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It's not uncommon to add sugar, honey, or molasses to even homemade breads, especially breads with a lot of whole-wheat or rye flour. It encourages fermentation from the yeast. A lot of German and Swedish rye bread recipes I've seen call for a little bit of sweetener.
Dried yeast doesn't care about the cold, as long as you don't totally freeze it for more than a month. Fresh yeast you can't freeze but it's not too bothered by fridge temps.
If it's old, bosh some in a jar with water and a pinch of salt and sugar and put it somewhere warm. Don't even think of using it until it starts to foam - and it will unless it is ancient.
I've used a thirty year old pack of dried yeast successfully. (Nan never threw anything away, and I got curious during the cleanout.)
I've been making bread recently, but it's so cold here that getting it to proof well is ridiculously hard. I have to keep it like next to the fireplace and rotate it regularly to prevent it from par-baking
This retarded myth comes from the fact that Subway's bread is classified as cake in Ireland. Most American bread doesn't have as much sugar as Subway and most countries don't have as autistic a definition of cake.
This retarded myth comes from the fact that Subway's bread is classified as cake in Ireland. Most American bread doesn't have as much sugar as Subway and most countries don't have as autistic a definition of cake.
Every American food product is designed to include as many possible extra ingredients so that corporations can tap into as many possible markets as they can. The health of the American people was sold off a long time ago to the corn and sugar producers for the sole purpose of extra profit. Do not expect the quality of any American food to improve within our lifetimes.
That's only loaf bread for sandwiches which year it's based of English white bread and made with extra sugar to be shelf stable longer.
Thus is why wondrebread can last a month before molding where the french bread goes bad after 2 days if not dried out.
Again most of the bread I buy French bread, pumpernickel rye bread and etc... tends to be almost exactly the same as euro ingredients. The issue I have with most American bread is that most people assume it's just sliced loaf bread we eat when I enjoy baguettes.
A bread lasting a month? That's crazy, but makes sense why they would add sugar to it. It may give beetus but your inventory's shelf life is at least quadrupled...
A bread lasting a month? That's crazy, but makes sense why they would add sugar to it. It may give beetus but your inventory's shelf life is at least quadrupled...
I mean most people are at risk of diabetes these days even healthy nations as the average person globally consumes 24x the sugar they did in the Victorian era.
Even in places like Japan or Germany or Russia you're seeing a rise in diabetes. The only place where it's in the decline is sanctions economies where one cannot afford food think Venezuela and even recently the country has taken economic reforms.
Our food is poison. It's salted, sugared, chemical laden, and overpriced considering all that. If they're gonna make it slop, make it cheap slop at least.