The BEST Method(s) that keep Bread Fresh for longer - 224

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
  • Different breads require different conditions to stay "fresh". Meaning... as close to when it was baked as possible. Keep crusty breads crusty and soft breads soft for longer with these tips :-)
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Комментарии • 225

  • @tl4214
    @tl4214 8 месяцев назад +23

    Just when I thought your videos were not amazing already .... this!! *And* you brought up pasties!! 🥰 Bread is intentionally used in so many different recipes in so many countries for it's very specific use at exactly *that* stage. Truly a beautiful thing!!

    • @Bakewithjack
      @Bakewithjack  8 месяцев назад +6

      Exactly! It’s where so many delicious dishes organically evolved from! AND It would have never happened if bread was always what it is today… 🤯

    • @susanbutler96
      @susanbutler96 7 месяцев назад

      New book! Life lessons with Jack! Great metaphor - and really how to appreciate our homemade breads. ❤

  • @budj13
    @budj13 8 месяцев назад +47

    Only a person with passion for bread would do so well at articulating our appropriate relationship with bread. Your point is excellent-- enjoy bread fresh and learn to use it as it as it ages. I recently finished Apollonia Poilane's Masterclass and she has a whole lesson on using stale bread. I'm proud to say we no longer buy bread but make our own. I don't want to add junk to keep it fresh! That is why I don't buy their bread. But with planning we have fresh or frozen bread every day and don't waste any. Great video!

  • @msinglinksgirl
    @msinglinksgirl 8 месяцев назад +31

    I'm retiring at the end of this school year from 44 years in the classroom, the last 31 in a middle school teaching English grammar and writing. Yeah, I know... everyone's favorite class. Not! But I just HAD to comment on your wonderful, enticing dialogue of descriptive lusciousness, Jack! The way you added adjectives to describe the different stages and uses of our homemade breads was masterful! You certainly do have a gift for words and thoughts ... and you make a might-fine teacher, too!
    Thanks so much for the little audio clip in response to my (finally) epic sourdough loaves during the Christmas holidays. My husband and I were both impressed that you would actually take the time to send a live, just-for-me message! You are precious! Keep on with the good work, Jack! Love you!

  • @tamialvis9143
    @tamialvis9143 8 месяцев назад +19

    Jack, you are truly a breath of fresh air...informative with humor... important lessons with a new approach...a joy to watch...thank you ☺️

    • @Bakewithjack
      @Bakewithjack  8 месяцев назад +1

      That’s really kind of you thank you ☺️🙌🏻

  • @eternalfizzer
    @eternalfizzer 7 месяцев назад +9

    I thought you were going to teach me what I'd been doing wrong all these years ... and now I have learned the difference between store-bought 'bread' and the amazing fresh ambrosia you've taught me to make ... especially its ephemeral nature. I will bake pizza and raisin tea buns from scratch today and enjoy them *today* with my roommate and my neighbours. Because that's what they're for. Bread is community. The distribution of a fresh loaf or tray of scones *is* wealth.

    • @michelleholmes7582
      @michelleholmes7582 5 месяцев назад +1

      I love this so much. I am getting ready to bake some honey butter rolls for a special needs friend that has requested them of me, and my heart is so happy just by knowing that the rolls I bake will bring him happiness. That truly IS wealth, isn't it?!

  • @MichelleHotchkissArt
    @MichelleHotchkissArt 8 месяцев назад +21

    Here I am, at 8 am, in cold,
    super snowy, frozen and dark Alaska, watching Jack.
    Suddenly I’m hungry for ramen and cake (I totally see the point of cake 😉) and planning to make delicious fresh bread after my breakfast and morning meeting that starts in 2 minutes.
    Thanks Jack! Love all you do!

    • @alexanderschwartz4235
      @alexanderschwartz4235 8 месяцев назад +3

      I am also in the cold, super snowy, frozen and dark Alaska, about to pop some bread in the oven.

    • @MichelleHotchkissArt
      @MichelleHotchkissArt 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@alexanderschwartz4235 fresh baked bread on a cold winter day. Perfect!

    • @christinebubb6658
      @christinebubb6658 8 месяцев назад +2

      Mmmmm, with a steaming bowl of homemade turkey noodle soup!! Wish it was frozen and snowy here in PA!

