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Bread has been around for 5000 years.

http://www.breadpages.org.uk /. Bread has been around for 5000 years. . A record of bread recipes was first made by Pliny the Elder in Roman Times. Paul Pursglove. Slides for SOTMAS Talk and tasting – A History of Bread Baking – 7 th March 2014. Examples of bread making.

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Bread has been around for 5000 years.

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  1. http://www.breadpages.org.uk/ Bread has been around for 5000 years. A record of bread recipes was first made by Pliny the Elder in Roman Times. Paul Pursglove Slides for SOTMAS Talk and tasting – A History of Bread Baking – 7th March 2014

  2. Examples of bread making • Viking Blaanda Bread from Shetland and Sweden – Archaeological Evidence • Egyptian Khorasan Bread – Hieroglyph and Archaeological Evidence • Roman Bread of Pisenum – Early Roman Recipe • Tudor Peasebread – Last bake of the day  • Lancashire Riddle Bread – Pub Grub 

  3. Blaanda Bread “The name is Old English for Mixed Bread” HolgerArbman. 1943. Die Gräber. Birka: Untersuchungen und Studien, vol. 1. Stockholm: Kungl. VitterhetsHistorieochAntikvitetsAkadamien. The graves. Birka: investigations and studies, vol. 1 Remains of unleavened bread in a womans grave, early viking. HakonHjelmqvist. 1986. "Botanische Analyse einigerBrote." Birka II:1, SystematischeAnalysen der Gräberfunde, ed. Greta Arwidsson, pp. 263-272. Stockholm: Almquist & Wiksell. Botanical analysis of some bread. Birka II Analysis of bread remains and grains at Birka (Bjӧrka), Sweden.

  4. Saddle Querns were used to grind grain into flour. 150g wholemeal barley flour 50g wholemeal wheat flour 2 teaspoons of crushed flax seeds 2 teaspoons of lard or butter 100 ml water Mix the dry ingredients and rub in the lard or butter. Mix in the water to achieve a thick dough. Roll into balls and press flat to 20mm thickness (or less). Bake on a warm griddle – turn with a wooden spatula.

  5. Egyptian Khorasan Bread • The Egyptian Empire lasted 2000 years. • Khorasan wheat was used in the Ptolemaic Dynasty from 280 BC onwards. • It is often referred to as Golden Flour.

  6. Baking Egyptian Style 500g Kamut Flour 5g “Dried Yeast” 400ml Water 15ml Olive Oil Light kindling in the clay oven and burn for an hour and a half. Mix the ingredients into a stiff dough and rest for an hour. Knock back the dough and kneed. Shape into Flat breads and leave to rise for 30 minutes. Rake out the oven and bake the bread until done.

  7. Roman Bread The Romans were the first people in history to document bread recipes. Roman bakers were required to register with the Collegium Pistorumbefore they could sell their produce. The earliest recorded recipes come from the time of Pliny the Elder. They are of course in Latin.

  8. Mosaic – Villa near Paris Lava Cast of BreadPompeii Roman Oven - Egypt

  9. Bread of Picenum Picenum was a town in Italy which was well known 2000 years ago for its speciality bread. This bread requires a yeast starter or “mother dough”. Mix flour and warm water to form a loose batter and add chopped currants. Leave for a few days until the mixture is fermenting.

  10. Pane Picenum 500g Wholewheat Emmer flour 2 tablespoons of Mother Dough 200ml warm whole milk 2 teaspoons of Honey 50g Currants 25ml Olive Oil Add the honey and currants to warm milk and leave to infuse for an hour. Mix in the flour, currant mix and the mother dough and kneed into a stiff dough. Leave to rise for an hour. Knock back and kneed a second time, form into a round loaf shape and leave to rise and double in size. Bake at 190°C for 23 minutes.Glaze with olive oil whilst still hot. Cool before eating.

  11. Tudor Baking During Tudor times, baking bread was very much in the medieval tradition, using brick or stone ovens which had to be fired up before each bake. Mixed grain bread was used for workers and artisans. Refined white bread was eaten by the aristocracy. Society at this time was very class orientated.

  12. Clapbread or Peasebread At the end of the bakers day, clapbread would be made up from bran, left over flour and probably floor sweepings. The oven would not be fired up and this bread would cook in the residual heat from the last bake. It was a very cheep bread for the poor. Peasebread was made when all of the grain had been used up. Peas, beans and vetch would be milled to make an inferior loaf.

  13. Ingredients A Ingredients B 300g pea flour 400g bran 300g wheat flour 200g bean flour Yeast Yeast 500ml warm water 500ml warm water Ingredients C 400g Bran 200g wheat flour Yeast 500ml warm water

  14. 19th Century Bread During the 19th Century there were many types of bread made regionally. Many homes and businesses baked their own bread in their own ovens.

  15. Lancashire Riddle Bread This bread was made as pub grub, to go with cheese and pickles and a pint of ale.

  16. Riddle Bread 300g Oatmeal flour 50g Sourdough yeast starter Warm Water Make like a pizza base and use a skewer or a ruler to mark the rolled out dough very deeply. Bake at 200°C for 15 minutes. This is a quick to make bread which can be easily split into pieces. Traditionally it was spread thickly with butter which sat in the riddle like grooves.

  17. Fin http://www.breadpages.org.uk

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