Anonymous wrote:But I don’t want bakery bread, I want normal white sandwich bread.
Anonymous wrote:What type of bread are you baking and how many loaves? Also German born ft mom but thinking about making this a thing ...
Anonymous wrote:We have our personal chef make bread for us near daily. It's the best! She orders flours from France and Italy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who the hell buys Wonder Bread?
People whose picky kids will eat it
People who grew up eating it and still like it
People who don’t bake — or who don’t have time to bake
People whose local stores don’t carry a wider variety of breads
People who shop weekly and want bread that doesn’t rot
People who need to budget for multiple meals and appreciate the price per serving
People who tried making cinnamon toast with sourdough bread and immediately regretted it
Most people in America actually.
Those of you who are relatively new to the area might not be aware of the factory outlet store that was near Howard University. Prices were quite low. Many families made regular trips to stock up on baked goods. Oh the days when the freezer was stocked with a box of Ho-Hos for an inexpensive summer treat!
And that's why nearly 50% of adults in the US will be obese by 2030. They eat trash.
True. That’s US capitalism for you!
The Federal government needs to ban salt and sugar in bread. The Federal government also needs to ban additives in flour except for where the government demands fortification in grains, like folic acid.
You need a small amount of each for the texture and the baking process (maybe not for sourdough). Even home baked bread requires them.
What now? I make bread every other week for my family and I never use sugar. No, you do not “need” sugar to bake bread
Also to the person above who said making bread is a privilege…again what now? You can make bread at home more cheaply than buying at the store.
Okay, you don’t “need” it, but many recipes have it and it helps to retain moisture.
With instant yeast it helps get the process going. 10g in a loaf is enough. I don’t think you need if using starters, but I don’t know for sure since I’m an instant yeast baker.
I use instant yeast and do not use sugar.