  • @jillykuhnert1415
    @jillykuhnert1415 8 месяцев назад +7

    My bread is brilliant thanks to JACK. It took 5 months for my book to arrive from the UK to Cape Town, I was so determined to get it after watching all the videos. It was definitely worth the wait. From daily loaf to ciabatta to sourdough, all perfect. Thanks jack😊

  • @ZzzzZz-pk2yq
    @ZzzzZz-pk2yq 8 месяцев назад +9

    This is an outstanding lesson in both baking and mindful living! Thanks, mate!

  • @marierogers8600
    @marierogers8600 2 месяца назад +2

    YES! Yes, YES!! Jack, you’ve nailed it! Appreciating food at its best in the moment and then moving on to the next stage, and appreciating that. No place for disuse, scorn, or waste.
    So many parallels here.
    I wonder how many bakers *rise* to becoming philosophers? I’m eternally grateful for my months of sourdough failures to stumble upon your videos. They’ve been a huge help in getting me not to give up. Now that I’m making successful loaves, I realize what a sacred space my kitchen has become when plunging my hands in dough, knowing the result will be something magnificent.
    Thanks, Jack!

  • @Kaenchin
    @Kaenchin 5 месяцев назад +3

    Brilliant analogy with the chicken! I now have a whole new appreciation for how versatile ONE loaf of bread can be over the span of several days!

  • @geminil2415
    @geminil2415 8 месяцев назад +10

    Oh Jack! I only have one life, I'm not a bread scientist, and I wish I could think cake is pointless but I can't. Now you have made me want a cup of tea and a piece of Christmas cake.I'll think about chicken another day.😉

    • @Bakewithjack
      @Bakewithjack  8 месяцев назад +9

      CHRISTMAS cake is a WHOLE different category of deliciousness 😋😋😋

  • @caitlync.6632
    @caitlync.6632 3 месяца назад +1

    Best video ever. What are we trying to keep away from our bread? A fly? A cat? Thank you for this. I was searching for ways to keep bread and I've decided let it rest on the chopping block cut side down. It's best fresh and enjoyed soon, not preserved long. Gives me an excuse to bake more often and get better at it.

  • @Carol-dr1mq
    @Carol-dr1mq 2 месяца назад +1

    This makes so much sense. Thank you! I bake gluten free so I'm not your target audience but I really enjoyed this video. After years of lackluster results, I've finally near- perfected gf bread-making. Finally I make homemade bread worth keeping fresh. I'll work thru some of your videos in search of tips, but gf baking really is counter to many traditional methods. Still, if your other videos are like this, it will be a pleasure regardless.

  • @laurasheepherder790
    @laurasheepherder790 8 месяцев назад +13

    "Treat your bread like a chicken." 😂😂 I get what you're saying completely, but that moment was golden 👌
    Conversely, I have a cat that will eat my bread given the opportunity. She loves the smell of dough & I have to make sure she can't get at it while it's proofing. Just makes life a little more exciting, lol.

    • @catherinedavidson7145
      @catherinedavidson7145 8 месяцев назад +5

      I found my cat sitting on my baguette dough. Thank heaven it was well covered! Pain a La Moggy!

  • @melvynblunt
    @melvynblunt 8 месяцев назад +2

    Oh Jack. I have missed that performance. Really one of your best and had me smiling and laughing throughout. It is why we bake bread. It’s not a hobby, it’s not even a passion. It is an obsession because it makes us happy. Just great.

  • @kayandgordonaram6049
    @kayandgordonaram6049 8 месяцев назад +4

    Have so missed your videos Jack, so it's good to see you back. I save the heel of the bread for breadcrumbs. I freeze them until needed then I just defrost what I need, whizz in my mini food processor and voila! fresh breadcrumbs. Also great to tear up for a quick bread and butter pudding. Husband likes to butter them and eat them with soup during winter and I just tear them up and drop them in the soup. I love soft, soup soggy bread ❤ Never any wastage here. There's so many different ways to use our homemade bread. Thanks for a great video!

  • @PitStopCrew
    @PitStopCrew 8 месяцев назад +2

    Passionate people being passionate about their passion are such fun to watch and this is right up there with the best of them. Treat your bread like chicken - a brilliant analogy.

