Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I promise you those “peak” baguettes you think you are buying are probably just as likely the ones baked in the morning. Sure they bake a few times a day, but there is no way they are tossing hours old bread out, let alone day old bread. At least in a US bakery. First baked, first sold. Your palate is not as refined as you pretend.
What if they’re still warm? Are they putting them back in the oven and out on display in the afternoon?
Anonymous wrote:I promise you those “peak” baguettes you think you are buying are probably just as likely the ones baked in the morning. Sure they bake a few times a day, but there is no way they are tossing hours old bread out, let alone day old bread. At least in a US bakery. First baked, first sold. Your palate is not as refined as you pretend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They get hard as a rock. Who can bite thru a sandwich on that?
Again if you make the sandwich immediately they are not hard. You should eat a baguette within a few hours of it being made.
We will sometimes just do a classic ham and butter sandwich for lunch on a saturday on a fresh baguette. So good. I think I will pick one up after tennis tomorrow for this purpose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I but lots of baguette. Usually, we either eat sandwiches on them, slice them up in eat with a pasta dinner, or toasted with butter and jam for breakfast.
I agree a baguette sandwich is lovely, but only if made immediately. Baguettes have to be consumed so quickly or they're rubbish. This is why bakeries bake them multiple times a day. Do you buy one and IMMEDIATELY go make sandwiches with it? If you're making sandwiches with it hours later or the next day, it's gross. There are much better bakery breads to make sandwiches with if not using IMMEDIATELY.
Not always immediately. I admit it, I’m gross. I do give it a few minutes in the toaster oven if it’s day-old. Not ideal, but miles better than mass produced bread. I can’t eat that stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Why is everyone on DCUM so obsessed with “bakery bread?” I’ve literally never heard this term anywhere outside this forum, but here it’s the only bread anyone will cop to eating.
Anonymous wrote:They get hard as a rock. Who can bite thru a sandwich on that?
Anonymous wrote:They get hard as a rock. Who can bite thru a sandwich on that?
Anonymous wrote:They get hard as a rock. Who can bite thru a sandwich on that?
Anonymous wrote:They get hard as a rock. Who can bite thru a sandwich on that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My EU DH eats bread with every meal (yes, even with tacos, Chinese food, etc.) Our kids eat bread and chocolate, or bread and nutella, as a snack after school while watching cartoons in their native language. Whatever they don't use up becomes toast the next morning.
Yes, it's tricky buying fresh bread every day in the US but we have a standing order at the local bakery and we've got a system down for buying bread every day. And, in a pinch, Whole Foods has good enough bakery bread.
My greatest generation grandparents ate bread with every meal. But it was just sliced white bread on a plate. It’s just an old fashioned habit.
Mine always, always had rolls and butter at dinnertime, no matter what was being served for dinner. You always put the rolls in a bread basket with a cloth (like a cloth napkin) around them.