Hey, c/frugal, I was reading through this little post, (https://lazysoci.al/post/23833029) when a comment about baking bread reminded me of something I had heard back on reddit: that apparently baking bread is a great way to be frugal. <br> I haven’t had bread for a while, and would love to engage with the bread-eating community again, and so I wish to ask your favorite frugal bread recipes! From loaves to naan, I would love your input :) <br> P.S. I would also love to ask what you all think of breadmakers, are they a good frugal buy?

  • BruceLee@sopuli.xyz
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    4 days ago

    I like like the pizza bread recipe by @[email protected]. I use it as a pizza dough as well as focaccia dough. I find it good to use after 3 days in the fridge and up to 5 days where as Adam Ragusea wait for a week. But it is easy to make. I cook it in on a sheetpan with no need of specific equipment and it can be store quite long for a fresh bread dough, neatly packed in the fridge.

  • TomatenMark@lemmy.world
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    24 days ago

    My wife bakes two loafes of sourdough bread every Weekend, without a breadmaker or anything Its always great, even when its “bad” its still way better than any storebought bread

  • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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    24 days ago

    We make pizza every weekend, so 1 or 2 dough at a time.

    And we make bread with a generous amount of trail mix added at least 2 or three times a week.

    Our entire level bread machine paid for itself in a few months.

    And we could be using it to make all kinds of dough and bread. One of my most used appliances.

  • Hideakikarate@sh.itjust.works
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    24 days ago

    I bought an old bread machine from a thrift store for $15. Took a little bit, but I found it’s original manual online and it had a bunch of recipes in there. We usually use the basic white bread recipe in a 2 pound loaf (matches the programs it has). Recipe is as follows:

    1.25 cups +2tbsp of hot water

    3tbsp sugar

    3tbsp oil

    1.5tsp salt

    4 cups bread flour (I use all purpose and it works fine)

    4tsp yeast

    The program mixes the bread for about 5-10 minutes, then bake for a little under an hour. So in about an hour and pennies worth of ingredients, we have a homemade loaf of bread. The only issue I have is storing it and keeping it away from the air. The stuff gets stale pretty quick. That’s when I make French Toast. Good luck with your search.

    • Justas🇱🇹@sh.itjust.works
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      24 days ago

      For making a bread that doesn’t go stale, there’s a trick of mixing about 40% of the flour with a bit of water, heating it on a stove until it turns into a coagulated paste and then chilling it before mixing it back into the dough. That’s how I make a brioche type yeast bread, but it should be possible to do for regular bread too.

  • CHINESEBOTTROLL@lemm.ee
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    24 days ago

    I use a breadmaker every few days, definitely worth it for me. The mental load compared to making it in the oven is just nothing. Just put the ingredients in (takes maybe 3 min) and go to sleep. (Idk if fire is possible but I have a fire alarm so…) Next day you have fresh bread. So wayyy too boring if you want to make bread as a hobby but perfect if you just want bread.

    For “recipies” I just use flour, water, salt and yeast + maybe other stuff to change it up (egg, olive oil, sunflower seeds, nuts, olives…)