
My great grandmother was born a peasant in Czechoslovakia, and she grew up eating super-crusty, European-style bread that had further turned to stone and was handed out for free to needy families by the local baker. As is often the case with things you experience early in life and have never known otherwise, she actually developed a fondness for stale bread.
Even once she moved to America and could afford fresh bread, she found it wholly unsatisfying. She would scour bakeries and markets for "day-old" bread, not just because it was cheap, but because she preferred it.
Later in life, she took to buying fresh bread and laying slices of it all around her kitchen to allow it to go stale before eating it. Her house always smelled of yeast, rather like a brewery.
Every time I screw up and let some bread go stale, I think of her and say to myself, "Don't throw that away!" Here's what I do with it instead:
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Jeff Yeager is the author of the book The Ultimate Cheapskate's Road Map to True Riches. His website is www.UltimateCheapskate.com.
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