  • @clarewillison9379
    @clarewillison9379 8 месяцев назад +4

    I love these philosophy classes and it’s glorious how eloquent you are without a script! (Maybe there are thousands of takes and gazillions of seamless unseen edits but that’s also a great achievement.)
    The life cycle of bread is like a living organism 💯 and its character develops over time. Even its dry husk of a loaf corpse can be resurrected in a bread pudding. And that, apart from the first warm crusty slice, is my favourite time for bread (oh yes, bread and butter pudding using slightly stale bread to absorb more).
    Never buy bread pudding from a high street bakery chain because they throw cake in and destroy the texture. If it’s fluffy it’s not right. IMHO. I based my BP on Delia’s but reduced the sugar and added an overripe banana or two (size dependent). No one tastes any bananariness and it’s a wee bit more nutritious and healthy(ish).
    Never used to have any bread left over until my long slice toaster died. The new ones can’t fit my loaves so I cut off the extra inches, let them dry and keep them in an airtight bucket safely for weeks until I’m ready to do another BP marathon.
    Might extract a few now, though, and try making doughnut croutons… 😋🤤

  • @jameskoiman
    @jameskoiman 7 месяцев назад +2

    Intelligent , funny , cool , well spoken , and people can learn easy ways to make homemade bread , that's why i enjoy your videos more than all the others .

  • @annjackson9858
    @annjackson9858 8 месяцев назад +3

    Yes, you are right and great way to get your points across. Really like the idea of slight undercook to freeze and one i am going to use. Means i could make double quantities, freeze one and eat one. Saving electricity too!

  • @crashcris
    @crashcris 8 месяцев назад +3

    I love this video and your choice of examples/analogies are inspired! I've been making increasingly higher hydration doughs lately. The latest at 93% (750g flour 700g water), the bread is wonderful, I find it's great once it's completely cooled down on the first day, and strangely enough it's best on day 2. Day 3 is still great for bread and day 4 is toast day. I fancy knocking up a soup and frying off some croutons now on this cold winter day. BWJ is the best.

  • @daniellebartholomew2140
    @daniellebartholomew2140 6 месяцев назад +1

    Wow, thank you Jack, you are so right even though I never looked at it this way!
    How you simplify what can seem so confusing and complicated is VERY appreciated! You're a wonderful teacher. Cheers!

    • @Bakewithjack
      @Bakewithjack  6 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you Danielle 🤗🤗🤗

  • @1LuckyGirl1975
    @1LuckyGirl1975 Месяц назад

    Am I the only one who thinks of Rodney on Only Fools and horses whilst he talks? I lived in Hammersmith for many years and I really have the giggle when Jack gets excited. Lovely video mate and always appreciated. 🙏🍞

  • @johngage5391
    @johngage5391 8 месяцев назад +2

    I bake two large loafs of sourdough bread a week (550g white whole wheat, 550g bread flour, 803g water, 100g dark rye 100% hydration starter, 22g salt), having learned how to do so when the whole world was shutdown and I discovered Jack working his magic on this channel in March, 2020. I watched and rewatched Sourdough 101, until a month later, when I was finally able to procure the flours I needed. And my bread journey began. Tonight, I finished the final shaping of my next two loaves, tucked them into the fridge for an overnight retard, and what to my weary eyes should appear on my phone, but Jack waxing poetically about the magic of this process. Godspeed to you Jack. Yours will be my first and last video of the night, and I'll wait with patient anticipation for your next. Meanwhile, tomorrow it's fresh bread for me and my family, and one for the freezer. Real food, made at home. Thank you!

    • @Bakewithjack
      @Bakewithjack  8 месяцев назад +1

      Yessssss John, this is so lovely 😊, enjoy your sourdough in the morning!

  • @pr0l1ng
    @pr0l1ng 8 месяцев назад +2

    Freezing bread is the easiest solution with my family, I make 4 baguettes at the weekend and freeze 3 to use up during the week. They defrost quicker than an uncut loaf and no need for wonky pre-slicing efforts. A game changer for me recently was using the inner bags from empty cereal packets to store them in the freezer, instead of buying more plastic. They are more robust and can be reused many times. Reuse cereal bags! Bread is cereal. Cereal bags for frozen bread! You know it makes sense. Please spread the word ;-D

  • @gwenscoble6229
    @gwenscoble6229 8 месяцев назад +1

    The balance between keeping air away from your loaf and letting is breath varies with location. My mother's home in cornwall has moisture laden air, not only does bread go mouldy if confined, but so do wooden bread bins, spatulas and spoons. Using the same method in a cottage in Wales, with a coal fired Aga (came with the house), coal or ash fall out would pepper the bread.
    I keep mine in a cupboard that has the central heating pump behind it. Bread tends to dry out, but putting it in a box with the lid askew, means I can adjust the drying depending on time of year.
    Thanks for the video, good to see you back.

