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

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

    Ingredients: The type of flour used to make the bread can impact freshness. Specialty flours like whole wheat or rye contain more oils than white flour, causing them to go stale faster.

  3. Should you be storing your bread in the refrigerator? Experts ...

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  4. 11 Foods You Don't Need To Refrigerate To Make Room For The ...

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    Related: 10 Things You Should Refrigerate (But Probably Aren't) Bread Loaves. ... Make sure they aren’t stored next to any fruit or potatoes. Alliums are ethylene producers and can cause other ...

  5. Stollen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stollen

    The finished bread is sprinkled with icing sugar. [4] The traditional weight of a stollen is around 2 kg (4.4 lb), but smaller sizes are common. The bread is slathered with melted unsalted butter and rolled in sugar as soon as it comes out of the oven, resulting in a moister product that keeps better. [5] The marzipan rope in the middle is ...

  6. Proofing (baking technique) - Wikipedia

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

    An overproofed bread may even collapse in the oven as the volume of gas produced by the yeast can no longer be contained by the gluten structure. Retarding may occur at any time during fermentation and is accomplished by placing the dough into a dough retarder, refrigerator, or other cold environment to slow the activity of the yeast. The ...

  7. Modernist Bread - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modernist_Bread

    Volume 3: Techniques and Equipment ("guidebook to the techniques of bread making. Chapters follow the process of making bread: fermentation, mixing, divide and shaping, proofing, scoring and finishing, ovens and baking, plus cooling and storage.") Volume 4: Recipes I ("Each chapter is divided by types of breads.

  8. Should You Refrigerate Cornbread? You Don’t Have to ... - AOL

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    Our Test Kitchen reveals the top 3 ways to store cornbread (and how to know which method is right for you).

  9. Sponge and dough - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sponge_and_dough

    The sponge and dough method is a two-step bread making process: in the first step a sponge is made and allowed to ferment for a period of time, and in the second step the sponge is added to the final dough's ingredients, [1] creating the total formula. [2]