Ideal Bite: Dough, a Deer - Born Again Week
May 14, 2009 Trouble viewing this email? Read it online...
DAY-OLD BREAD Dough, a Deer - Born Again Week If 10,000 Biter families of four eat all the unspoiled food they typically throw away, in a year we'll save a collective $6 million. On the run from the Third Reich and got seven little mouths to feed? That will bring us back to...day-old bread. Instead of tossing the stale stuff, whip up some delicious bread pudding, bruschetta, soufflé, or French toast. It's a drop of golden sun for your palate.
- Less trash = a high note. Less bread means less bread packaging, and even though bread's biodegradable, the bags will take years to decompose in a landfill, where light, moisture, and bacteria are scarce.
- Eating on a nun's wages. At the store, day-old bread costs a third to half as much as fresh bread.
- Tastes worth singing about. No, really.
Heather uses day-old bread to make a mean bruschetta - just don't tell her to call it "brew-SHEH-tuh."
Check for mold (which isn't good for birds either, BTW) before you use it.
- Refresh it - splash some water on the loaf so it's damp on top, and heat it up in a 300-degree toaster oven for about 5 minutes (use the heat left over from baking something else to save energy).
- Make bread crumbs - toast it in a 200-degree toaster oven until it's crusty (or let dry while spread out on a flat surface), then use your cheese grater to grate it into bread crumbs.
- Make croutons - chop it into big cubes, coat it with organic olive oil, and toast it at 375 degrees 'til dry and golden brown.
- Use it in a recipe - try these: Apple Pan Charlotte; Baked French Toast; Cheese, Onion, and Bread Soufflé; Chocolate Bread Pudding; and Panzanella (Tuscan Bread Salad)
You can often tell which day of the week a bread loaf was baked by the color of its plastic twist tag. (Colors depend on region and store.) SPONSOR
Copyright 2009 Ideal Bite, Inc.
340 Brannan St. Ste 402
San Francisco, CA 94107
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A personal quest to promote the use of wind energy and hydrogen technology in the Great Lakes area of the United States. The Great Lakes area is in a unique position to become an energy exporting region through these and other renewable energy technologies. *Update 2014: Just do it everywhere - Dan*
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