Brendan Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > So we have established that everyone here with a > bread maker, except Alan, finds it useful. It takes a big fat bald man to admit when he's wasted money on a breadmaker Brendan.
Alan Dale's 'we sold the breadmaker' karaoke night at The silver Buckle, Camberwell. Maybe. Although I should probably put the cash towards a Victorian money pit near Peckham Rye. Take away your competitive advantage. Anyway 'Blinder's a tight wad and I'm anonymous. Sounds like a tough deal to broker.
We are all the characters we cast onto these hallowed pages. I am a fat bald guy with a small eighties house who drinks in the Silver Buckle. You are a slim rich guy with period features who drinks campari and soda. Thanks for reminding me. You are a vain snob *Bob*. Shame you weren't such a snob on your UCAS form. Agreed Sean. Seems like you got a backbone for Christmas.
I bet *Bob* still uses his soda stream. Scratch that I bet he's got some original 1950s soda syphon that he picked up in Holland. Only way to make a campari and soda...blah blah blah.
What do you mean *Bob* is right?! Everyone knows bread makers are the sodastreams of the 90s. You lot make me sick. I prefer you when you sit on the fence Sean. I've go tmy basic hygiene cerificate somewhere - don't make me get it out.
Might not take that long. Some of the 1984 Selborne Village houses are already very expensive... *Bob*'s right though. A lot of 60s houses are getting really expensive. Anyone know The Hamlet in SE5 near Champion Hill. One of those 3 beds went for ?470k last July....
No way. I love the Horniman and there are some lush 1960s houses around there that I also really like - perfect home for my G plan furniture. I am still looking for the shid bid. I think there are some very poorly connected areas that feel a bit suburban but they are by no means shiddy and have some great houses that are still fairly reasonable. I think the Crown and Greyhound is rubbish - does that help?
*Bob* Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > I'd like to go to an idiot-free zone, but they are > few and far between. You did have the opportunity but you preferred Sheffield.
Pasta maker, ice cream maker, espresso maker, blank or blanks maker Anyone who still usess their bread maker a year after the wedding is either ridiculously stubborn, frugal or undiscerning.
Maybe you could flog a ditty or two. Seriously though. Bakery is a highly skilled profession -ask the NAMB. The fact that no ne uses their breadmakers more than twice is testament to the abject failure of hot point et al to automate this ancient profession.
The breadmaker is the classic back of the cupboard wedding gift. Nothing wrong with making bread by hand but there's no need to make it in a ?120 alarm clock. EDA - do your parents live next door to Penelope Keith?
Good point about babysitters. I think you have to have children before you can be 'child free' otherwise childless is more appropriate. Child free in the place of childless sounds like people are putting a positive spin on a bad situation. 'It's great being child-free because I get to concentrate on improving my banjo skills while the missus can really ramp up her painting by numbers...'
'child free' is a funny term. I'm not going to go out much in January because I'm 'cash free'. I gave my last pound coin to a 'home free' guy at London Bridge. My friend is not going to have kids because her husband is 'fertility free'. She got mugged last week which is lucky because now she's 'hand bag free'.