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We used to have a Breville sandwich maker in the seventies. It used to make the sealed edges rock hard and a sure way of breaking a tooth.
I think used to make corned beef and cheese.
 

Speicher

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We used to have a Breville sandwich maker in the seventies. It used to make the sealed edges rock hard and a sure way of breaking a tooth.
I think used to make corned beef and cheese.

I nearly always have a tin or two of corned beef, to have with chips etc. That sounds like a good idea. I could use tinned sardines, as well.
 
I like toasted sarnies. My toasted sarnie maker was given to me yonks ago, and is difficult to clean. So I have been experimenting with toasted sandwiches "fried" in a frying pan. I follow the same process by spreading the spreadable butter on the outside of the bread, adding a small knob of butter to the pan. They are much betterer than ones done in the machine. I found the trick to squishing them, is to wait until the first side is nicely brown, and squish them once they are turned the first time. The real bonus is that they take less time this way than in the machine.

Fried this way, there are IMO much better, and you can keep the crusts on. The bread goes crispy, and is not soggified. So far I have just used cheese, but what other things do peeps put in their toasted sarnies?
Corned beef is good.
 
LOL... About two stones of Maris Pipers, that's somewhere in the region of 15 kg - plenty of chips, plus I do mine in beef dripping when I do make them... :hungry:

Just as well I picked em up on saturday night, the rest (that were too damaged to take) were brown goo all over the road when I went out this morning.
We were given 30kg of them by a friend yesterday. Given I'm not eating spuds during the week they're going to take some getting through!
 
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