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I bake eggless dinner rolls at home, also known as “Paav”in many countries. I use dry yeast to make dough. Also, use sugar for yeast fermentation, and butter and salt as per the requirements. I bake it @ 360 F for 25-30 minutes. It comes out really soft and in a good texture. Everyone enjoys it’s taste at home. However, the texture of the rolls stays same for at most two days max then it gets dry and hard. I don’t realize what wrong am I doing. I also, wrap left over rolls air tight with sealing wrap.

I would appreciate your answer.

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    All bread will go stale within a few days after baking. See for example [this answer](https://cooking.stackexchange.com/a/49629/22591). – LSchoon Jul 17 '20 at 16:36
  • Agree with LSchoon - you are not doing anything wrong, that's very normal for bread. I chose several questions on bread storage as duplicate targets, you can read through them to see if you can get any better by following them. – rumtscho Jul 17 '20 at 16:47
  • 'Dry' & 'stale' are not really the same thing. For 'dry' you can pat with wet hands & fresh up in the oven. – Tetsujin Jul 17 '20 at 18:09
  • This is partly an advert for a bread product, but does explain the difference & also reiterates my method for rehydrating dry bread - http://bridgebread.org/FreshDryStale – Tetsujin Jul 17 '20 at 19:02
  • @Tetsujin Actually, "freshening up" bread in the oven works to undo staling (i.e., mostly reverses the starch retrogradation that causes staleness). The patting with water prevents the bread from drying out too much while doing this. I wonder if we have a question on the subject... – LSchoon Jul 17 '20 at 23:24

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