Bread is such a food basic that is often just absent-mindedly tossed into the toaster or used to slap together whatever constitutes the middle of your sandwich. True, relatively recent changes like that whole wheat bread costumed as the smooth and tasty white bread of an earlier decade, have made it more interesting and the more recent endless variations on grains—whole wheat, cracked whole wheat, 12-grain whole wheat, wheat berry, etc., ensure that when you are paying upwards of $2.50 a loaf (if it’s on sale) you can pretty much get what you really want.
Arnold, long a baker of good-tasting and hearty breads, has four new very tasty choices:
Grains & More Double Fiber
Grains & More Double Oat (to help lower cholesterol)
Grains & More Double Protein
Grains & More Double Omega
Now there are even more ways to get your Omega or Fiber.
Here is a bit of background of this company from their website
http://arnold.gwbakeries.com/history.cfm
“Arnold Bread is a love story in baking. In March 1940, in a brick oven at the rear of a small house in Stamford, Connecticut, Dean and Betty Arnold baked the first two-dozen loaves of Arnold bread. Placing their trust in superior ingredients, unbleached spring wheat flour, honey, butter and eggs, they developed the compact, golden rich bread that would soon become a leading premium bread with an international reputation.
Ironically, Mr. Arnold established a baking business of his own because of a serious allergy to flour. After graduating from Columbia University, he worked for a large baking company until his allergies grew too severe to continue. In January 1940 with only $600 in severance pay, he and his wife, Betty, moved in with his uncle on a farm in Armonk, New York, and the love for baking began.
Always believing there was a need for a better loaf of bread, Dean and Betty took their unique recipe and stoked up their first brick oven. Soon, the whole family was involved as relatives helped to slice, wrap and hand deliver the bread from house to house. By 1941, business was booming and the bakery needed to expand. Though he didn’t have a financial statement, Dean was granted a bank loan on the taste of his bread alone and moved the bakery to Port Chester, New York…”.
“…In the sixties, they built the largest bakery under one roof in the world in Greenwich, Connecticut, with the largest brick oven anywhere.”
Arnold is now a part of George Weston Bakeries.
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