Crispbread

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Template:Short description Template:Redirect Template:Infobox prepared food Crispbread<ref>CRISPBREAD</ref>Template:Efn is a flat and dry type of bread, containing mostly rye flour. Crispbreads are lightweight and keep fresh for a very long time due to their lack of water. Crispbread is a staple food<ref>Medeltida trädgårdsväxter: Att spåra det förflutna Template:Webarchive</ref> and was for a long time considered a poor man's diet.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Origins

File:Knäckebrödsbakning. Bjurbäcken, Manskogs socken, Värmland - Nordiska Museet - NMA.0033934.jpg
Crispbread baking in Värmland (1911).
File:No-nb digibok 2015022324004 0300 1.jpg
Crispbread was often stored on long poles hanging from the roof.

Sweden, Finland, and Norway have long traditions in crispbread consumption. The origin of the crispbread came from the earlier Template:Lang 'stovebread' which was a similar but thicker kind of bread. The Swedish word knäcka in Swedish means 'to crack' or 'to break'. However the Swedish word knäckebröd (crispbread) originates from the old word kruseknäcke which refers to a specific tool that was used to roll the crispbread dough.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

These breads were baked from at least the sixth century in central Sweden.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> They were usually hung above the stove to be dried. Traditional crispbread in Sweden and western Finland is made in this tradition with the form of a round flat loaf with a hole in the middle to facilitate storage on long poles hanging near the ceiling. It may also have been a way to keep the rats away from them.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Traditionally, crispbreads were baked just twice a year: following harvest and again in the spring when frozen river waters began to flow.<ref>History of Crispbread – http://www.finncrisp.com/history Template:Webarchive</ref> The slim crispbread that is common today originated in eastern Värmland.<ref>Nils-Arvid Bringéus. ”Knäckebröd”. Nationalencyklopedin. Bokförlaget Bra böcker AB, Höganäs.</ref> Sweden's first industrial crispbread bakery, AU Bergmans enka, began its production in Stockholm in 1850. Rectangular Template:Lang was first manufactured in Germany in 1927, and has remained popular and readily available there ever since.

Crispbread in the household is most common in Sweden (figures published in 2003); in Sweden 85 percent of households have crispbread at home, while in Germany it is 45 percent and in France 8 percent.<ref name="GP">Knäckebröd 03. Göteborgs-Posten, 2003.</ref>

Ingredients

Crispbread traditionally consists of wholemeal rye flour, salt, and water. Today, however, many kinds of crispbread contain wheat flour, spices and grains, and are often leavened with yeast or sourdough, and milk or sesame seeds can be added.<ref name="Swahn">Template:Cite book</ref>

In the case of unleavened crispbread, bubbles are introduced into the dough mechanically. Traditionally, this was done by mixing snow or powdered ice into the dough, which then evaporated during baking.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Today, the dough, which must contain a large amount of water, is cooled and mixed until bubbly.

Another method is to knead the dough under pressure in an extruder. The sudden drop in pressure then causes water to evaporate, creating bubbles in the dough.

Crispbread is only baked for a few minutes, at temperatures usually between 200 and 250 °C.

Serving

Crispbread itself is very dry and therefore served with a spread, like butter, and optional toppings. Crispbread is usually a part of a daily meal. In Sweden and Finland crispbread and butter or margarine are included in school meals. Crispbread might also be crushed into yogurt or Template:Lang in place of cereals or muesli, and even used as a pizza base.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In Sweden, crispbread is a common side dish for pea soup, as well as for pickled herring.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

File:-2020-09-09 Crispbread with cheese, tomatoe and egg, Trimingham.JPG
Crispbread in England with butter, cheese, egg and tomato.

Different types and shapes of commercial crispbread:

See also

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Notes

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References

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Template:Bread Template:Flatbreads Template:Swedish bread