The DU Lounge
Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsWe all seem to like the smell of bread baking. What is your favorite bread, and where do you get it-homemade, store,or
bakery I like sourdough from the bakery.
fargone
(218 posts)debm55
(36,011 posts)fargone
(218 posts)My wife has these bread recipe books and makes a new one almost every time. There have been very few duds.
debm55
(36,011 posts)Goatguy
(9 posts)Zucchini bread and pear bread and pear butter or wild plum jam, delicious!
debm55
(36,011 posts)Lonestarblue
(11,818 posts)Early morning aromas in the store are amazing.
Next favorite though I rarely experience it is croissant baking everywhere early morning in Paris.
debm55
(36,011 posts)Ocelot II
(120,836 posts)There's a little cafe near me that makes really excellent bread on site, which I buy sometimes.
debm55
(36,011 posts)Ocelot II
(120,836 posts)Sunstreet Breads in Minneapolis has some of the best bread in the universe. I can walk over there and buy it. No cooking, no mess, no work.
Midnight Writer
(22,972 posts)We were a very poor family, but Mom would, on occasion, walk us seven kids (we never owned a car) to the Sally Ann bakery. They sold fresh loaves of bread, still warm from the oven, wrapped in plain brown paper, for 5 cents.
We would stand on the sidewalk outside, and Mom would break off chunks of the fresh bread and hand a piece out to each of us.
No butter, no toppings. We would eat the bread right there outside the bakery.
I'll never forget the smell and the taste of that fresh-baked bread, even more than 70 years later. It was a rare treat for us all.
debm55
(36,011 posts)CrispyQ
(38,245 posts)I would never do all that otherwise. It's amazing how perfectly it toasts compared to store bought bread. I also love quick breads, blueberry almond being my favorite.
marble falls
(62,052 posts)CrispyQ
(38,245 posts)I have to say though, I was surprised how such a tiny paddle can do the job.
debm55
(36,011 posts)different.
brush
(57,495 posts)Last edited Sat Oct 19, 2024, 01:49 PM - Edit history (1)
debm55
(36,011 posts)brush
(57,495 posts)debm55
(36,011 posts)brush
(57,495 posts)Polly Hennessey
(7,453 posts)debm55
(36,011 posts)justaprogressive
(2,447 posts)that's pretty much perfect...
and a plug for a recent discovery
Dave's Killer Bread
We toasted up a slice of this high-protein bread and went...ok kinda nutty.
Then we put together a Ham & Swiss with LTO took one bite and said OMG!
A huge number of flavors added.. plus umami.
Simply outstanding!
debm55
(36,011 posts)marble falls
(62,052 posts)... or not, but I am wearing my King Arthur Baking School book out.
I have on hand at least six different flours, and all sort of nut, seed etc to add to a loaf, I started from inside of my pantry my own wild yeast for sour dough. I've been perfecting my sour Rye loaf and I'm going on to the next recipe next week.
You've found the one thing besides music and humor I am truly passionate about!
debm55
(36,011 posts)marble falls
(62,052 posts)debm55
(36,011 posts)CanonRay
(14,859 posts)But I can't get it where I live. Only in Chicago.
debm55
(36,011 posts)FarPoint
(13,619 posts)No Knead bread.... let it sit for 18 hours then bake in my cast iron dutch oven....I have a 4 qt. This is my baby for delicious, Artisan bread... Griswold cast iron is a brand of cast iron cookware that was produced in Erie, Pennsylvania from 1865 to 1957. It has inside the lid, drip spikes I call them and it adds to creating a crunchy crust/ like a steam ....
I also make a scratch Pullman loaf of bread occasionally... sandwich bread delight.
Then, scratch biscuits.... This is how I roll...rarely buy store bought bread. I use King Arthur's Flour.
debm55
(36,011 posts)FarPoint
(13,619 posts)You can find the Griswold also on Ebay... I have a few of their cast iron skillets as well.
A good alternative is a Staub cast iron dutch oven ... their inner lids have the drip spikes...sold new at Williams Sonoma or Sur la Table.... different sizes are available... or just google Staub ...
https://staub-cookware.com/
debm55
(36,011 posts)malthaussen
(17,672 posts)A brand with many different factories will have different-tasting bread depending upon the water they use. I loved Arnold's bread in Philly, hated it in Jacksonsville, and in Pittsburgh, it's kinda meh.
In any event, nothing beats homemade bread, as long as the baker knows how to do it.
-- Mal
debm55
(36,011 posts)alwaysinasnit
(5,253 posts)when I lived in South San Francisco. They had freshly-made bread coming out of the oven every hour.
https://www.raymondsbread.com/