  • @jennfoy9821
    @jennfoy9821 8 месяцев назад +1

    Usually I can’t bear with the people that go on and on.. I just want them to get to the point! You, on the other hand, I love the twists and turns and delightful opinions and facts you weave together for these videos. Refreshing and interesting!

  • @zerozerotwo5543
    @zerozerotwo5543 6 месяцев назад

    I've been baking bread and pizza using "Rice Kōji Starter or Saka-dane酒種" (also called Kōji Sourdough Starter). The result is amazing: soft inside, crispy outside, tasty and last long. I use store-bought dry Rice Kōji, freshly cooked rice and water. Mix ingredients and fermentate in a Yogurt maker. Yes, "Rice Kōji Starter or Saka-dane酒種" was invented in Japan. As they are SO GOOD, I cannot go back to regular bread or pizza.

  • @davidotoole9328
    @davidotoole9328 8 месяцев назад +2

    My trick for sandwiches: Toast the outside of both slices of bread, let them go cold and make your sandwich. When you eat it, the inside remains moist and tender but the outside is toothsome and keeps a firm texture, making your piece easier to handle. You can make really wet sandwiches like this as the bread won't soak all the way through.

  • @risingmojofilter
    @risingmojofilter 3 месяца назад

    "There's more to bread than a really lovely sandwich and then 6 or so disappointing ones that follow"
    Perfectly describes the dinner rolls I made last week. How does he know??? Definitely going to try out the freeze and reheat strategy. I've just been putting them in the fridge in tupperware and it hasn't turned out great.

  • @GermandaSpeedwell
    @GermandaSpeedwell 7 месяцев назад

    I make bread once a week and when it is totally cold we slice and freeze it. Then we just take out the slices we want exactly when we want them! Lovely fresh bread all week! By the way, the lucky slicer gets the privilege of eating the crusts( the best bit) with honey as a reward!

  • @magdar.3986
    @magdar.3986 7 месяцев назад +1

    If the last slice of bread becomes really hard - you can always recycle it. Next time you bake soak it in as much water as it can absorb (which is a lot) and add it to your new dough (squish it with your hands or use a mixer). This will allow for a higher total hydration and keep the new bread "fresh" for longer.

  • @taxdragon
    @taxdragon 5 месяцев назад

    I don't think there was anything in that video that I didn't already know. However, it was great to be reminded of all those points and ideas. It was great to have that info presented the way you did. That made me think about what you said and I will definitely being applying it, to bread, chicken, and probably other types of "leftovers". Thank you.

  • @ulf373
    @ulf373 6 месяцев назад

    This video deserves a record in the archive of what's left after the inevitable nuclear war. Bread can be perfected. Life can be made as beautiful as is, no level up after that. Accept the status quo, that, whatever is the best thing that will happen to you during your lifetime, cannot be improved. If it can, not by much, and most certainly most of us won't be able to tell the difference.

  • @Tim_E88
    @Tim_E88 6 месяцев назад

    Hey Jack,
    while watching this video two bloomers can't wait to get baked in some minutes. Your videos helped me a lot to get back or to stay on my bread baking journey. Thanks a lot! Your beginner sourdough recipe is a great start for everyone in central European climate with about 20-22°C room temperature. Over the last weeks I baked 12 of those loaves and still tweaking to get better and better. Your 217 milk bread became a staple since it's first bake. It's soo good!
    You nailed the point of this whole keep stuff fresh forever topic. Treat bread like a chicken!! Make the best of each part and enjoy it. I don't ever through bread away. If some is getting stale I cut it into cubes, dry them with retained heat after baking and crush them in a blender, do bread dumplings, bread pudding. Toasted sourdough bread and leftover gravy, great combination. Grilled cheese with pickles... I'm getting hungry.
    I really like your enthusiasm and passion on this. Keep up all that great work you are putting into your content.
    Greetings from Germany, Tim

  • @FlavourFool
    @FlavourFool 8 месяцев назад +3

    The day after baking, I cut and freeze my bread in pairs of slices, then in the morning before work I get a pair out, and it doesn't matter that it's still frozen when I make the sandwich, because by lunchtime it's good to eat 😉

