Oh how I wish that were true in the colloquial sense, as in being really rich and well heeled, but
actually I mean it in the sense of bread dough … and maybe a little pastry dough for
good measure.
Where to begin with bread eh ... one of the staples of daily
life, and the answer is about 30,000 years ago, but in reality it was more like
10,000 years ago that we learned to make it properly edible. The first breads were of course flat breads
as we had yet to learn about yeast, and in fact many cultures today still have unleavened bread as their preference, whereas many others like their bread well risen. In medieval Europe stale bread was even used
as a dinner plate or “trencher”. If you
were still hungry at the end of your meal you could quite literally eat your plate.
One of my favourite sayings is “it’s the greatest thing since sliced bread”. A chap called Otto Frederick Rohwedder invented a
machine to slice bread in 1912, but bakers resisted it fearing that a sliced
loaf would quickly go stale. Not to be deterred
Otto took another 16 years (a very thorough chap indeed was Otto) and invented
a machine that not only sliced the bread but packaged it as well. Then he convinced a bakery in Missouri to use
it, and the rest shall we say is “history”.
The French have a long and illustrious history of bread or “pain”
as their most important of all daily staples. Not so long ago your only hope of getting a really good French baguette in London was quite literally to go to France. There’s just
something about a good French baguette, crisp, light, fluffy, yet chewy and dense all at the same
time. My favourite one is the “ancienne” as it
has the crunchiest crust. In recent times a number of French bakers have bought
their trade to London and one of the latest is “Aux pains de Papy” a family of bakers
“from father to son since 1948”.
Their breads are the real (French) McCoy, even
their flour comes from France. I usually go in for bread and come out with a
range of pastries and cakes that the Doll tells me I can’t eat for breakfast … anyone
else noticed how long it is in stomach minutes between breakfast and lunch.
8 comments:
Great! it is really hard to find good bread or baked goods in the city.
Great! it is really hard to find good bread or baked goods in the city.
Here it is, 8:00 AM on a Sunday morning and now I'm wondering where I can get some great bread for my breakfast. I'm kind of wishing I could reach through the screen and pick something up.
sadly we have changed our diet to eat "sandwich thins" which are healthy but a poor replacement for a good French baguette
I only wish it was around the corner from me .... I would take a walk there right now!! looks soo.... scrumptious.
"Adelaide and Beyond"
And now I'm hungry!
Great post! So the French now have an edge on us for bread, but I am sure not on every type of bread...
Ah, Ted, thanks for this illuminating post about bread and in particular, French bread. I always learn from you.
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