• jqubed@lemmy.world
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    il y a 1 mois

    In all my years I’ve never walked into a friends home and been offered a baguette or a fresh slice of focaccia.

    Well then your friends suck

    • mydoomlessaccount@infosec.pub
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      il y a 1 mois

      “Hey, man! Glad you could make it! Can I get you anything? Some chips, some pretzels, an entire baguette, maybe some iced tea or something?”

    • Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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      il y a 1 mois

      I buy baguettes roughly twice a week. They are amazing with oil and vinegar.

      This is 4chan, though… I’m not shocked an incel would think this.

    • RBWells@lemmy.world
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      il y a 1 mois

      Yeah, my second to oldest daughter was visiting the other day and I offered her fresh sourdough toast and filtered chilled water, felt kind of funny like “here’s your bread and water” but it is a delicious snack.

      Sourdough is sold in stores here, a loaf from Whole Foods was the reason I started baking again, that bread was so good but mine now is often even better. So maybe there is a big overlap between people who like fancy bread and people who make it? But even so - if you are making a soup and want bread with it, nobody is buying sliced white industrial sandwich bread for that, and I will occasionally ask my husband to pick up “fancy white bread - from the bakery section not the aisles.”

    • GiantChickDicks@lemmy.ml
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      il y a 1 mois

      Agreed! I had a get together with a friend on Friday, and among our many wonderful snacks was a loaf of picante cheese bread from the bougie bakery owned by our employer. That shit slaps, and people deserve to experience the carb-rich glory.

  • TootSweet@lemmy.world
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    il y a 1 mois

    “Shit, man, shit shit shit.”

    “Steve man. Calm the fuck down. What’s wrong?”

    “It’s a customer, man.”

    “Please tell me they didn’t take an orange from the bottom of the stack again.”

    “No, no. Worse. So much worse. He’s buying the boule.”

    “Ha. You had me worried for a minute. Nobody buys the boule. You misheard.”

    “No, man, I’m telling you. He asked where it was. I made him repeat the question. He said again he wanted the ‘sourdough boule.’ He’s got it in his cart now.”

    “…You’re serious.”

    “Yes, man. He’s about to fucking buy the boule.”

    “Shit, man. What are we going to do?”

    “I don’t know. I- I don’t know. This has never happened before.”

    “We have to alert them.”

    “Them?”

    “You know, them.”

    “Wh- you mean the simulation people?”

    “You got a better idea?”

    “Yeah, maybe drinking bleach. Not to mention we have no way to con-”

    “H-hello? Um… Sim- simulation people? Um-”

    “What the fuck are you doing, Ted? You fucking dipshi-”

    “Yes?”

    “…”

    “…”

    “Steve… you… you heard that, ri-”

    “I don’t have all day. What is it?”

    “Shit, um.”

    “Yes sir, um, Mister Simulator sir, I-”

    “Missus.”

    “Oh, um, sorry, the voice is just kindof… tinny an-”

    “Look, we’ve got a problem. It’s one of the… simulated.”

    “Mmm hmm?”

    “He’s on his way to the checkout now.”

    “And?”

    “He’s buying the boule.”

    “Mmm. Right. Thank you for alerting me. This anomaly will be dealt with.”

    “Oh. Um. O…kay. Um. Thank yo-”

    “Wait, how exactly will it be deal-”

    • babybus@sh.itjust.works
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      il y a 1 mois

      Are you watching their politics? This can’t be real, the writers are all over the top. The whole country is a simulation.

      • Senseless@feddit.org
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        il y a 1 mois

        I get some things when I scroll through c/all, that’s way then enough for me. I have no idea how the presidential race can even be remotely close. That being said I’m afraid that this behaviour and talking points are coming more and more to us. Some politicians of a conservative party here met several times with republicans and brought some “bright” ideas over here. Guess I’ll do the Robinson Crusoe some time and just move to a small island so I don’t have to deal with all this nonsensical shit fest.

    • Chewget@lemm.ee
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      il y a 1 mois

      Sheltered American…they can’t keep the bread on the shelves where I’m at

  • lowleveldata@lemmy.world
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    il y a 1 mois

    So you think you’ve found the hole of simulation and don’t even try to buy some to see if it is really a decoration? WTF bro

  • kubica@fedia.io
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    il y a 1 mois

    This is your last chance. After this, there is no turning back.

    You take the normal bread – the story ends, you wake up in your bed and believe whatever you want to believe.

