I've had this discussion with many people now, and it's starting to grate.
If you put your bread in the fridge it will go stale more quickly. Bread going stale is caused by amylopectin in the bread crystallising, this happens more quickly at low temperatures. Also, cold bread isn't as nice.
Yes mould is more likely to grow on your bread at room temperature, but that generally happens after the bread has gone stale anyway.
So for Pete's sake take, use your loaf and take your bread out of the fridge, it's not as tasty and it doesn't last as long.
Sources:
http://www.boston.com/news/science/...he_fridge_or_when_stored_at_room_temperature/
"Bread Science" by Emily Buehler, pp 102-104
http://www.twobluebooks.com/Website excerpt.pdf
http://www.ehow.com/how-does_4571444_what-makes-bread-stale.html
If you put your bread in the fridge it will go stale more quickly. Bread going stale is caused by amylopectin in the bread crystallising, this happens more quickly at low temperatures. Also, cold bread isn't as nice.
Yes mould is more likely to grow on your bread at room temperature, but that generally happens after the bread has gone stale anyway.
So for Pete's sake take, use your loaf and take your bread out of the fridge, it's not as tasty and it doesn't last as long.
Sources:
http://www.boston.com/news/science/...he_fridge_or_when_stored_at_room_temperature/
"Bread Science" by Emily Buehler, pp 102-104
http://www.twobluebooks.com/Website excerpt.pdf
http://www.ehow.com/how-does_4571444_what-makes-bread-stale.html