Jump to content

Recommended Posts

SimonM Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Supermarket "bread" is just unutterably vile. If

> buying I like the walnut and onion from Blackbird

> and almost anything from Kindred. Mostly though we

> use a breadmaker - a ?90 Panasonic bought from

> Amazon 3 years ago which has paid for itself

> several times over. A day-old home-made loaf

> tastes fresher than a fresh shop-bought one.

> Blackbird flour is nice and the EDD sells French

> bread flour which makes amazing white loaves....


I agree with the general comments on supermarket bread, though there are some granary/seeded varieties that are OK - I tend to keep one in the freezer for emergencies.


Agree about the Blackbird onion and walnut - it's delicious, but horribly expensive (think it was ?2.95 for a large loaf last time I bought one - I also noticed earlier this year a price hike of almost 20% when it went up from ?2.50 which I already considered a bit pricey. It's now become an occasional treat, whereas I used to buy one most weekends.It has encouraged me to get back to baking my own though. Artisan bakers are great, but not everyone can afford their prices on a regular basis.


Thanks for the tip about the French flour in the EDD SimonM - I will check that out.

dita-on-tees Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I rather like the fact you can wander round that

> shop and feed your face. Never actually bought

> anything in there though as it always seems

> insanely expensive (much more than their stores in

> the US and Canada (even allowing for exchange

> rates)


The sourdough bread was ?1.99. I also bought some 'light' wholewheat flour on sale for about a quid.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • He looks like the human version of the 😡 emoji. I'm sure he's lovely in real life (whoever he is).
    • Absolutely, Insuflo I very much doubt that anyone other than football fans would have heard of Dyche, much less his views on false number nines, mobile centre halves  dropping into midfield or diamond formations. But all middle-aged, portly, bald, gruffly spoken football fans from north of the capital who eschew fancy Dan tactics for the traditional, English merits of 4-4-2 shall be deemed knuckle-dragging Neanderthals by the Wokerati and the Metropolitan Elite. They care not what his views are, only that he looks like the sort of person who may have them. It's political correctness gone mad. But they, unlike Dyche, won't have a pub named after them.
    • I'm afraid I have no idea who Sean Dyche is, but I'm sure I could research him (and his views on library refurbishment timetables, if any) on any of the Southwark libraries' internet access computers. Free for any library member!
    • So that suggests the consultations with 'community' are just a tick box exercise where information given cannot be relied on. Not a good look. I hope Renata Hamvas who is the local councillor, as well as licensing, finds a way to stop the wholesale, spreadingmonetisation of an important green space in summer. If they get this it'll end up like Brockwell Park before you know it.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...