Posts Tagged ‘Bakery’

Bread – the best food ever

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

Bread is a staple food prepared basically by cooking/baking a dough of flour and water. Most of the time additional ingredients are used as well. Doughs are usually baked. In some cuisines breads are steamed, fried or baked on an unoiled skillet.

Following are very common ingredients used: salt, fat, yeast, baking soda. Leavening agents are very important in bread making process. Bread may contain other ingredients: sugar, egg, spice, fruit (such as raisins), nuts (such as walnuts), seeds (such as poppy seeds or sunflower seeds) or vegetables (such as onion or garlic).

Dating back to the Neolithic era bread is one of the oldest prepared foods. The development of leavened bread can probably also be traced to prehistoric times.

More information will be available soon.

Bakery Joke: Healthy Choice

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

A customer in a beautiful bakery was carefully examining all rich looking pastries and yummy cakes displayed on trays in the glass cases.

Then a bakery employee approached him and asked, “What would you like sir?”

He answered: “I would like that chocolate covered, cream-filled doughnut, plus that jelly filled doughnut and that cheese Danish.”

Then immediately with a deep sigh he added: “But I’m going to take an oat-bran muffin.”

If you know more bakery or watermill related jokes please fill out the comment form. Thank you!

Baker Profession

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

This BAKER word explanation is related to the cooking profession.

A baker is someone who primarily bakes and sells bread and other goodies which needs to be baked in the oven. Cakes and similar foods may also be produced. There used to be boundaries between what is produced by a baker as opposed to a pastry chef in past, but have blurred in recent decades.

The place where a baker works is called a bakery, bakehouse or bakeshop.

Bakers can work in different environments both as employees or owning their own stores/bakeries. Bakers could be working in the following types of businesses:

  • Large factories – These produce bread and flour based baked products which are then transported to numerous selling points. These normally include supermarkets, convenience and grocery stores, etc. Bakers in these environments are largely there for quality control because machines nd technology take care of much of the labour intensive aspect of the job.
  • Small Independent bakeries – These are mostly family-run businesses. They may specialise in particular types of products or country of origin.
  • Chain stores – These are mostly supermarkets selling the same range of baked products. Bakers in these stores bake according to a pre-determined recipe book using techniques used by the franchising model. The recipes used tend to be well-founded, and popular with the paying public.