    You take the fancy bread – you stay in Wonderland, and I show you how deep the rabbit hole goes. Remember, all I’m offering is the truth – nothing more.”

  • xantoxis@lemmy.world
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    il y a 1 mois

    Ok but if you see sliced croissant loaf, fucking buy that shit, buy two, immediately. I don’t even like to shop any more at places where they don’t sell it.

        • Shapillon@lemmy.world
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          il y a 1 mois

          Count me in.

          The only issue I see with it is that since it’s wrapped in plastic it’s gonna be soft and rubbery instead of crunchy.

          • ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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            il y a 1 mois

            it’s gonna be soft and rubbery instead of crunchy

            I don’t think croissants are supposed to be rubbery or crunchy, are they? “Flakey” is probably what you want.

            • Shapillon@lemmy.world
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              il y a 1 mois

              Yeah flakey would be a better term altthough I’d still put it in the crunchy umbrella. Like flakey means the exterior is kinda crunchy.

              Otoh don’t take me too seriously I like to dunk them in coffee or milk :p

    • pseudo
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      il y a 1 mois

      Je suis venu faire mon français outré mais oublions OP deux minutes ? Qu’est-ce que c’est que ça ???!

    • JackFrostNCola@lemmy.world
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      il y a 1 mois

      Does this come in unsliced? Because cut that suckers down the middle perpendicular to the chopping board and you could make a giant toasted ham & cheese croissant slab

  • thedirtyknapkin@lemmy.world
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    il y a 1 mois

    you’re telling me that this guy saw something that he didn’t understand, but said piqued his curiosity, and instead of trying it to see what it’s like he goes straight to schizo posting about it on the Internet?

    this is why trump is winning.

  • Sam_Bass@lemmy.world
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    il y a 1 mois

    the bread is real. what you arent seeing is the removal of the unsold products that are almost certainly being donated to homeless shelters and hog farmers, then replaced with fresh loaves the next day. there are fda rules in place to prevent leaving such products out more than a couple days.

    • bad_alloc@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      il y a 1 mois

      are almost certainly being donated to homeless shelters being thrown away and people who are taking some are persecuted… and hog farmers

      fixed that for you :)

      • Sam_Bass@lemmy.world
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        il y a 1 mois

        you fixed nothing maybe where you live thats how it works but here in tejas we follow food safety rules as well as donated unsold produce to our local foodbanks and shelters. if that isnt how your community works then i hope you get to experience it firsthand. i have and without those good folks deeds we wouldve starved to death a long time ago.

        • djsoren19@yiffit.net
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          il y a 1 mois

          Have worked in grocery stores, it just gets thrown out. The level of food waste in the United States is legitimately stomach churning.

            • Krauerking@lemy.lol
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              il y a 1 mois

              Arizona it’s literally considered illegal to dumpster dive anywhere inside of a curb and yet they still also pour bleach on the tossed food at grocery stores to “dissuade” people.

              So you can be arrested if you survive being poisoned.

          • _stranger_@lemmy.world
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            il y a 1 mois

            HEB is the only native grocery store in Texas that matters, and they make sure they recover 95% of the food that isn’t fit for human consumption by getting it to farms and such. They also, separately, are involved in food bank and other human wellness activities, including running logistics for hurricane relief (as an example).

            HEB is too good for Texas.

            https://ourtexasourfuture.com/food-recovery/

            https://newsroom.heb.com/disaster-relief/

          • Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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            il y a 1 mois

            In France it is illegal to throw food out. It has to go to the homeless or those stores will get fined.

            You do know most people don’t live in the US, right?

            • Madison420@lemmy.world
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              il y a 1 mois

              You can safely assume American when you see English and monstrous business behaviors. Aside from that I think the US makes up most of Lemmy traffic anyhow.

        • Mushroomm@sh.itjust.works
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          il y a 1 mois

          In the capitalists west, there are only small grassroots projects doing this. Most volume of that stuff goes straight in padlocked trash when best before is met

  • Kaity@leminal.space
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    il y a 1 mois

    Sometimes I buy the bread lol. The bread just gets made into other things if nobody buys it. Sliced after the first day, made into croutons the day after or a number of other bread goodness like garlic bread or used to make those pre-packed subs, etc. Or it’s just tossed cause bread is cheap and making at the scale they make it makes it even cheaper.

