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Mass Produced Bread

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jadyn | 17:53 Wed 23rd Aug 2017 | Food & Drink
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Why can I sometimes buy pre-packaged bread in shops made by Allied Bakeries, Roberts etc and find them drier or moister than other similar packaged bread.
I'm not talking here about supermarket in-store bakery bread. I mean the stuff that is wrapped in branded plastic bags with a tag as a closure. I've seen this difference in moisture content in supermarket own label bread as well and I realise that these big manufacturers make it for them.
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Unfortunately bread and bread products now are not what they used to be. So whatever you buy, wherever you buy from they seem to be of a standard mix and bake. If you want decent bread...IMO it is bake your own. You will never beat it....mass produced bread it NOT IMO good. You will never replicate decent bread unless it is baked from scratch with no additive flour and decent yeast.

Other than that....choose one that suits you, but good luck. IMO opinion bread nowadays it total *** and there's no escape from it!
Jadyn, I know precisely the type of bread you're referring to and the reason for the disparity is down to whether or not they contain fat and/or oils.

Much of the supermarket bread made by Hovis and their franchise bakeries (e.g Family Loaf), don't contain any fat or oils (Hovis for many a year have produced both white and brown bread). Consequently, the bread is drier than some other mass produced loaves making it more appealing for toasting regardless of the thickness of the bread. In fact, some other manufacturers exclude oil deliberately in their "Toastie" bread ranges to alter the texture for this very purpose.

Morrisons also tend not to include oils and fats in their own brand bread ranges(made by Rathbones, which Morrison's own) and other suppliers. Roberts Bakeries use fats and oils with some discretion whilst Braces use only rapeseed oil.

As far as the oil/fats are concerned, rapeseed oil was formerly the most common oil in bread, but due to it's increasing cost on the commodity market, manufacturers are substituting palm oil. Palm oil is one of the highest saturated oils in existence and has gained dominance because it is hugely cheaper than rapeseed oil. Until recently, palm oil's primary use was lubricating industrial machinery. Please don't be misled about so-called "sustainable palm oil" on packaging as there is no legal definition of the term and the ecosystems out in Borneo and other islands are being systematically destroyed in order to grow the palm species required for the oil.

The widespread use of palm oil is one of the reasons why successive governments no longer bleat about the harm we are doing to ourselves in eating saturated fat. They have been unable to curb it's widespread use as manufacturers say that reverting to the healthier rapeseed oil will increase the cost of processed food massively.

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