Cornbread Cornbread

Cornbread - Definition and Overview

Cornbread is a variety of quick bread (a bread leavened chemically, rather than by yeast) containing cornmeal.

Cornbread is a traditional staple of rural cuisine in the United States of America, especially in the Southern United States. A typical contemporary northern US cornbread recipe contains half wheat flour, half cornmeal, milk, eggs, sugar, leavening agent and salt, resulting in a bread that is somewhat lighter and cakier than its more traditional southern counterpart, which is normally made from a mixture of cornmeal, buttermilk, salt, eggs, lard or bacon fat, and leavening agent. This bread will tend to be denser, meant more as an accompaniment than as a bread meant to stand on its own.

Cornbread is a popular item in Soul food enjoyed by many people for its texture and scent.

While various colors of cornmeal are used, the preference in the north tends to be for yellow cornmeal, whereas the south is heavily biased towards white cornmeal.

See also

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