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Why should/shouldn't I store my bread in the fridge/freezer/breadbox/plastic bag/etc?

13 Answers 13

19

Storing bread in the freezer you can store for several days and keep it soft.

To eat, remove from the freezer and put in the oven.

4
  • I completely forgot about keeping bread in the freezer. I'm such a sandwich nut that I rarely have to do that anymore. Good answer.
    – Jacob R
    Jul 9, 2010 at 19:40
  • 1
    We keep bread in an airtight box in the freezer and defrost it in the microwave wrapped in a clean cloth. This absorbs all moisture released in the defrosting process and keeps the bread from becoming spongy. Jul 20, 2010 at 13:08
  • Every week I buy 1 sliced bread and put it in the freezer. Every morning I prepare my sandwhiches with cheese, using the still frozen slices of bread, and take them to work. During lunch, the bread has thawed and tastes really fresh.
    – Pieter B
    May 7, 2019 at 8:31
  • You can also defrost bread at room temperature overnight — but keep it in a sealed bag to avoid it drying out.
    – gidds
    Dec 10, 2023 at 23:06
15

Bread in the freezer will stay edible for a long time. Freezing doesn’t much affect the texture of the bread either. The downside is that you have to thaw or toast the bread before you can eat it.

Bread in the refrigerator will keep longer without going stale or moldy. The downside is that the texture of the bread changes when it is refrigerated. I notice it quite a bit, but my wife doesn’t seem to.

Plastic is a good way to keep bread on the counter, but you want to make sure that it is completely cool before wrapping it. If the bread is still warm, the plastic will trap the escaping water vapor and the bread will get soggy.

Warm fresh bread should be allowed to (at least mostly) cool either on the counter or in an open bag. Once it is mostly cool, a paper bag is a good way to keep it if you need to put it in something. Any remaining water that is going to come out of the bread won’t pool up on the bread’s surface like it would while stored in a plastic bag.

For artisan bread, I usually wrap it in aluminum foil and keep it on the counter. I don’t have any reason to believe that this is somehow better than other methods. It goes stale after a couple of days, but if it’s not eaten by then we will toast it or make French toast for breakfast.

5

The best way to store bread I have found is in a good stone container that is keeps airtight. The stone container keeps the bread away from light and keeps the bread in normal temperature. It also keeps mold away very good, especially when washed every now and then with diluted lemon juice or vinegar.

5

Bread goes stale in the fridge as you are storing it at the quickest stealing temperature. The moisture migrates in the starch from alpha to beta cells. You should never store bread in the fridge. Trust me I used to be a baker and it was one of the first things we learned at college in baking technology. The fridge will inhibit mould but pointless if it is stale. You can pop the bread in the oven for short while which will temporarily migrate the moisture back restoring freshness.

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    What's "stealing temperature"? Is it a typo for "staling"?
    – Golden Cuy
    Jul 10, 2016 at 8:13
3

If you take the danish "rugbrød" (I think the closest english version is rye bread)...it gets really hard, dry and dull tasting if you put it in the fridge, though it'll be able to keep of the mold for a while longer.

3

The freezer is absolutely the best place to store bread you want to keep for more than a day or two (depending on the bread - baguettes keep fresh for only hours, multi-grain sourdough for much longer). Suck the air out of the bag so it doesn't get frosty, and slice before freezing if you want to use it by the slice. A few seconds in the microwave and the previously-frozen slice will be in very good shape. This won't work as well for something really crusty - the crust will lose it's crunch - but you really can't keep crusty bread long no matter what you do.

Don't keep bread in the refrigerator. It will go stale and get moldy quickly.

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    I disagree about the refrigerator. Bread will get moldy more quickly at room termperature. The refrigerator does change the texture of bread quickly though, even if it hasn't had time to get stale yet.
    – Al Crowley
    Jul 20, 2010 at 12:31
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    I also thought that was weird, why would it get moldy quickly in the refrigerator. Surely it must last longer there than in room temperature ?
    – Zitrax
    Oct 29, 2010 at 8:30
2

Best way to store bread, including baguettes, is in the freezer where it can keep for months. Reheat by placing straight into a hot oven from the freezer. The bread will crisp up and be just as if you had just baked it. Bread that has gone a little bit stale can be lightly moistened with water all the way round, then placed in a hot oven to crisp up. Never store in plastic if possible. A thick brown paper bag will keep it pretty fresh on the counter for a couple of days. If you don't get through a loaf that quickly, it's worth freezing half.

1

I've always stored my bread in a dry, dark cupboard or drawer. I would assume that a bread box would accomplish the same thing. Bread stored this way has generally lasted me 2 weeks before mold even begins to start growing.

Another thing to keep in mind is to keep your bread stored in an airtight fashion. If you don't, you risk your bread drying out quicker.

My experience with keeping bread in the fridge results in faster molding, and dryer bread.

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    I've never found bread to get mouldier in the fridge. Definitely becomes stale more quickly. Jul 9, 2010 at 22:04
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My favorite place to store bread is in my mouth/tummy :P

On a serious note: we've tried storing it in various places and each seemed to have enough downsides (coupled with how much we enjoy good, fresh bread) that we decided it was worthwhile to just buy and make it more frequently then it was to try to preserve it longer.

1

Bread with a crispy or hard crust, like most European breads, will lose its texture when stored in plastic, which you’ll never see done in Europe. Dense breads do well standing the cut end on a board or plate. Others are best in a paper or cloth bag—Italians often have a special cloth bread bag on the counter or in a cabinet.

Freezing is the only long-term storage that preserves bread’s qualities. As noted here, refrigerator temperatures cause staleness faster than room temp.

0

I bake bread frequently and store it upright on the cut end on my breadboard. It's a crusty loaf and the crust will get soft if wrapped. It doesn't last long in our house so long term storage isn't a problem. There is a way to restore the crisp exterior if you must wrap it in plastic. Preheat oven to 375 degrees Fahrenheit. Sprinkle a little water on the loaf or pat it with a wet hand. Place on the middle oven rack for a few minutes. It will crisp up almost as much as when it was fresh but it must have had a crisp crust to begin with. This doesn't work on the fluff from the supermarket.

0

The primary considerations for bread storage vessels are as follows:

  • Humidity/dryness. For example, bread in a sealed plastic bag usually stays wet and rots with fuzzy white, black, and green mold.
  • Preventing the incursion of rodents, cockroaches, flies, insects, and other small animals. For example bread stored inside of an electric refrigerator will not usually get eaten by mice.
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Bread lasts longer out of the refrigerator.

2
  • In warm and humid environments, store-bought bread will commonly develop mold after just one or two days at room temperature.
    – KatieK
    Oct 1, 2013 at 16:00
  • Bread frequently stales faster at refrigerated temperatures, perhaps that's what is being referred to?
    – SourDoh
    Oct 4, 2013 at 13:48

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