Dan Seitz

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Poorly capitalized and facing cutthroat competition, the country’s small bakeries slashed any cost possible. They stretched and whitened cheap flour with plaster of Paris, borax, ground bones, pipe clay, chalk, alum, and other nefarious compounds. They invariably sold underweight loaves, and they worked laborers as hard as they could.
White Bread: A Social History of the Store-Bought Loaf
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