It is estimated that the first bread was made around 10000 years BC or over
12,000 years in the past.
This bread was more than likely flatbread, similar to a tortilla, made
simply of ground grains (flour) and water that was mashed and baked. The
first tools and implements used in the making of bread are dated to about
8000 years BC.
Egypt is attributed with popularizing the art of making bread. Egyptians are
considered to be the agricultural pioneers of the old world, probably
benefiting from interactions with Samaria.
The closed oven was invented circa 3000 BC and allowed for more varieties of
bread to be produced. It is around this time that leavened bread is first
described - bread with yeast added so that it would rise during production.
Refined grains were considered superior and therefore were prevalent in the
higher courts, so the poorer populations used barley and sorghum in their
breads.
Biblical Era
Around 1000 BC the Mosaic laws were introduced. These laws, in the books of
Leviticus and Deuteronomy, contained instructions to the nation of Israel
regarding proper food preparation.
When the Hebrew people fled Egypt during the legendary Exodus, they were
forced to make unleavened (flat) bread in their haste. Leviticus declares a
feast commemorating the exodus using flatbread.
Bread is a common symbol of bounty in the bible – Leviticus 21:22 declares,
“He shall eat the bread of his God.” When the people of God were lost in the
wilderness, they were fed manna, which was described as bread from heaven.
The Christian Savior, Jesus Christ, is called the “Bread of Life”.
The bible also gives one of the earliest recipes for sprouted grain bread.
It reads, in Ezekiel 4:9-17: “Take thou also unto thee wheat, and barley,
and beans, and lentils, and millet, and fitches, and put them in one vessel,
and make thee bread thereof, according to the number of days that thou shalt
lie upon thy side, three hundred and ninety days shalt thou eat thereof.”
While more than a year of nothing but this bread sounds like quite a
marathon diet, analysis of products today using the same recipe show that it
was a well-balanced, nutritious bread that yielded plenty of protein, fiber,
carbohydrate, and healthy fat.
Early Greek
In 400 BC, around the time when Socrates was providing sage dietary
advice, Plato imagined an ideal world. In this world, men would live to a
ripe old age. Their main source of sustenance would be whole grain bread
from local wheat.
168 BC saw the establishment of baker’s guilds in Rome. Bread even played a
major role in politics when, in 40 BC, as part of a campaign, it was decreed
that bread should be freely distributed to every male adult.
Middle Ages
In 1202 AD, English laws were passed to regulate the production of
bread. While many people are aware of the differences between whole grain
(brown) bread and white breads, few realize that it caused quite a stir in
1307 when the white bread bakers and brown bread bakers split to form
separate guilds!
It was not until two centuries later, in 1569, that the guilds were reunited
and called the “Worshipful Company of Bakers.”
The Age of Refined Bread
As early as 1826, the whole grain bread used by the military was called
superior for health to the white, refined bread used by the aristocracy. In
fact, the term refined today comes from this fact.
Before the industrial revolution, it was more labor consuming (and therefore
costly) to refine bread, so white bread was the main staple for aristocracy.
This made them “refined”.
20th Century
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