Why Americans eat sliced bread
An explanation from the
Smithsonian's Food and Think blog:
In the early 20th century, Americans were highly concerned with the
purity of their food supply. In the case of bread, hand-kneading was
suddenly seen as a possible source of contamination... Mass-produced bread, on the other hand, seemed safe. It was made in
shining factories, mechanically mixed, government regulated. It was
individually wrapped...
But factory breads were also incredibly soft... “Softness,” Borrow-Strain writes, “had become
customers’ proxy for freshness, and savvy bakery scientists turned their
minds to engineering even more squeezable loaves. As a result of the
drive toward softer bread, industry observers noted that modern loaves
had become almost impossible to slice neatly at home.” The solution had
to be mechanical slicing.
Factory-sliced bread was born on July 6, 1928 at Missouri’s
Chillicothe Baking Company. While retailers would slice bread at the
point of sale, the idea of pre-sliced bread was a novelty... The bakery saw a 2,000 percent increase in sales, and mechanical slicing quickly swept the nation.
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