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Do you refrigerate (or freeze) your bread (Doing it for an assignment)

Do you refrigerate your bread

  • Yes

    Votes: 36 58.1%
  • No

    Votes: 26 41.9%

  • Total voters
    62

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I eat my sour dough too quickly to worry about putting it in the fridge. Emergency bread lives in the freezer.

I use high protein low carb bread for lunch though and that seems to be best kept in the fridge.
 
Refrigerate mass produced bread used for toast. Have some in the freezer for emergency use as toast.

Occasionally buy fresh sourdough which is eaten fresh and not refrigerated.

Mass produced bread is so full of preservatives, mostly salt, that it doesn't really need to be refrigerated but as we eat so little of this type of bread I have had some go mouldy after many weeks so refrigerate it. I only eat this type of bread as toast. As El_Scorcho posted above, bread that has been frozen is only good for toast. My toaster, like many, has a defrost setting.
 

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Willie Rioli being investigated by the AFL for freezing sourdough bread. Victorian media has said it's 'horrible and unfathomable'. More on the story at 6
 
At the beginning of this year, a looming Federal Election was the Australian Liberal Party’s to lose, and that is what it did.

Modern elections are typically won by the political group offering the biggest showbag of goodies. In PNG, a carton of beer for a villager and a shiny new Toyota for the chief will secure votes while in Australia, a tax cut here, a first home buyer grant there and $75 off your next power bill seems to do the trick.

History shows that over several election cycles, weak fiscal regimes that deliver ongoing budget deficits give rise to an unserviceable debt mountain and crippling debt servicing costs. Ultimately, a loss of credit worthiness and trust sees nations slump to become like Argentina and imminently, the USA. These regions tend to be led by a small, wealthy, powerful and cocooned elite, below which is a hollowed-out and mostly obedient middleclass sitting above a large rump of poorly educated people who, if they have employment, are typically two or three pay-cheques away from destitution. Many are honest and hardworking, but in modern society there is an expanding sub-group that social commentator Yuval Noah Harari labels the “useless class”, equivalent to Hillary Clinton’s basket of deplorables.

When the revolution comes, as it did in France, Russia and China, everything is thrown in the air or broken. An unpredictable series of events ensures over decades. China’s Cultural Revolution led by doctrinaire Red Brigades that ended with poverty and starvation, has echos with the USA's MAGA movement.

Argentina under President Javier Milei and the USA under Trump, have begun this journey, but for now, Australia’s mostly low-tech, primary industries keep the rest afloat.

This week’s federal election shows that Australia is still a couple of election cycles away from that dire future, when the bills must be paid. However, immigration fuelled demographic changes mean that it is more unlikely that the LNP will ever regain leadership in Canberra.

Australia faces threats to its food production from severe climate events, like the 30-month drought in South Australia, recent floods in Queensland, as well as a new order in global trade and politics. A logical and prudent approach to this macro environment would be to stabilise the population below 30 million by reducing immigration inflows that added 1.28 million people in the three years to 30 September 2024.

SPA would like to see Australia adopt population policies and a political direction that mirror those of progressive Denmark.

Despite some references to policies directed towards lower immigration by parties of the Right, the election outcome was another tragedy for the sustainable population movement.

Sustainable Population Australia National President
 
At the beginning of this year, a looming Federal Election was the Australian Liberal Party’s to lose, and that is what it did.

Modern elections are typically won by the political group offering the biggest showbag of goodies. In PNG, a carton of beer for a villager and a shiny new Toyota for the chief will secure votes while in Australia, a tax cut here, a first home buyer grant there and $75 off your next power bill seems to do the trick.

History shows that over several election cycles, weak fiscal regimes that deliver ongoing budget deficits give rise to an unserviceable debt mountain and crippling debt servicing costs. Ultimately, a loss of credit worthiness and trust sees nations slump to become like Argentina and imminently, the USA. These regions tend to be led by a small, wealthy, powerful and cocooned elite, below which is a hollowed-out and mostly obedient middleclass sitting above a large rump of poorly educated people who, if they have employment, are typically two or three pay-cheques away from destitution. Many are honest and hardworking, but in modern society there is an expanding sub-group that social commentator Yuval Noah Harari labels the “useless class”, equivalent to Hillary Clinton’s basket of deplorables.

