Goldtouch GOLDTOUCH 150g Grain Mill Review
Our verdict
The Goldtouch 150g grain mill is one of the more affordable options in the category at $46.99, and its 4.3 rating from 277 reviews suggests buyers find it delivers reasonable value for small-batch grinding. The low price makes it accessible but also signals limits on capacity and throughput.
Check price on AmazonBest for
Cooks who grind small batches of grains, spices, or dried herbs occasionally and do not want to invest $80 or more in a grain mill.
Skip if
You plan to grind more than a cup or two at a time, or you need a machine built for regular heavy use.
- Priced 68% below the category median ($148.38 across 16 tracked models)
Our scorecard
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Owner rating4.3/5
4.3 average across 277 owner ratings
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Popularity3.4/5
277 owner reviews, more than most models here
The overall score is owner satisfaction weighted by how many reviews back it, so a high rating from few reviews counts for less. The bars below show where this model stands against the other vacuum sealers, built-in and countertop dishwashers, food slicers, meat and grain grinders, spice mills and kitchen prep appliances we track in this category on price, popularity and size. Context, not marks against it, and our read of the data, not a lab test.
Overview
At $46.99, the Goldtouch 150g sits at the value end of electric grain mills. The 150g designation refers to the grinding capacity per batch, which is roughly a third of a pound and enough for small baking projects or spice grinding but not for anyone milling flour for weekly bread baking.
The listing does not publish wattage, weight, or dimensions, which limits direct comparisons. What the 277 reviews and 4.3 rating do signal is that buyers who purchase with realistic expectations tend to be satisfied. This is not a machine for serious homesteaders or frequent bakers.
For someone who occasionally wants to mill a small amount of grain or grind a handful of dried spices, the Goldtouch 150g covers the basics at a price that requires minimal commitment. The lack of published specs is a gap worth noting before buying.
Pros
- One of the lowest price points for an electric grain mill at $46.99
- 4.3 rating from 277 reviews reflects solid buyer satisfaction
- Compact 150g capacity suits small-batch and occasional use
- Accessible entry point for first-time grain mill buyers
Cons
- 150g per-batch capacity is limiting for regular baking
- No wattage, dimensions, or weight specs available to review
- Not suited for high-volume or daily milling sessions
- Low price likely indicates lighter-duty construction
Performance notes
Published specs are minimal for this listing. The 150g capacity is the defining performance constraint: at roughly 5.3 oz per batch, you will be refilling frequently for any recipe calling for more than one cup of flour. Without wattage data, grinding speed and ability to handle hard grains like wheat berries is uncertain. Best results are likely with softer grains, dried herbs, and spices rather than hard wheat.
What buyers say
277 reviews at 4.3 stars is a credible sample for a budget product. It is large enough to filter out a few outliers and points to a product that meets expectations for the price. Buyers who understand the small batch size going in tend to be the most satisfied.
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Frequently asked questions
What grains can the Goldtouch 150g handle?
Electric grain mills at this price and capacity generally work best with softer grains like oats, dried corn, rice, and softer wheat varieties. Hard red wheat and other hard grain berries push motors harder and may produce uneven results in budget machines. The 150g also shines for dried spices, herbs, and seeds where small batches are the norm anyway. If hard wheat flour is your main goal, a machine with published wattage above 1000W is a safer bet.
Is $46.99 too cheap for a reliable grain mill?
Price does not automatically mean poor quality, but it does reflect trade-offs in capacity, motor power, and build durability. At $46.99, the Goldtouch 150g is designed for light use. The 4.3 rating across 277 reviews suggests it holds up for the buyers who use it as intended. If you grind small batches occasionally, the value is real. If you expect it to handle daily heavy loads, you are likely to be disappointed regardless of brand at this price.
How does the 150g capacity compare to other grain mills?
Most consumer grain mills in the $80 to $150 range hold 500g to 700g per batch. At 150g, this Goldtouch unit holds roughly one fifth to one third as much as mid-range competitors. For spice grinding or a small recipe supplement, that is fine. For milling several cups of flour in a single session, you would spend most of your time refilling the hopper, making a larger capacity mill a more practical choice.