  • @mirandavandermerwe2185
    @mirandavandermerwe2185 5 месяцев назад

    This seriously helped my enjoyment of baking bread. No longer tooth breaking bread, which tasted great in the morning but in the evening in the shop's plastic bag in the fridge, was very unpleasant. Bread needs to be in the fridge as our temperatures in home is soaring and unlike Europe and USA, we don't have central heating or homes built for the weather. Store-bought bread turns green moldy if left on the counter. Or on the fridge in the bread bin for that matter. I do confess I did not follow you Jake in all the other parts of the video, English is not my first language, and you do speak at breakneck speed in this video. Yet this has been the one thing that gives me new hope for baking bread again. Thank you. I immediately put my cookies in a glass jar, now house members or guests don't have an excuse to finish the packet in one go.😀 So amazing, I looked up at the breadbin and saw the popcorn there. bought a popcorn airfryer because the hard kernels broke my microwave popcorn machine. The stuff is so darn dry, no one wants to eat the popcorn. Thanks again Jack for this rapid speaking video - I can slow the speech down, but I think I get it.

  • @519achilles
    @519achilles 8 месяцев назад +1

    The first person on earth that used a knife to open biscuits 😂
    Love you Jack!

    • @Bakewithjack
      @Bakewithjack  8 месяцев назад +3

      😂😂😂 now the WHOLE WORLD will 😜

  • @anthonymcphillips3675
    @anthonymcphillips3675 6 месяцев назад

    Brilliant and even if I can’t use the last crumb I know the birds in the garden will enjoy

  • @baccibee1
    @baccibee1 8 месяцев назад +3

    Jack…I was just having a cuppa while my dough finishes proving ….what a lovely homage to the stuff of life !
    Thanks for this and all your posts . XRuth

    • @Bakewithjack
      @Bakewithjack  8 месяцев назад

      Perfect timeing :-) You're welcome!

  • @lucooper8166
    @lucooper8166 8 месяцев назад +1

    I made a killer loaf of crusty sourdough yesterday, I don’t want it to last forever, but we are 2 older people who would like to keep the crunchy crust as long as possible. I just leave it in the empty oven to keep it out of the way, or wrapped in a tea towel in the oven. I guess that’s about as good as I can keep it. I’m now thinking I should take my sourdough bread recipe and cut it in half before preshaping and underbake one of the smaller loaves to freeze. Thanks for the idea (and matter how obvious it seemed) 😜😬

  • @HolisticRobot
    @HolisticRobot 8 месяцев назад +3

    We really need a shirt "Treat bread like a.......chicken."

    • @Feebeeee
      @Feebeeee 8 месяцев назад +1

      I would like a ‘Cake is Pointless’ T-shirt 🤣

    • @lanaroberts2937
      @lanaroberts2937 8 месяцев назад

      Please do this without the ellipsis. 🎉❤

  • @marywebb1138
    @marywebb1138 8 месяцев назад +1

    I bought a plastic bread box from Amazon. It keeps my bread fresh for at least a week. It's not cheap, $30 . But it's worth keeping my bread fresh

  • @pamcullen537
    @pamcullen537 8 месяцев назад +5

    Years ago my late mother in law got 9 meals out of 1 chicken but she was in the. WI. Probably made coat hangers from the bones😂 sorry, I digressed then 💕🦆

  • @mirandavandermerwe2185
    @mirandavandermerwe2185 5 месяцев назад

    Just an update on those moldy green bread, white. I have neighbours all around me that share the same rubbishbin and I find 3/4 loaves or 1/2 at least bread from the shop in the dustbin, in our sweltering heat in the homes. Where do they leave it, I asked one. One the countertop. Thank you seriously Jack, I now have hope for my treasured baked bread, that it will last longer and be at least chewable. They otherwise leave it in the fridge in the plastic bag from the shop. Still, it molds, in this humid climate.

  • @KerryHarrison-zf1zd
    @KerryHarrison-zf1zd 8 месяцев назад +2

    Your bread advice is great life advice!

  • @candywalker483
    @candywalker483 8 месяцев назад

    Fantastic video, full of information this gal who has baked bread over 50 years really appreciates and some never heard before. 😍

  • @unconventionalideas5683
    @unconventionalideas5683 8 месяцев назад +2

    3:01
    New merchandise idea: Bake with Jack cloth bread bags! Anyone else down for it?
    Edit: autocorrect changed cloth to clutch. I guess I write about mechanical things too much…

  • @supernoobsmith5718
    @supernoobsmith5718 8 месяцев назад

    I keep my fresh bread out for half a day, then put it in the fridge in a ziplock. I cut and lightly toast every slice after that. Works great for me.