When the revolution comes, as it did in France, Russia and China, everything is thrown in the air or broken. An unpredictable series of events ensures over decades. China’s Cultural Revolution led by doctrinaire Red Brigades that ended with poverty and starvation, has echos with the USA's MAGA movement.

Argentina under President Javier Milei and the USA under Trump, have begun this journey, but for now, Australia’s mostly low-tech, primary industries keep the rest afloat.

This week’s federal election shows that Australia is still a couple of election cycles away from that dire future, when the bills must be paid. However, immigration fuelled demographic changes mean that it is more unlikely that the LNP will ever regain leadership in Canberra.

Australia faces threats to its food production from severe climate events, like the 30-month drought in South Australia, recent floods in Queensland, as well as a new order in global trade and politics. A logical and prudent approach to this macro environment would be to stabilise the population below 30 million by reducing immigration inflows that added 1.28 million people in the three years to 30 September 2024.

SPA would like to see Australia adopt population policies and a political direction that mirror those of progressive Denmark.

Despite some references to policies directed towards lower immigration by parties of the Right, the election outcome was another tragedy for the sustainable population movement.

Sustainable Population Australia National President
Yeah, but do you freeze or refrigerate your bread?
 
At the beginning of this year, a looming Federal Election was the Australian Liberal Party’s to lose, and that is what it did.

Modern elections are typically won by the political group offering the biggest showbag of goodies. In PNG, a carton of beer for a villager and a shiny new Toyota for the chief will secure votes while in Australia, a tax cut here, a first home buyer grant there and $75 off your next power bill seems to do the trick.

History shows that over several election cycles, weak fiscal regimes that deliver ongoing budget deficits give rise to an unserviceable debt mountain and crippling debt servicing costs. Ultimately, a loss of credit worthiness and trust sees nations slump to become like Argentina and imminently, the USA. These regions tend to be led by a small, wealthy, powerful and cocooned elite, below which is a hollowed-out and mostly obedient middleclass sitting above a large rump of poorly educated people who, if they have employment, are typically two or three pay-cheques away from destitution. Many are honest and hardworking, but in modern society there is an expanding sub-group that social commentator Yuval Noah Harari labels the “useless class”, equivalent to Hillary Clinton’s basket of deplorables.

When the revolution comes, as it did in France, Russia and China, everything is thrown in the air or broken. An unpredictable series of events ensures over decades. China’s Cultural Revolution led by doctrinaire Red Brigades that ended with poverty and starvation, has echos with the USA's MAGA movement.

Argentina under President Javier Milei and the USA under Trump, have begun this journey, but for now, Australia’s mostly low-tech, primary industries keep the rest afloat.

This week’s federal election shows that Australia is still a couple of election cycles away from that dire future, when the bills must be paid. However, immigration fuelled demographic changes mean that it is more unlikely that the LNP will ever regain leadership in Canberra.

Australia faces threats to its food production from severe climate events, like the 30-month drought in South Australia, recent floods in Queensland, as well as a new order in global trade and politics. A logical and prudent approach to this macro environment would be to stabilise the population below 30 million by reducing immigration inflows that added 1.28 million people in the three years to 30 September 2024.

SPA would like to see Australia adopt population policies and a political direction that mirror those of progressive Denmark.

Despite some references to policies directed towards lower immigration by parties of the Right, the election outcome was another tragedy for the sustainable population movement.

Sustainable Population Australia National President

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At the beginning of this year, a looming Federal Election was the Australian Liberal Party’s to lose, and that is what it did.

Modern elections are typically won by the political group offering the biggest showbag of goodies. In PNG, a carton of beer for a villager and a shiny new Toyota for the chief will secure votes while in Australia, a tax cut here, a first home buyer grant there and $75 off your next power bill seems to do the trick.

History shows that over several election cycles, weak fiscal regimes that deliver ongoing budget deficits give rise to an unserviceable debt mountain and crippling debt servicing costs. Ultimately, a loss of credit worthiness and trust sees nations slump to become like Argentina and imminently, the USA. These regions tend to be led by a small, wealthy, powerful and cocooned elite, below which is a hollowed-out and mostly obedient middleclass sitting above a large rump of poorly educated people who, if they have employment, are typically two or three pay-cheques away from destitution. Many are honest and hardworking, but in modern society there is an expanding sub-group that social commentator Yuval Noah Harari labels the “useless class”, equivalent to Hillary Clinton’s basket of deplorables.

