-fonio-day-27-july/ 2. "Sanoussi Diakité: Grain of Hope," Rolex Awards 1996
https://www.rolex.org/rolex-awards/applied-technology/sanoussi-diakite
3. Ovazu Foundation - About, https://www.ovazufoundation.org/about 4. "Ovazu (Fête des moissons en pays Akposso et Akebou)," Togo Tourisme
https://togo-tourisme.com/culture/fetes-traditionnelles/ovazu-fete-des-moiss...
participants (2)
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Don Osborn
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Gary Wietgrefe