by JudyJB » Thu Aug 08, 2013 9:27 pm
Yup, I checked and it is the Rhodes brand. I think I got it at an Albertsons, not Wal-Mart. I got a three-pack of white bread.
With this last loaf, I put it briefly in the microwave until it was just slightly unthawed. At that point, you could cut it up and refreeze it, I think. It does not make a really big loaf anyway, and I think only paid maybe $3.50. The baked loaves do keep several days unthawed, but it is so good and fresh, I don't think it would last that long. I sliced the end and the next big piece last night and ate it with butter and jam. Had another piece for breakfast.
Actually, you can refrigerate most bread dough for a few days, especially if it is a sweet roll dough and has extra sugar in it for the little yeasties to eat when you take them out of hibernation. I have some sweet roll dough in my refrigerator right now. Just whack at it if it starts to rise and put it back in the refrig.
Thanks for the website.
Or, you could just buy some yeast and throw some real bread together. My grandmother, my mother, and my father all made bread. This is the recipe I was taught when I was 9 or 10:
2 pkgs dry yeast dissolved in 1.5 cup warm water
3 T sugar
2 T Crisco or butter
1 T salt
6-7 cups of bread flour (must use real bread flour)
Add the sugar, crisco or butter, and salt to the water that has the yeast dissolved in it. Add about half the flour and stir. Then keep adding flour until the dough is soft but not sticky. Let it sit a few minutes and dump it onto a floured surface. Rub the stuff left in the bowl with your hands and add it to the stuff on the surface. Knead it a couple of minutes.
Put some butter or Crisco in the bowl and rub it around so all sides and bottom are covered. Dump the lump of dough back in the bowl and turn it over so there is a side up that has butter or shortening on it. Cover with saran or foil and let it sit until double. When double, knock it down a bit and knead it some more. Doesn't matter how you do this. Take out all your frustrations on the dough. Put it back in bowl and let rise some more.
Butter or grease two bread tins. Cut the dough into two parts and knead each one individually, then put in pans, let rise until almost double. (My mother used to brush melted butter on the tops before baking.) Bake at 375 or 400 or so for maybe half an hour. (Just look at it, and when the top looks brown, take it out. Dump the hot bread onto something so it can cool. Eat. Bread is a lot easier than it looks because you can be so rough with it and do so many things. No need for a bread machine and premixed garbage!