How do you store your bread?
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Discussion

Mont Blanc

Original Poster:

2,071 posts

60 months

Sunday 31st August
quotequote all
The warmer weather this year has no doubt had something to do with it, but we seem to have thrown out quite a lot of mouldy bread over the last few months. A loaf kept in its plastic bag in a cupboard, seems to go mouldy within 5 or 6 days.

Keeping it in the fridge obviously stops the mould, but makes it go stale very rapidly.

Maybe I'm expecting too much longevity, but we never seem to get though it all before it goes mouldy.

The obvious answer is 'buy less bread' but I was wondering what everyone else does for bread storage?

sherman

14,535 posts

232 months

Sunday 31st August
quotequote all
This year hasnt been great for bread ime.
Bread needs cool but not cold storage for normal eating.
Find a cool cupboard in your house to store it.

Your other option is to put half the loaf in the freezer and get it out as required.
Bread defrosts very quickly.
You could even make a sandwich with frozen bread and it will defrost in your lunch box by lunchtime.

ARHarh

4,884 posts

124 months

Sunday 31st August
quotequote all
My missus makes bread, a couple of loafs every other weekend, I cut each one into 3 bits and freeze, take out as needed and it never goes bad, before its eaten.

JoshSm

1,856 posts

54 months

Sunday 31st August
quotequote all
I just keep it in the bag stored in a zip lock. Maybe in the fridge first while the other one is finished; doesn't go stale but needs to sit a while out of the fridge afterwards to recover.

Does seem to depend on the brand, some bread goes moldy quickly and others last ages.

Mont Blanc

Original Poster:

2,071 posts

60 months

Monday 1st September
quotequote all
I think freezing may be the way forward. I already do this with bags of fresh croissants etc, and they always thaw/heat just fine.

Someone needs to invent a humidity and temperature controlled bread storage bin... I would absolutely buy one. You could obviously waste a lot of bread before coming close to covering the cost of such a device, but it's the principle of the matter smile

21TonyK

12,498 posts

226 months

Monday 1st September
quotequote all
Mont Blanc said:
I think freezing may be the way forward.
This was my thought as we use very little sliced bread, just keep a loaf in the top of the freezer and pull out slices as needed.

Other than that we tend to either buy or I make unsliced loaves which are gone in a day or so at most.

NDA

23,432 posts

242 months

Monday 1st September
quotequote all
A loaf in the fridge lasts a week - I think brown lasts longer than white*


  • I am not a scientist

Bluevanman

8,675 posts

210 months

Monday 1st September
quotequote all
I only ever use bread for toast so it's in the freezer and from there straight into the toaster,no waste at all

andyb28

1,020 posts

135 months

Monday 1st September
quotequote all
I hold the top of the bag, then give the loaf a couple of spins like a basketball.
Place back on the Worktop biggrin

I have seeded bread, so perhaps that lasts a bit longer than white.

fooman

292 posts

81 months

Monday 1st September
quotequote all
The best bread is bread that baked, sliced and eaten on the same day. The next best bread is baked. sliced and frozen on same day. We keep a whole freezer drawer just for bread.

Mobile Chicane

21,598 posts

229 months

Monday 1st September
quotequote all
I freeze it in batches of four slices each and remove as I need.

I make packed lunch sandwiches with frozen bread - easier to spread butter on - and keep these the fridge overnight to defrost.

thegreenhell

20,142 posts

236 months

Monday 1st September
quotequote all
Sliced loaves (brown, seeded) go in the fridge in an airtight bag with the air squeezed out. These can last a week without going mouldy or stale. They could probably last longer, but they're usually eaten before then as toast or quick sandwiches.

Full loaves from the bakery are sliced and frozen as soon as they get home, then individual slices are defrosted as necessary.

TX1

2,686 posts

200 months

Monday 1st September
quotequote all
Used to throw loads away at one time, nowadays freeze all types of bread and make sure it is well wrapped and defrost in the microwave as required.
If it is the crunchy type like a stick I slightly wet the crust after defrosting and put it under a grill or in the oven for a while to get the crust crunchy again.

hidetheelephants

30,993 posts

210 months

Monday 1st September
quotequote all
Bluevanman said:
I only ever use bread for toast so it's in the freezer and from there straight into the toaster,no waste at all
Snap; keep it in the freezer, mainly used for toast so it's not exactly a hardship.

paulrockliffe

16,217 posts

244 months

Monday 1st September
quotequote all
andyb28 said:
I hold the top of the bag, then give the loaf a couple of spins like a basketball.
Place back on the Worktop biggrin

I have seeded bread, so perhaps that lasts a bit longer than white.
Suck the air out first and it lasts twice as long.

dickymint

27,487 posts

275 months

Monday 1st September
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Freezer space is high end real-estate in our house - bread has no place in there nono

Bill

56,074 posts

272 months

Monday 1st September
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I suppose it gets stored in the kids bellies. Doesn't last long enough to get mouldy.

Petrus1983

10,469 posts

179 months

Monday 1st September
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I've been a convert to freezing it - genuinely wouldn't think it would taste nice after being frozen. I was wrong and now 60% of each loaf isn't wasted.

soad

34,057 posts

193 months

Tuesday 2nd September
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Goose and ducks are very grateful for any leftovers in a local park. biggrin

Sheepshanks

37,815 posts

136 months

Tuesday 2nd September
quotequote all
soad said:
Goose and ducks are very grateful for any leftovers in a local park. biggrin
Uh oh……