  • @nikolateslawirelessradio
    @nikolateslawirelessradio 7 месяцев назад

    I was watching your 3 Bread Basics videos. One thing that you rarely hear about on bread channels when making bread is the age of your flour. I've been making bread for decades and only recently discovered that older flour (more than 2 years old) can result in the bread flattening during the baking process. Would be great to see a video on this subject.

  • @angieneal7362
    @angieneal7362 8 месяцев назад +2

    I've been going down this thought path myself lately. Thank you for saying what I needed to hear - and for doing it eloquently and hilariouslyrics! Yes! Treat bread like chicken! ❤😂 👏

  • @tanyabrillhart6608
    @tanyabrillhart6608 7 месяцев назад

    Watched this video while my oven is preheating. Gonna go score it and bake.

  • @MyParamedicAfterLife
    @MyParamedicAfterLife 6 месяцев назад +1

    That was the most entertaining explanation of bread and freshness I’ve ever watched. 😀 Love it. ❤️👍

  • @mplstb
    @mplstb 7 месяцев назад

    This tip may be contrary to everything in this video but a bread baker told me to store his bread, or my homemade bread, in those waxy bags that are inside boxes of cereal... It's not airtight but it keeps our bread nice for the couple of days that it lasts after baking.

  • @benstern2079
    @benstern2079 4 месяца назад

    You are simply great. Knowledge, ability to get your message across, and real value to us amateurs.

  • @spacial2
    @spacial2 8 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you Jack. An excellent rant. Just watched it, early morning. Set me up for digging my garden.

  • @helenjohnson7583
    @helenjohnson7583 8 месяцев назад

    Really have missed your “rant” lectures Jack! So spot on! Thanks!!
    Store bought bread in plastic bags usually tests positive for mold. Bakery bread (allowed to breathe) usually is free of mold.

  • @gabyvon-wes8324
    @gabyvon-wes8324 7 месяцев назад

    Someone told me about you! You are great! Thanks for the advise, I usually bake brioche and Focaccia and they keep well on those freezer bags..

  • @jaysonwilliamson970
    @jaysonwilliamson970 8 месяцев назад +1

    I’m glad we live in a world that has both bread and cake.

  • @livebree8879
    @livebree8879 6 месяцев назад

    I suddenly remember the chilled "fresh" sandwiches in supermarkets. LMAO. I bake fresh bread because I and my family wanted to eat fresh bread. Otherwise, we could just grab store-bought bread anytime. In case of leftovers, which rarely happens, I just feed them to the pigeons by my window.

  • @learnwithlillian8509
    @learnwithlillian8509 7 месяцев назад

    Hey Jake, except for brownies, I too prefer sweet breads over cake. Your videos just get better and better, as your wisdom “puffs” up. Thanks!

  • @adrianrevill7686
    @adrianrevill7686 3 месяца назад

    I do love crispy crust, but i also enjoy a good chewy crust too. As long as the center is still ok. After that it is toast.

  • @skiesthelimit101
    @skiesthelimit101 8 месяцев назад

    As always “Brilliant” description of Why I love making my breads. Thank you my friend.

  • @fathiftaita9690
    @fathiftaita9690 Месяц назад

    You've just got a new subscriber. Loved the video and planning to see more. Very educational and entertaining. Thank you.

  • @miriam9230
    @miriam9230 3 месяца назад

    ahah! you are funny! "Let's not treat bread as a biscuit. Treat bread as chicken!' lolzz love your videos !

  • @Mikester1974
    @Mikester1974 7 месяцев назад

    Nice video. I took a bagel in to work for my lunch this week with some bread sticks and hummus. The bread sticks lost a bit of crunch. Hmmm lesson learnt.

  • @Kay-du4ll
    @Kay-du4ll 4 месяца назад

    THAT sir was a PERFECT explanation!! Treat your bread like a chicken....brilliant!!

