Bread made easy
Bread made easy
Breadmakers are rather strange things. They’re surprisingly big kitchen appliances with only one use: they bake bread. Now, baking bread isn’t really that hard, but breadmakers claim to make it so super-easy that you can eat freshly-baked bread every day for the rest of your life. Much like those machines that make you orange juice every day from fresh oranges, however, the necessity of this is debatable.
To use a breadmaker,
all you need to do is add the ingredients of bread (flour, milk, yeast and so
on) and turn it on – you can even get special ‘bread mix’ to use if fresh
ingredients are too much trouble for you. The machine will make dough from your
ingredients and then bake it into a loaf of bread. The bread typically tastes
quite good, but won’t last very long because of the lack of preservatives.
Where breadmakers
really get interesting is not when they are making normal, store-style bread,
but when you decide to get creative with them. Because they make bread so
quickly, they make it much more convenient to experiment with strange
ingredients that might just turn out great. You can make bread with your
favourite cheese in it, for example, or chocolate, or some kind of herbs and
spices that you like. There are many websites on the Internet devoted entirely
to sharing interesting breadmaker recipes, and many new kinds of bread have
been discovered through this experimentation that would never have been found
otherwise.
Basically, if you just
want bread, you’re probably better off buying it from a shop. If you want
unusual, customised experiments in bread, however, then breadmakers aren’t very
expensive, and getting one could be a good choice for you. The only thing to
worry about, really, is where on earth to put the bulky things.
Iraqi Bread
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