M.F.K. Fisher - No yoga exercise, no meditation in a chapel filled with music will rid you of your blues better than the humble task of making your own bread Podcast Por  arte de portada

M.F.K. Fisher - No yoga exercise, no meditation in a chapel filled with music will rid you of your blues better than the humble task of making your own bread

M.F.K. Fisher - No yoga exercise, no meditation in a chapel filled with music will rid you of your blues better than the humble task of making your own bread

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Welcome to the Daily Quote – a podcast designed to kickstart your day in a positive way. I'm Andrew McGivern for November 17th.Today is National Homemade Bread Day – celebrating the ancient, comforting art of baking bread from scratch.Bread is one of humanity's oldest prepared foods, dating back at least 30,000 years. From Egyptian flatbreads to French baguettes to San Francisco sourdough, every culture has its own bread tradition. But something shifted in the 20th century – bread became industrialized, mass-produced, packaged in plastic. We traded time and craft for convenience.National Homemade Bread Day invites us back to something primal – mixing flour, water, yeast, and salt with our own hands, waiting for it to rise, and filling our homes with that unmistakable aroma of fresh-baked bread.Food writer M.F.K. Fisher understood the deeper magic of breadmaking when she wrote:"No yoga exercise, no meditation in a chapel filled with music will rid you of your blues better than the humble task of making your own bread."Fisher recognized that breadmaking is more than cooking – it's therapy.There's something deeply meditative about kneading dough. The rhythm, the repetition, the transformation happening beneath your hands. You can't rush it. You can't multitask through it. You have to be present, working the dough until it becomes smooth and elastic.Then comes the waiting – watching it rise, smelling it bake, anticipating that first warm slice. The entire process demands patience, attention, and presence. In our distracted, hurried world, that's radical.Fisher knew that when you're elbow-deep in flour, your anxious thoughts quiet down. Your hands are busy, so your mind can rest. And at the end, you've created something real, tangible, nourishing.Today, try making bread. Find a simple recipe – you only need four ingredients. Don't worry about perfection. Focus on the process.Feel the dough change under your hands. Watch it rise. Smell it bake. Notice how the act of creating something with your hands shifts something inside you.Fisher was right – this humble task has power. In a world of endless noise and worry, sometimes the answer is flour, water, time, and your own two hands.That's going to do it for today. I'm Andrew McGivern signing off for now but I'll be back tomorrow. Same Pod time, same Pod Station - with another Daily Quote.

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