  • @anthonydeherrera6707
    @anthonydeherrera6707 8 месяцев назад

    I agree with you, Jack. I don't buy store bread no more. I am making bread everyday just for practice and eating it too. And it's so much better. I think i'm gonna join your club on baker's club thanks again jack

  • @vt356b
    @vt356b 6 месяцев назад

    Nice one! But have you tried freezing sandwiches? A whole fresh loaf sliced up and made into sandwiches - Sharp Cheddar cheese and chutney or cheese and apricot jam or marmalade - then wrapped individually and frozen. Grab one as you leave in the morning for work and by lunchtime it's thawed and ready to eat. If your willpower fails at elevenses it's an interesting experience tasting each component as they thaw in your mouth at slightly different rates: bread then chutney then cheese! Fresh bread and these relatively dry high fat fillings don't seem to end up soggy but I wouldn't try tomatoes or other things with a high water content.

  • @1LuckyGirl1975
    @1LuckyGirl1975 Месяц назад

    Dying laughing at this one bloke skit. The Sunday roast..are you partial to potatoes roasted in goose fat with yours as well? I needed this good time today. Bless you love.

  • @Breezan65
    @Breezan65 2 месяца назад

    “Treat [real] bread like a chicken.” Brilliant!

  • @dottyk1637
    @dottyk1637 8 месяцев назад

    Mom didn't have time to make bread, too busy with 5 kids, gardening vegetables, laundry using a wringer washer and clothesline, cloth diapers too, cooking everything from scratch, preserving, baking potica, strudel and homemade raised donuts, yummers! But the Italian bakery down the street, fresh bread still warm, never fully made it all the way home intact('mom, mice ate the insides'🤣) Bread was ABSOLUTELY never wasted, each day a different use, yes, with meals, sandwiches, French toast, mlecin kafe(bread, rockhard, soaked in hot cafe au lait, as kids we LOVED it) and then the ultimate, breadcrumbs, for the very ending Weiner Schnitzel, yum again!
    Trying desperately to make all our own bread, already muffins, pies, cakes, pizza, for sure homemade. I've made your focaccia a dozen times, best ever, family and neighbours approved.
    Bread just doesn't last long enough, in our house, to get too stale, all the better! Thanks Jack.

  • @andrewmoss9242
    @andrewmoss9242 7 месяцев назад

    To my taste, the magic happens with my sourdough that's around three, to four days old. More sour note flavour, and the chew, which personally I enjoy as much as a good crust. Supermarket bread does have it's up side. Buying up their reduced to clear sourdough that is not even past it's BB date, for a fraction of the original price. Freeze it and enjoy later. My favourite is to buy up a few loaves from the bakery of a particularly well known French baker, for 0.49p each, from my local supermarket.

  • @hehxP
    @hehxP 8 месяцев назад

    The cut side down on the chopping board is the only way I keep my bread.
    Sourdough at my house can stay fine for up to 4 days, could be more if I used any oil in the dough.
    Thanks Jack for this video. I thought I was the only one that keeps bread that way - as most homes have some kind of bread box. Though wooden bread boxes might be ok'ish as untreated wood breathes.

  • @kathleenfairykats1166
    @kathleenfairykats1166 7 месяцев назад

    I still miss the music but this was an OUTSTANDING lesson in mindfulness with bread. You are a treasure.

  • @elisebrinich7625
    @elisebrinich7625 7 месяцев назад

    Love this lesson on why we keep bread various ways. Definitely gonna start to think of my bread as a roast chicken!

  • @robjones2060
    @robjones2060 8 месяцев назад

    Being fairly new to your channel and your take on all things bread, I am not at all sure what you just said, it sounded good and following your videos I can make passable bread, so thank you Jack and keep em coming !!

  • @belindadavis5497
    @belindadavis5497 7 месяцев назад

    Thanks Jack. I have always wondered about this. You have clarified it so well -as always. And I do like cake as well as bread and biscuits. Always great with a cuppa. I live in a very humid hot climate and unfortunately the best way to keep bread is in the freezer.

  • @pamelahooper7851
    @pamelahooper7851 8 месяцев назад

    Thanks Jack. That brings together random thoughts and ideas about our lovely home made bread into logical order. The concept of accepting and enjoying the different stages after the baking makes sense. Baking bread is a real luxury but I will continue to indulge.