    By the way, if you have even a passing interest I recommend baking your own bread, unless you want sourdough and you don’t want to spend that effort cause sourdough is next level effort. But a basic white bread is extremely easy and tastes so good fresh and lasts for soooo much longer than the store made breads.

    • 10MeterFeldweg@feddit.org
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      il y a 1 mois

      I bake my sourdough weekly. Once you have your sourdough it is pretty much the same effort, but you don’t have to use yeast anymore and you need to plan a bit more time for the bread to rise. It is worth it for the taste.

      • Kaity@leminal.space
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        il y a 1 mois

        I’d love to get into it but I just don’t have the time to get past the initial start up. Plus after work I am just exhausted and I definitely don’t have the fortitude to make it a weekly ritual (not to mention we just don’t eat that much bread). Maybe someday though.

        • 10MeterFeldweg@feddit.org
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          If you ever want to try it but have no interest to make the starter, just ask around in your community. More often than you think there is this one person who has their sourdough and is more than happy to share it. I shared mine multiple times over the years, because I know getting started is no fun at all.

          You can also freeze the sourdough to use from time to time or keep it in the fridge and just refresh it weekly to bi-weekly by mixing some of it with a bit of water and flour.

          • Kaity@leminal.space
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            il y a 1 mois

            That’s a great idea! maybe it’s not as hard as I thought… at least if I’m able to snag some starter :)

        • Kanda@reddthat.com
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          il y a 1 mois

          The initial startup requires a bit of reading and then a few minutes every day pouring out a bit of starter and mixing flour and water

    • bdonvr@thelemmy.club
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      il y a 1 mois

      I had the opposite experience with it lasting longer. My homemade sandwich loaf will not last more than a week without molding… Supermarket bread (the mass produced stuff, dunno about the made in store stuff) is packed with preservatives and seems to last at least two.

      But it’s so much better that it was never going to last that long anyway.

      I usually make two and freeze one

      • Kaity@leminal.space
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        il y a 1 mois

        For us the deli bread lasts 3 days on average, the regular store bought bread lasts like actually forever but it’s awful so not worth it, the bread I made lasted more than a month. We did however store it in the fridge and I’m sure the recipe and how you handle it are critical.

      • greedytacothief@lemmy.world
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        il y a 1 mois

        The preservative they use is oil. You’ll notice your own bread dries out much quicker than the mass produced stuff. There’s maybe some other preservatives in there, but it’s mostly just a lack of water

    • njm1314@lemmy.world
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      il y a 1 mois

      Since apparently it’s so cheap to make and so much of it gets thrown away anyway, you’d think they just lower the price of it. The reason I don’t buy that kind of bread is it usually way more expensive.

        • njm1314@lemmy.world
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          il y a 1 mois

          The like artisanal type breads? Like the brioche and the sourdough and all that? Hell that’s a deal. I can get a French loaf for a dollar but that’s about it.

          • Kaity@leminal.space
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            il y a 1 mois

            Oh well I usually do just get the french/italian breads, I don’t usually swing for the higher end breads, though I got them once or and I recall them being fairly inexpensive but I don’t know what the actual cost was.

  • Donkter@lemmy.world
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    il y a 1 mois

    To be fair, the quality of the bread in these mass produced “artisan bakery” sections can be trash tier, like sometimes it’s wonder bread level but even more dry. Idk why they decide to do it. Maybe it was fresh at one point but these displays can get left out all week.

    Source: an NPC who sometimes buys this crap to try it.

    • RubberDuck@lemmy.world
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      il y a 1 mois

      Yeah a d by the time you are spending that kind of money on bread, either get it from an actual bakery or make it yourself.

    • ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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      I used to buy this kind of bread before I started making my own sourdough, but it just doesn’t compare to fresh out of the oven. It’s more or less equivalent to my own bread after a week when I have to start toasting it.

    • logos@sh.itjust.works
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      il y a 1 mois

      Our local chain, Hannaford, has pretty good stuff actually. Their cakes and pastries are good too. Walmart bakery is trash, but it’s Walmart. They do pizza rolls 👌

  • Agent641@lemmy.world
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    il y a 1 mois

    The bread is a decoration indeed. It’s there for the same reason the flowers are out the front of the supermarket, it makes the store look more welcoming and less like a warehouse that is engineered to siphon money from your wallet.

    Nobody buys that shit. We just wait for them to yeet it in the dumptster out back, then we cut the chain and take it home.