Breadmaker

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OP
OP
gavroche

gavroche

Getting old but not past it
Location
North Wales
New development. When I mentioned it to my wife , her reply was:" What for? You will probably use it a few times and it will end up at the back of a cupboard!"
Can she be right? I wonder. Maybe I should instead have a go by hand and see how it goes.
 

jayonabike

Powered by caffeine & whisky
Location
Hertfordshire
Find a copy of "Bread" by Daniel Stevens, (its part of the River Cottage handbooks). I learnt a lot about baking bread from that.
 

Dave7

Legendary Member
Location
Cheshire
I managed to kill my M R after about 2 years of constant use by washing the tin in the sink. What I didn't realise was that the bearing in the base of the tin was rusting up and eventually siezed completely. Replaced with a Panasonic which is still going after 5 years. It does say "never immerse in water" in the instructions so I just give it a quick wipe-down after every use (no mention of that in the M R instructions).
I've tried baking by hand, but it doesn't work for me.
Now I didnt realise that........I washed mine in the sink yesterday (normally just wipe down).....hope it works ok next time.
 

stephec

Squire
Location
Bolton
New development. When I mentioned it to my wife , her reply was:" What for? You will probably use it a few times and it will end up at the back of a icupboard!"
Can she be right? I wonder. Maybe I should instead have a go by hand and see how it goes.
Don't store it in a cupboard, keep it out on a worktop.

That way you'll use it everyday instead of leaving it stored away.
 

stephec

Squire
Location
Bolton
[QUOTE 4502370, member: 259"]We* make proper bread (pain au levain and all that) but for proper white for making toast with you can't do worse than a panny breadmaker, and what's laughably called the "French" setting.

*well, my wife does...[/QUOTE]
I half do that, let the bread maker mix the dough, knead it by hand, then shape, rise, and bake in the oven.
 
U

User19783

Guest
Panasonic SD-2500.
You will never again be able to eat that mass produced sh!te that supermarkets call bread.

Again this model is the one to get, as the bread just falls out of the tin, no hassle digging the paddle out.

Edit spelling
 
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Brandane

Legendary Member
[QUOTE 4502370, member: 259"]We* make proper bread (pain au levain and all that) but for proper white for making toast with you can't do worse than a panny breadmaker, and what's laughably called the "French" setting.

*well, my wife does...[/QUOTE]
Yes, I tried the French setting on mine and was disappointed to find that the loaf still came out in a roughly rectangular shape. :smile:
 
OP
OP
gavroche

gavroche

Getting old but not past it
Location
North Wales
Went out to Morrisson, bought different types of flour, yeast, butter, coffee( for the coffee machine) and started my first hand made loaf. Waiting for it to rise now before it goes in the oven. Keep fingers crossed now. My first one is brown bread with seeds.
 

Pale Rider

Legendary Member
Some of the foodie stuff on CycleChat is a bit pretentious for me.

But I could read about - and eat - home made bread for a long time.

This thread has quite put me off today's Pot Noodle.
 
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