Originally posted by BrianSnail
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Bread Makers
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We had our breadmaker out for the first time in two years. My son tried to make some bread without yeast. The flour wasn't even self-raising. The resultant "bread" was dense enough to absorb most forms of radiation and certainly worthy of stuffing under your shirt in the event of a gun-fight.
I dunno - kids these daysComment
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A good name for a bread maker would be 'The Quantitive Easer'
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(>'.'<)
("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to WorkComment
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Originally posted by xoggoth View PostA bread maker is a just another machine the missus buys to sit in the kitchen and gather dust.Comment
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I make bread fairly often but don't use a bread maker. Just get a bread tin.
Results are the same. Make the dough the night before stick it in the fridge. Next day 30 mins in the oven and bread ahoy!Comment
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostDepends what you buy... bread that stays fresh a long time or is very cheap is not good. But fresh-baked bread in their own on-site bakery, that goes stale in 1-2 days - surely that's loads better.Hard Brexit now!
#prayfornodealComment
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Originally posted by TonyEnglish View PostWe bought one a while ago and it's been used twice. It now lives in the cupboard under the stairs along with all the other junk we bought but never used.Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ hereComment
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Originally posted by OwlHoot View PostI imagine they're like toasted sandwich makers - Easy to use, but hellishly hard to clean, especially with sticky gloopy stuff like dough (or is that "do" if you're a septic?)Where are we going? And what’s with this hand basket?Comment
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Originally posted by OwlHoot View PostI imagine they're like toasted sandwich makers - Easy to use, but hellishly hard to clean, especially with sticky gloopy stuff like dough (or is that "do" if you're a septic?)Last edited by Mustang; 17 April 2009, 09:50.Comment
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This thread has really sold the idea to me. Nice one guys!
I wonder if there is one that can go in the dishwasher..."take me to your leader"Comment
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