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  2. How To Store Homemade Bread So It Lasts - AOL

    www.aol.com/store-homemade-bread-lasts-142600332...

    If baking homemade bread has become a regular part of your routine, or if you're venturing into bread-making for the first time, understanding how to store it properly is essential for preserving ...

  3. This Is The Best Method For Thawing Frozen Bread - AOL

    www.aol.com/best-method-thawing-frozen-bread...

    The easiest method for thawing a frozen loaf of bread is to simply transfer the wrapped loaf from the freezer to the refrigerator, says North Carolina chef Rhonda Stewart,

  4. Bread Baking for Beginners: Everything You Should Know ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/bread-baking-beginners-everything...

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  5. Breadbox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breadbox

    They are usually made of metal, wood or sometimes pottery (pottery breadboxes are also called bread crocks). Old breadboxes can be collectible antiques . Breadboxes are most commonly big enough to fit one or two average size loaves of bread—up to about 16 inches wide by 8 to 9 inches high and deep (40 cm × 20 cm × 20 cm).

  6. Modernist Bread - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modernist_Bread

    But each has useful variations that work with many kinds of mixing and cooking methods, for both professional and home kitchens. Above all, the book is a call for cooks to rethink one of the world's oldest foods — to understand how bread is made, using more than their instinct and intuition, so they can push the craft forward. [2]

  7. Royal icing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_icing

    The Oxford English Dictionary gives the first mention of royal icing as Borella's Court and Country Confectioner (1770). The term was well-established by the early 19th century, although William Jarrin (1827) still felt the need to explain that the term was used by confectioners (so presumably it was not yet in common use among mere cooks or amateurs). [3]

  8. Proofing (baking technique) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proofing_(baking_technique)

    Bread covered with linen proofing cloth in the background. In cooking, proofing (also called proving) is a step in the preparation of yeast bread and other baked goods in which the dough is allowed to rest and rise a final time before baking. During this rest period, yeast ferments the dough and produces gases, thereby leavening the dough.

  9. Soda bread - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soda_bread

    In some parts of Fermanagh, the white flour form of the bread is described as fadge. [4] [5] The "griddle cakes", "griddle bread" (or soda farls in Ulster) take a more rounded shape and have a cross cut in the top to allow the bread to expand. The griddle cake or farl is a more flattened type of bread.