
So here's me, just malted a huge batch of corn, struggled with the drying process, but eventually I'm sitting with +-50kg of malted corn and no way to grind it. My friend knows an old guy with a hammer mill, but I never get around to him. Tried using a twiste-blender thing. One of those with the flat bottoms, with 3or4 blades on a central shaft, with the motor on the top... you know which ones I'm talking about. It works to some degree, but its noisy as all hell and I'm worried it might damage the blades.
So a little inspiration from those horror movies where people get chopped up by boat propellers and noticing that the malt gets very soft after standing in water for half an hour:
Macgyver a magafter to attach the bladed shaft to the drill, fill some buckets half full with malt, cover with water maybe a little more than an inch over the malt, soak 30 minutes, maybe longer. Feel the corn, it feels soft and one can just about crush it between your fingers. Stick the blades into the bucket and let her RIP! SLOWLY... start very slow and increase speed gradually. At first it looks like nothings happening and then you start to see the first husks and chunks floating to the surface.
A few notes though:
make sure its centered, a slightly off center alignment can cause an off balance drill, which vibrates a LOT and can cause more grain to go flying than getting chopped.
Not sure if it'll work with all grains though, corn malt works (I'm assuming) cause the husk is already broken by the acrospire and it readily soaks up water again and goes soft.
Don't use the wife's twister unless you planning on buying her a new one

BE CAREFUL!!! this hobby is quite dangerous as it is without adding open spinning blades to the mix. There's no guard, no safety... fully submerge the blades in the bucket before starting up the drill. We have 10 fingers because we need 10 fingers, they're not considered "spares" (moment for anyone who lost some in an accident)
Hopefully someone in a tight spot might learn from this, there's more ways that one to skin a cat.