When the revolution comes, as it did in France, Russia and China, everything is thrown in the air or broken. An unpredictable series of events ensures over decades. China’s Cultural Revolution led by doctrinaire Red Brigades that ended with poverty and starvation, has echos with the USA's MAGA movement.

Argentina under President Javier Milei and the USA under Trump, have begun this journey, but for now, Australia’s mostly low-tech, primary industries keep the rest afloat.

This week’s federal election shows that Australia is still a couple of election cycles away from that dire future, when the bills must be paid. However, immigration fuelled demographic changes mean that it is more unlikely that the LNP will ever regain leadership in Canberra.

Australia faces threats to its food production from severe climate events, like the 30-month drought in South Australia, recent floods in Queensland, as well as a new order in global trade and politics. A logical and prudent approach to this macro environment would be to stabilise the population below 30 million by reducing immigration inflows that added 1.28 million people in the three years to 30 September 2024.

SPA would like to see Australia adopt population policies and a political direction that mirror those of progressive Denmark.

Despite some references to policies directed towards lower immigration by parties of the Right, the election outcome was another tragedy for the sustainable population movement.

Sustainable Population Australia National President

ctrl f: freeze, bread

0/0
 
At the beginning of this year, a looming Federal Election was the Australian Liberal Party’s to lose, and that is what it did.

Modern elections are typically won by the political group offering the biggest showbag of goodies. In PNG, a carton of beer for a villager and a shiny new Toyota for the chief will secure votes while in Australia, a tax cut here, a first home buyer grant there and $75 off your next power bill seems to do the trick.

History shows that over several election cycles, weak fiscal regimes that deliver ongoing budget deficits give rise to an unserviceable debt mountain and crippling debt servicing costs. Ultimately, a loss of credit worthiness and trust sees nations slump to become like Argentina and imminently, the USA. These regions tend to be led by a small, wealthy, powerful and cocooned elite, below which is a hollowed-out and mostly obedient middleclass sitting above a large rump of poorly educated people who, if they have employment, are typically two or three pay-cheques away from destitution. Many are honest and hardworking, but in modern society there is an expanding sub-group that social commentator Yuval Noah Harari labels the “useless class”, equivalent to Hillary Clinton’s basket of deplorables.

When the revolution comes, as it did in France, Russia and China, everything is thrown in the air or broken. An unpredictable series of events ensures over decades. China’s Cultural Revolution led by doctrinaire Red Brigades that ended with poverty and starvation, has echos with the USA's MAGA movement.

Argentina under President Javier Milei and the USA under Trump, have begun this journey, but for now, Australia’s mostly low-tech, primary industries keep the rest afloat.

This week’s federal election shows that Australia is still a couple of election cycles away from that dire future, when the bills must be paid. However, immigration fuelled demographic changes mean that it is more unlikely that the LNP will ever regain leadership in Canberra.

Australia faces threats to its food production from severe climate events, like the 30-month drought in South Australia, recent floods in Queensland, as well as a new order in global trade and politics. A logical and prudent approach to this macro environment would be to stabilise the population below 30 million by reducing immigration inflows that added 1.28 million people in the three years to 30 September 2024.

SPA would like to see Australia adopt population policies and a political direction that mirror those of progressive Denmark.

Despite some references to policies directed towards lower immigration by parties of the Right, the election outcome was another tragedy for the sustainable population movement.

Sustainable Population Australia National President
I'd sell my vote for a carton of beer and bin the bread. Gives me indigestion anyway.
 

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Hey guys, just a quick pole on whether or not you refrigerate your bread, I need some form of data for an assignment. Thanks in advance.

Usually, we don’t. But we might do it in those heat-wave Summer weeks.
 
Guys, I'm conducting research as well - when you dispose of a body so you rely on pigs or a vat of acid? Strictly hypothetical of course.
 

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Do you refrigerate (or freeze) your bread (Doing it for an assignment)

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