Who Needs Yeast?
Reader Jen writes:
For reasons that have nothing to do with baking, I recently stumbled on the 19th/early 20th-century technology called “aerated bread,” which used carbon dioxide instead of yeast for industrial baking – as I understand it, was intended to preserve the comparatively low quantity of protein in British-grown wheat, while still achieving something fluffy and bread-like. Have you ever heard of this? Do you know anything about what it was like?
I certainly have heard of it, Jen! In fact a short history of the “ABC” (Aerated Bread Company) of Britain would have made a good post last week when I was talking about carbonation, since that’s what ABC bread was really all about. The company was founded in 1862 by a fellow named John Dauglish, who envisioned a bright, shining future where bread yeast was a thing of the past.
READ ON
