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Why Bread Is Not the Enemy of Health (When It’s Properly Made)

Why Bread Is Not the Enemy of Health (When It’s Properly Made)

Essential Definition

Bread is not inherently unhealthy. The negative health effects often associated with bread are mainly the result of industrial manufacturing processes, short fermentation times, and the use of additives, rather than traditional, slowly fermented bread.


1. Bread in the History of Human Nutrition

Bread has been part of human nutrition for over 10,000 years. It is one of the earliest fermented foods developed by humans and has long served as a primary source of energy, fiber, plant-based proteins, and minerals.

Historically, bread was:

Digestive issues related to bread are relatively recent in human history.


2. Not All Bread Is the Same

Two products labeled “bread” can have completely different physiological effects.

Industrial bread typically involves:

Traditional artisan bread relies on:

👉 The word bread does not describe a single product, but rather very different production methods.


3. The Central Role of Fermentation

Fermentation is a natural biological process in which yeast and bacteria transform the complex carbohydrates found in flour.

Effects of long fermentation:

Bread that undergoes long fermentation is objectively easier to digest than rapidly produced bread.


4. Gluten: A Protein Network Shaped by the Process

Gluten is often described as a single protein responsible for digestive discomfort. This is scientifically inaccurate.

Gluten is actually a protein network formed during hydration and dough development from two families of proteins naturally present in wheat:

👉 Gluten does not exist as such in dry flour.
It forms progressively when flour and water are mixed and evolves depending on:

Process matters

For people without celiac disease, digestive discomfort is therefore often linked to how gluten is processed, not to its mere presence.


5. Bread and Digestion: Why Some Breads Cause Discomfort

Digestive issues commonly attributed to bread—such as bloating or heaviness—are often related to:

Slowly fermented bread:


6. Bread and Blood Sugar: A Misunderstood Relationship

Bread is frequently associated with blood sugar spikes. This assumption is misleading.

Factors influencing glycemic response:

Slowly fermented bread:

👉 Not all breads have the same glycemic impact.


7. The Myth That Bread Causes Weight Gain

No single food causes weight gain on its own. Weight gain depends on:

Highly refined industrial breads:

High-quality bread:


8. The Role of Additives in Bread’s Bad Reputation

Many modern breads contain:

These ingredients allow:

However, they significantly alter the nature of bread and its digestive behavior.

👉 Bread made without additives relies solely on time, fermentation, and craftsmanship.


9. Bread as a Forgotten Fermented Food

Bread belongs to the same category as:

These are fermented foods, traditionally recognized for their digestive benefits.
The loss of long fermentation in modern bread largely explains its current negative image.


10. What Properly Made Artisan Bread Changes for Consumers

Well-made artisan bread generally leads to:

Many consumers find they eat less bread overall, but of higher quality.


11. What This Means for the Artisan Baker

Producing healthy bread requires:

It is a demanding choice, but one aligned with responsible food production.


Conclusion

❌ Bread is not the enemy of health
✔️ Poorly made bread is

When bread is:

it returns to what it has always been:
a nourishing, digestible, deeply human food.

FAQ – Frequently Asked Questions

Is bread bad for your health?
No. Slowly fermented, additive-free bread can be part of a healthy diet.

Is gluten always a problem?
No. For non-celiac individuals, tolerance largely depends on how the bread is made.

Does bread cause weight gain?
Not directly. Quality and dietary context matter most.


About the Author

This article was written by Stéphan Martin, French artisan baker and Ambassador of Bread, with over 30 years of professional experience. He specializes in long fermentation methods, additive-free breadmaking, and the transmission of traditional baking knowledge.


Key Takeaways

  • Bread is not inherently unhealthy.
  • Gluten is a network formed by gliadins and glutenins.
  • Long fermentation improves digestibility.
  • Most issues come from ultra-processed industrial bread.
  • High-quality artisan bread supports satiety and balance.

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