No argument Max. Plus the aroma is heavenly. Part of the reason the loaf doesn't last very long (anticipation and the fresh taste). At times I go to extremes and grind my own flour fresh to maximize the wheat taste. But that has pitfalls since the real "whole wheat" doesn't like being turned into bread and works to destroy the structure required.
I didn't make any loaf bread this past cold season, but I did make biscuits and yeast rolls. Both are super easy.
Trust me on this... For pizza try the Americas Test Kitchen recipe. IMO it blows all other dough recipes out of the water since it gives the dough days to ferment and develop flavor in the refrigerator. ATK says up to 3 days, but I've gone up to 10 days and I got rave reviews (best ever type and folks keep talking about it, unbidden, years later). Sure, it requires a bit of pre-planning, but anyone can pre-plan within a 10 day window*. Just google it, but if you can't find it contact me and I'll post it.
* When I did it for guests we had to coordinate our guests schedules and the weather since I was grilling the pizzas in the outdoor Primo @ 400°-450°F. That's when I found that the dough could be kept for 10 days. FWIW, it was in the shop refrigerator that hovers near 32°F and doesn't have tiny hands constantly checking it to see if the contents have changed in the last 10 minutes. A warmer refrigerator with tiny hands applied to the handle might not work as good.
Brian. Lover of SE razors.