Wonder "Bread"
Who doesn't have an appreciation for bread? France, in particular, boasts a remarkable array of delicious bread. While sustenance extends beyond bread alone, a meal feels incomplete without it. At every street corner, bakeries churn out scrumptious, freshly baked loaves, adding to the allure. This level of freshness isn't as easily accessible to me, leading to questions about the stark disparity. Why does the readily available bread here differ so significantly? Why does the art of bread-making lag in the US? Allow me to illustrate this contrast. Let's rewind twelve hours, back in the US. I'm currently at a grocery store, capturing how a lot of us Americans obtain our bread. It's disheartening. A highlight is when they make plastic packaging seem steamy, conjuring the illusion of just-out-of-oven freshness, despite the reality that it was factory-produced weeks ago. "Made with real butter," they claim. Always choose Wonder Bread, they say. You'll be glad you did. The motive behind my bread purchase is to carry an example to France, possibly using it as a teaching prop or even a pillow, given its softness akin to a Novaform pillow. Some bagged bread contains ingredients that are forbidden in the EU. Now, back to France.