‘Big Flour’ can’t recreate this stone-milled secret ingredient: the Kansas-grown artisan wheat in your favorite KC bakeries
January 2, 2025 | Nikki Overfelt Chifalu
Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro.
NEW CAMBRIA, Kansas — Artisan flour sourced from a network of Kansas growers not only takes any batch of baking up a notch, said Ben Mantooth; it makes a better product for consumers, farmers, and the earth.

Hayley Eckert, Farmer Direct Foods and Heirloom Brands, holds bags of the Kansas-grown flour outside a Kansas City-area Sprouts Farmers Market; courtesy photo
Farmer Direct Foods — an Overland Park-owned flour mill based in New Cambria, northwest of Salina — has more than 50 growers across the Sunflower State who all practice regenerative agriculture to grow wheat and other grains. The company produces four flours — whole white wheat, whole red wheat, heirloom wheat, and all-purpose — which can be found online or at local Hen House and, most recently, Sprouts locations.
“For any bag of flour that we produce, we can tell you the farmer who grew the grain behind it,” said Mantooth, vice president of marketing. “Consumers want to know where the food comes from. So that’s a huge advantage for us in the marketplace.”
Kansas City-area bakeries that use flour from Farmer Direct Foods include Ibis Bakery (Black Dog Coffeehouse and Messenger Coffee), Farm to Market Bread Co., and Strawberry Hill Baking Company. A larger partnership with McLain’s Bakery also is in the works.
“Most of our flour — with the exception of our all-purpose flour — is 100-percent whole wheat,” Mantooth noted. “The way that we process them is a lost art form. It’s a stone milling method that — what I’ll call, quote, unquote, Big Flour — doesn’t use. They use cheaper alternatives that strip the nutrients and the vitamins, essentially strip the bran and the good parts of the grain out of the wheat when they process it, and that yields a lower quality product.”
RELATED: Farmer Direct Foods cuts ribbon on facility expansion
Because the farmers — who are located all across Kansas, including Gypsum, Ingalls, WaKeeney, and Assaria — all use regenerative agriculture practices, the land benefits, as well, said Mantooth.
“They’re building the health of the soil, whereas commercial farming operations and traditional farming is really just using the land and then not really putting any value back into it,” he explained. “Regenerative is really focused on rebuilding soil health, which produces healthier foods, because you’re capturing carbon in the soil. You’re not releasing it up into the atmosphere. So the more nutrients that are in the soil itself, the better the food products that are that come out of it.”
Did you know?
The TikTok-famous Peterson Farm Bros — who gained popularity over more than a decade on social media platforms like YouTube and Facebook with their farm-related song parodies and choring videos — are members of the Farmer Direct Foods network of growers.
Check out a video feature on the brothers below, along with a video from their YouTube channel, then keep reading.
Farming practices championed by Farmer Direct Foods and its growers not only improve soil health and reduce carbon emissions, they conserve water, he continued, which is especially important in dry areas of Kansas, Mantooth said.

Ben Mantooth, Tim Webster, and Keaton Hale, Farmer Direct Foods; Santo Scavuzzo and Rick Steele, with Scavuzzo’s, one of Farmer Direct Foods Kansas City-area distributors; Hayley Eckert and Blake Woolman, Farmer Direct Foods; courtesy photo
“Every five pound bag of flour that we produce saves 650 gallons of water,” he added.
Investing in Kansas family farms is also important for Farmer Direct Foods — which was purchased by Heirloom in 2022 — Mantooth said. Farmers are paid a premium for their grains in exchange for using regenerative agriculture practices.
RELATED: Investor group looks to elevate Farmer Direct Foods
“We also have a profit sharing program, so we share a portion of our profits back with all of our farmers,” he explained. “So we’re supporting farmers, we’re supporting rural communities. We’re enhancing their lives.”
“Things like our regenerative practices are not without cost,” added John Griffith, farmer from WaKeeney, whose family has worked with Farmer Direct for generations. “Folks who value that in their foods can know that the premium they may pay for Farmer Direct Foods’ flour is being returned directly to the farmers who are doing those practices.”
The company is hoping this investment will encourage younger generations to continue their family farming traditions, Mantooth noted.
“It’s a tough life,” he said. “Our goal is hopefully to try to provide some incentive there to support the family and make it more profitable for them. It’s important. They are the backbone of the food industry.”
Check out a podcast below featuring Farmer Direct Foods leadership on the Kansas City-based Open Aire podcast.
This story is made possible by Entrepreneurial Growth Ventures.
Entrepreneurial Growth Ventures (EGV) is a business unit of NetWork Kansas supporting innovative, high-growth entrepreneurs in the State of Kansas. NetWork Kansas promotes an entrepreneurial environment by connecting entrepreneurs and small business owners with the expertise, education and economic resources they need to succeed.
Featured Business

2025 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Couple with tech, startup background embraces risk-taking as new Pitch owners
Local ownership of The Pitch will preserve the Kansas City alternative news publication’s voice, as well as expanding digital content for readers, and promotions and services for advertisers, Stephanie Carey said. “I love the independent voice. I love the fact that we can push those boundaries, push the envelope on stories, dig a little deeper,”…
Cultural differences contribute to entrepreneur access gap, Porter House founder says
Early education about entrepreneurism and the resources available aren’t typically priorities in low- to moderate-income communities, said Daniel Smith. “A lack of access results because we don’t really have a lot of programs in our communities that focus on small business and entrepreneurism,” said Smith, founder of The Porter House KC. “It’s more focused on…
Missouri, Airbnb announce revenue-sharing state sales tax deal
As Kansas City wrangles with its own short-term rental rules, Airbnb and the Show Me State announced an agreement Wednesday that will allow the home-sharing giant to collect and remit taxes on behalf of 6,300 Missouri hosts. Effective Feb. 1, the tax agreement with the Missouri Department of Revenue adds a state sales tax — now…
FEWDM drops high-tech fitness devices, pivots to workout apparel
Not every promising startup venture can keep the ball moving toward the end zone. It’s a lesson FEWDM founder Tommy Saunders says he’s blessed to have learned — despite the bittersweet turn for the former Detroit Lions receiver’s company. “We have a strong brand that our customers connect with and have grown to love,” Saunders…