  • @michaelprozonic
    @michaelprozonic 8 месяцев назад +1

    after seeing your other video, i tried just setting my bread face down on the cutting board. all was going well but then suddenly the crust got incredibly hard, even difficult to slice. now i store it face down with a plastic bag loosely over the top. seems to be working. a little air exchange under the loose fitting plastic seems to be just enough to keep the crust nice. This was a basic white sandwich loaf. Baguettes and ciabatta never make it to the next day in our house

  • @perrineanderson1851
    @perrineanderson1851 7 месяцев назад

    This right here is why I tell folks to look YOU up online !! ❤

  • @warzshadow9701
    @warzshadow9701 3 месяца назад

    Love your whitty analogies! Had me laughing while making me appreciate the "Bread" 😂

  • @ulf373
    @ulf373 6 месяцев назад

    Jack rocks. A few dentures and wrinkles punched into his face, but that's what's called life, isn't it? :)

  • @pompeyexileuk205
    @pompeyexileuk205 7 месяцев назад

    Well you learn something new every day even at 65. A couple of weeks back I put a couple of home-made fairy cakes in the buscuit barrel to keep them fresh and ALL of my choccy buscuits went soooo soft and limp I'm sure it was only the chocolate coating keeping them from falling apart. and I couldn't understand why. Lesson learned...thanks :)
    Here's a question though, whatever bread I bake no matter for how long or for how hot, what comes out with a nice crisp crust, within half an hour of cooling down the crust goes soft....WHY? Better still how can I prevent it from happening? Crusty bread from a high street bakers when you buy it (sorry for swearing) is crusty and that has been out of the oven for hours.

  • @jchill214
    @jchill214 6 месяцев назад

    Was this video about bread or life I couldn’t tell but I loved it

  • @karoliyer4860
    @karoliyer4860 8 месяцев назад +3

    Hear hear…….thanks Jack!

  • @TheJoan1959
    @TheJoan1959 7 месяцев назад

    Loved your video! Have missed hearing from you. Thank you for the wonderful encouragements (though I shall admit that I have a "wicked" yogurt blueberry muffin recipe that would put to rest any doubts about the interest of eating muffins!).

  • @mattcom2
    @mattcom2 7 месяцев назад

    Phenomenal, Jack! A mundane topic turned into a tour de force. Would that I had even a gram of your talent - not for making bread (I can do that, thanks to you) but for extemporaneous, if structured, talk to the camera. Or to an audience. Marvelous!

  • @martianrobber
    @martianrobber 8 месяцев назад

    I wrap my bread in butcher/freezer paper and then pop that into a plastic baggie to freeze it. It keeps my bread great! No frost.

  • @rachaelsimpson8802
    @rachaelsimpson8802 8 месяцев назад

    I'm not going to watch another video, cos I've got to go and get my starter going so I can make bread in the morning! Excellent video Jack, well said.

  • @Raul28153
    @Raul28153 8 месяцев назад

    you CAN keep your breads fresher and moist by using some pregelatinized flour starch into the mix. for yeasted breads a teaspoon of White Vinegar will give you a longer resistance to mold.

  • @bekahbeeb
    @bekahbeeb 8 месяцев назад

    Holy rant! You've mentioned SOOOOOO many different good ideas!! Great video once again 🎉

  • @katieberberich826
    @katieberberich826 7 месяцев назад

    You are brilliant, Jack. I hope you know it. 🥇

  • @bloob318
    @bloob318 8 месяцев назад

    What about keeping bread fresh in hot humid places? It will turn moldy in a couple of days wrapped in a cloth. The only way I could find is to put the bread into an air-tight box. For longer storage, the freezer is necessary.

  • @readeral
    @readeral 7 месяцев назад

    This is a hilariously good rant. Enjoyed every second of it.

  • @barbarapaessler9067
    @barbarapaessler9067 8 месяцев назад

    The perfect video lol.. I've been trying to figure out how to keep my self made bread fresh / store it.. You crack me up ! Thanks for the information ..

  • @ingridkarm8922
    @ingridkarm8922 8 месяцев назад

    Haha love all the metaphors. There is a delicious purpose for every stage of good bread

  • @AliciatheCho
    @AliciatheCho 7 месяцев назад

    Wicked sense of humor AND informative

  • @1998tkhri
    @1998tkhri 8 месяцев назад

    I moved into an apartment over the summer, and the fridge had stuff from previous roommates including the majority of a loaf of store-bought bread that had been past the expiry date for wayyy too long. Yet, no signs of mold. I composted it, but point still stands.

  • @michelleslifeonrepeat
    @michelleslifeonrepeat 7 месяцев назад

    Love your style and content. I’m waiting for my starter to be right to make my sourdough journey again. Stopped for a year, health reasons.