Graham bread is a name for whole wheat bread that was inspired by the teachings of famous health reformer Sylvester Graham.
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Type | Bread |
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Place of origin | United States |
Main ingredients | Whole-wheat flour |
Sylvester Graham was a 19th-century health reformer who argued that a vegetarian diet, anchored by bread that was baked at home from flour that was made from whole wheat flour, was part of a healthful lifestyle that could prevent disease.[1]: 21, 29
In 1837, Graham published the popular book Treatise on Bread and Bread-Making, which included a history of bread and described how to make Graham bread, though the passage is absent of any exact measurements and instead calls upon the baker's "good judgment." It was reprinted in 2012 by Andrews McMeel Publishing, as a selection of its American Antiquarian Cookbook Collection.
Like Graham crackers, Graham bread was high in fiber and made from graham flour free from the chemical additives that were common in white bread at that time such as alum and chlorine. He argued that these chemical additives were unwholesome.[1]: 25–26
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