Take back the bread is the blog for Steve the Bread Guy. This blog features videos and posts about how to make delicious bread at home, by hand, without bread machines. This blog and its website are designed for people who have never made bread before. Just follow these easy steps, and you'll be making bread that tastes great and will amaze your friends.
| Publishes | Daily | Episodes | 6 | Founded | 15 years ago |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Categories | LeisureHobbies | ||||
Leftover Rice Bread
I like to experiment in the kitchen, so lately I have been messing around with using rice in my breads. The other night I had some cooked white rice and some corn niblets leftover from dinner, so I decided to try to make a brea... more
Sourdoughs are one of the older kinds of breads still around. Instead of instant yeast, they rely on a yeast colony called a starter or a 'mother'. This is a container of a liquid flour mixture that already has its own yeast within it, captured from ... more
In this video podcast, Steve the Bread Guy shows you how to make a sourdough starter from scratch.
What is a starter? Sourdough breads have been around for many centuries, and all of them start with a 'mother' or starter. It's simply some flour and... more
This is a glorious loaf that looks even better than it tastes. Often served at Easter, it has a sweet rich flavour, and a beautiful appearance thanks to some simple braiding. If you've never tried to shape bread like this before ( or you just don't k... more
People also subscribe to these shows.



I've made bread at home for what seems like eons and have had varied sucess over the years. I've always shyed away from sourdough bread because of all the messing about with sourdough starters, loading the starter, keeping it in the fridge and the sheer time it takes to make a traditional sourdough loaf but the time came a few weeks ago to try. I found the Take back the Bread site and was really impresses with the ease and clarity of the videos and instructions given. I made my starter or "mothe... more










Listeners, social reach, demographics and more for this podcast.
| Gender Skew | Location | Interests | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Professions | Age Range | Household Income | |||
| Social Media Reach | |||||
Rephonic provides a wide range of podcast stats for Take back the bread. We scanned the web and collated all of the information that we could find in our comprehensive podcast database. See how many people listen to Take back the bread and access YouTube viewership numbers, download stats, audience demographics, chart rankings, ratings, reviews and more.
Rephonic provides a full set of podcast information for three million podcasts, including the number of listeners. View further listenership figures for Take back the bread, including podcast download numbers and subscriber numbers, so you can make better decisions about which podcasts to sponsor or be a guest on. You will need to upgrade your account to access this premium data.
Rephonic provides comprehensive predictive audience data for Take back the bread, including gender skew, age, country, political leaning, income, professions, education level, and interests. You can access these listener demographics by upgrading your account.
To see how many followers or subscribers Take back the bread has on Spotify and other platforms such as Castbox and Podcast Addict, simply upgrade your account. You'll also find viewership figures for their YouTube channel if they have one.
These podcasts share a similar audience with Take back the bread:
1. The Food Programme
2. Gastropod
3. Christopher Kimball’s Milk Street Radio
Take back the bread launched 15 years ago and published 6 episodes to date. You can find more information about this podcast including rankings, audience demographics and engagement in our podcast database.
Our systems regularly scour the web to find email addresses and social media links for this podcast. We scanned the web and collated all of the contact information that we could find in our podcast database. But in the unlikely event that you can't find what you're looking for, our concierge service lets you request our research team to source better contacts for you.
Rephonic pulls ratings and reviews for Take back the bread from multiple sources, including Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Castbox, and Podcast Addict.
View all the reviews in one place instead of visiting each platform individually and use this information to decide if a show is worth pitching or not.
Rephonic provides full transcripts for episodes of Take back the bread. Search within each transcript for your keywords, whether they be topics, brands or people, and figure out if it's worth pitching as a guest or sponsor. You can even set-up alerts to get notified when your keywords are mentioned.