thumb|upright=1.35|Freshly baked bread thumb|upright=1.35|Anders Zorn – Bread baking (1889)
thumb|upright=1.35|Freshly baked bread thumb|upright=1.35|Anders Zorn – Bread baking (1889)
Baking is a method of preparing food that uses dry heat, typically in an oven, but it can also be done in hot ashes, or on hot stones. Bread is the most commonly baked item, but many other types of food can also be baked. Heat is gradually transferred from the surface of cakes, cookies, and bread to their center, typically at elevated temperatures surpassing 300 °F (148 °C). Dry heat cooking imparts a distinctive richness to foods through the processes of caramelization and surface browning. As heat travels through, it transforms batters and doughs into baked goods and more with a firm dry crust and a softer center. Baking can be combined with grilling to produce a hybrid barbecue variant by using both methods simultaneously, or one after the other. Baking is related to barbecuing because the concept of the masonry oven is similar to that of a smoke pit.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).