What's Your Favourite Loaf Of Bread?
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Originally posted by ardcarp View Post...Has anyone heard of the Chorleywood Process? It's the way most commercial sliced bread is made. Not sure about the details, but I personally wouldn't touch any high-volume commercial bread with a barge-pole.
Only if you let dough ferment for long enough can naturally occurring beneficial bacteria work to make the bread more digestible, nutritious and tasty. Most British bread is made too quickly for these bacteria to have a chance. Fermenting dough for six hours as opposed to 30 minutes removes around 80% of a potentially carcinogenic substance called acrylamide found in bread crusts, and long yeast fermentations conserve the highest levels of B vitamins in dough.
In the 1990s a new breed of enzyme-based "improvers" displaced the suspect chemical additives. You won't know they are there because the law says that as "processing aids" they don't need to be declared on the label!"
This method uses double the amount of yeast, and is baked under pressure to make the process faster.
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Originally posted by Beresford View PostFat Flour bakery in Flookborough (was in Cark) - extremely unpretentious, everything sourdough, open 8-1 every day (sourdough needs feeding every day!).
I went there this morning to stock up on gorgeous Donkel (Dutch for dark), I guess 50% rye, but still very light.
Filberts Bakery in Lancaster is also all sourdough, but the ambience is more self-conscious, like some HIPP concerts. Cakes are better though.
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Ciabatta served hot or warm, ripped into chunks ready for butter & marm or beside soups or salad. Tesco large unwrapped is good value, part-baked M & S, Morrison's, Tesco Finest are yummy but Lidl is a catastrophe.
Also Duchy Ancient Grains or other stuff in their range for a bit of a treat (Waitrose).
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Originally posted by Zucchini View PostCiabatta served hot or warm, ripped into chunks ready for butter & marm or beside soups or salad. Tesco large unwrapped is good value, part-baked M & S, Morrison's, Tesco Finest are yummy but Lidl is a catastrophe.
Also Duchy Ancient Grains or other stuff in their range for a bit of a treat (Waitrose).
I subsequently discovered the reason. Ciabatta was invented in 1980 as an answer to the French baguette!!!
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View Post... Ciabatta was invented in 1980 as an answer to the French baguette!!!
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Sainsbury's small wholemeal loaf, organic, "in store" baked.
Worthy runners up, that I eat almost as frequently, for variety, all "in store" baked:
Lidl "low GI" rolls
Tesco small wholemeal/wholemeal bap.
Morrison's small wholemeal
Haven't tried ASDA, and M&S need to get their act together. (Their hyper-expensive wholemeal bap might make the runners up list if it wasn't hyper-expensive, their reasonably priced small wholemeal just doesn't cut it IMHO. Though it's "different" and tastes may differ...)
P.S. My blood pressure was too high at my last test, so take Ferney's warning seriously!
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Originally posted by Mal View PostSainsbury's small wholemeal loaf, organic, "in store" baked.
Worthy runners up, that I eat almost as frequently, for variety, all "in store" baked:
Lidl "low GI" rolls
Tesco small wholemeal/wholemeal bap.
Morrison's small wholemeal
Haven't tried ASDA, and M&S need to get their act together. (Their hyper-expensive wholemeal bap might make the runners up list if it wasn't hyper-expensive, their reasonably priced small wholemeal just doesn't cut it IMHO. Though it's "different" and tastes may differ...)
P.S. My blood pressure was too high at my last test, so take Ferney's warning seriously!
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostAny of those made without palm oil? ...
A quick Google indicates Sainsbury's is not made with Palm Oil, they use Rapeseed. Lidl don't say what fat is used, but the low (relative) percentage of saturated fat indicates it may not use Palm, or not much. That said 8.5g of fat per 100g is a lot compared to Sainsbury's 1.5g. Do they use so much fat to reduce the GI? Or to make it it moreish?!
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Originally posted by Mal View PostYou can Google the ingredients online.
A quick Google indicates Sainsbury's is not made with Palm Oil, they use Rapeseed. Lidl don't say what fat is used, but the low (relative) percentage of saturated fat indicates it may not use Palm, or not much. That said 8.5g of fat per 100g is a lot compared to Sainsbury's 1.5g. Do they use so much fat to reduce the GI? Or to make it it moreish?!
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostExercise can get BP down a bit, and generally seems a good idea. If your BP is very high, then other methods may be needed as well.
Good luck with that.
I wonder if we can “save the planet” and if that diet is good for BP. Stop the cows from “burping” - or even existing.
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