This is a list of American breads. Bread is a staple food prepared from a dough of flour and water, usually by baking. Throughout recorded history it has been popular around the world and is one of humanity's oldest foods, having been of importance since the dawn of agriculture.
This list includes breads that originated in the United States.
American breads
- Adobe bread – type of bread typical of the Pueblo peoples of the Southwestern United States,[1] it is often shaped like animals typical of the region.[1] The dough often contains meat, vegetables, seeds, or nuts.[1]
- Amish friendship bread[2]
- Anadama bread – traditional yeast bread of New England in the United States made with wheat flour, cornmeal, molasses and sometimes rye flour.
- Banana bread – first became a standard feature of American cookbooks with the popularization of baking soda and baking powder in the 1930s; appeared in Pillsbury's 1933 Balanced Recipes cookbook.[3]
- Beaten biscuit – Southern food from the United States, dating from the 19th century. They differ from regular American soft-dough biscuits in that they are more like hardtack. In New England they are called "sea biscuits", as they were staples aboard whaling ships.[4]
- Biscuit – in the United States and parts of Canada, and widely used in popular American English, is a small bread with a firm browned crust and a soft interior.
- Boston brown bread – also known as New England brown bread
- Bulkie roll – New England regional variety of sandwich roll
- Cornbread
- Cuban bread
- Frybread[5]
- Graham bread – invented by Sylvester Graham in 1829 for his vegetarian diet, it was high in fiber, made with non-sifted whole-wheat flour and free from the chemical additives that were common in white bread at that time such as alum and chlorine.
- Hot water corn bread
- Hushpuppy – savory food made from cornmeal batter that is deep fried or baked rolled as a small ball or occasionally other shapes.
- American muffin
- Muffuletta – both a type of round Sicilian sesame bread[6] and a popular sandwich originating among Italian immigrants in New Orleans, Louisiana using the same bread.
- Parker House roll – invented at the Parker House Hotel in Boston during the 1870s[7] and still served there,[8] it is a bread roll made by flattening the center of a ball of dough with a rolling pin so that it becomes an oval shape and then folding the oval in half.
- Pepperoni roll
- Popover
- Pullman loaf
- San Francisco sourdough - a specialty form of French bread with a crispy brown crust and a distinctly "sour" taste, which derives from the fructilactobacillus sanfranciscensis bacteria in the fermented sourdough starter. French bakers are suspected to have introduced sourdough bread to the San Francisco area during the California Gold Rush in the 1850s [9]
- Salt-rising bread
- Scali bread
- Sloosh
- Texas toast – type of packaged bread (not sold toasted as the name implies) which is sold sliced at double the typical thickness of most sliced breads
- American-style biscuits, served with honey
See also
References
- 1 2 3 Mariani, John F (1999). Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink. Lebhar-Friedman Books. p. 4. ISBN 0-86730-784-6.
- ↑ Adams, Marcia (1997). New recipes from quilt country: more food & folkways from the Amish & Mennonites. New York, N.Y: Clarkson Potter Publishers. p. 50. ISBN 0-517-70562-1.
- ↑ Ames, Mary Ellis (1933). "1 - Breads". Balanced Recipes. Minneapolis, Minnesota: Pillsbury Flour Mills Company. p. 3.
- ↑ Villas, James (2004). Biscuit bliss: 101 foolproof recipes for fresh and fluffy biscuits in just minutes. Harvard Common Press. p. 14. ISBN 978-1-55832-223-3.
- ↑ Miller, Jen (July 2008). "Frybread". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 8 August 2014.
- ↑ Lempert, Phil (September 17, 2007). "Is the best sandwich in America the muffaletta?". Today. MSNBC. Archived from the original on November 9, 2007. Retrieved 2010-05-10.
The secret ingredient, besides the special recipe for the sesame bread, is Central Grocery's homemade olive spread.
- ↑ Smith, Andrew F, ed. Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink in America. New York:Oxford University Press, 2004, Volume 1
- ↑ John T. Edge (29 September 2009). "Fast Food Even Before Fast Food". The New York Times. New York, NY. Style Section: Dining & Wine. Retrieved 8 August 2014.
- ↑ Clemens, Scott. "The Rise Of San Francisco Sourdough". Epicurean.com. Fezziwig Publishing Co.
External links
- Media related to Breads of the United States at Wikimedia Commons
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