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  2. Bark bread - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bark_bread

    The bread was then baked the normal way adding yeast and salt. Bark bread did not leaven as quickly as normal bread due to bark content. The more bark to flour, the slower the leavening. Bark bread was therefore often made as a flatbread. The bark flour could also be used for porridge. [9]

  3. Sourdough - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sourdough

    Sourdough or sourdough bread is a bread made by allowing the dough to ferment using naturally occurring lactobacillaceae and yeast before baking. The fermentation process produces lactic acid , which gives the bread a sour taste and improves its keeping-qualities.

  4. Gollum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gollum

    Gollum hates everything Elf-made. In The Two Towers, Sam bound Gollum's neck with Elven rope, which caused Gollum excruciating pain by its mere presence. [T 6] He was unable or unwilling to eat the lembas bread Sam and Frodo carried with them, and rejects cooked rabbit in favour of raw meat or fish. [T 8] [T 9]

  5. Bagel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bagel

    Another bagel-like type of bread is the traditional German Dortmunder Salzkuchen from the 19th century. [53] Ka'ak al-Quds (better known in English as the Jerusalem bagel) is an oblong ring bread, usually topped with sesame seeds, with its origins in Jerusalem. Unlike the bagel, it is not boiled prior to baking. [54]

  6. Smeagol (gastropod) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smeagol_(gastropod)

    Smeagol is a genus of small air-breathing [2] sea slugs of the upper intertidal zone. [3] They are pulmonate gastropod mollusks related to land slugs and snails. Analysis of DNA sequences has shown that Smeagol belongs in the family Ellobiidae , and is therefore closely related to ellobiid snails.

  7. Bread - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bread

    Bread is also made from the flour of other wheat species (including spelt, emmer, einkorn and kamut). [17] Non-wheat cereals including rye, barley, maize (corn), oats, sorghum, millet and rice have been used to make bread, but, with the exception of rye, usually in combination with wheat flour as they have less gluten. [18]

  8. History of bread - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_bread

    For generations, white bread was the preferred bread of the rich while the poor ate dark (whole grain) bread. However, in most Western societies, the connotations reversed in the late 20th century, with whole-grain bread becoming preferred as having superior nutritional value while Chorleywood bread became associated with lower-class ignorance ...

  9. Salt-rising bread - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt-rising_bread

    Salt-rising (or salt-risen) bread is a dense white bread that is traditional in the Appalachian Mountains, leavened by naturally occurring wild bacteria rather than by yeast. [1] [2] [3] Salt-rising bread is made from wheat flour; a starter consisting of either water or milk and corn [4] potatoes, [5] or wheat; and minor ingredients such as ...