In Canada, there are laws that govern how much of a loaf of bread must weigh 💀

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This one is actually real 🤣

Prediction: Canada is full of such weak men at the moment (good times created) that the turnaround over the next 10 years will be epic (strong created).

We will see but my gut is usually spot on.

So, we have a similar law in Jordan.

This law is to control the type of bread that benefits from government subsidies.

They do this so that bakers don’t make wedding cakes using subsidized flour if that makes sense.

But in Jordan, resources are ver limited. Not sure why Canada does it.

Interesting. Crazy but interesting.

Yeah, it’s just. Law preventing abuse of gov subsidies.

My guess Canada does for a similar reason?

Good guess. 🤷🏻‍♂️

I have bread that is heavier, what should I do?

Turn yourself in to the police 🚨🚓

Most "ice cream" in the store doesn't say "ice cream" on the container because it isn't legally ice cream. There is a legal minimum milk fat from cream content that they don't meet.

Correct. It's nasty. It's a "dairy treat".

I'm careful to stick with Haagan-Daz, B&J, Tillamook, and Van Leeuwen if I'm feeling fancy. All the rest are air-injected nonsense using substandard and shady ingredients.

"Your bread loafs are to heavy and cause truckers to use more gas, hurting the environment"

🤣

Based AF

People buy bread? We bake our own. Yeah, it takes some time but the results are superior. I didn't know what's in commercial bread that prevents it from going moldy but you know that shit ain't right. Also, I've been in bakeries and I drive a truck. The more commercial products you remove from your life, the better your health will be. Hey! You wanna know where "mini carrots" and canned veggies/canned soup veggies come from? Hint: they're the rejects, often exceeded temp allowances in transport, whittled down to passably edible.

Ah yes... How we legally seperate a loaf from a bread stick

i think most countries have laws on bread since it was the staple food of humanity until about 100 years ago or even more recently.

In brazil, bakeries must sell the 50 gram "french bread" (which is actually a small portuguese bread). If the bakery runs out of "french bread", it must sell any other bread available for the same price. (just found out this law was revoked a few years ago, out bread is more free now)