Bread Makers

Author
Discussion

bitchstewie

Original Poster:

51,212 posts

210 months

Wednesday 2nd September 2015
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My mum has decided she'd like a bread maker and being the "internet expert" I was asked what to get.

Is there that much difference between these things or is it more a case of garbage in, garbage out but the choice of bread maker won't make too much difference?

Suggestions welcome smile

Shaw Tarse

31,543 posts

203 months

Wednesday 2nd September 2015
quotequote all
Panasonic.

HarryW

15,150 posts

269 months

Wednesday 2nd September 2015
quotequote all
Shaw Tarse said:
Panasonic.
+1
Thread closed...

bearman68

4,652 posts

132 months

Wednesday 2nd September 2015
quotequote all
Panasonic

uk_vette

3,336 posts

204 months

Wednesday 2nd September 2015
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Care to mention which Panasonic?

21TonyK

11,530 posts

209 months

Wednesday 2nd September 2015
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SD-2501 is the one that was recommended to me.

Before you or she buys just be aware that what they do is limited, they take up space and take longer than making bread by hand.

Maybe I didn't give it enough of a chance but its now at the back of the under stair cupboard.

Edited by 21TonyK on Wednesday 2nd September 18:49

mrsshpub

904 posts

184 months

Wednesday 2nd September 2015
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SD-ZB2502 here. Second Panasonic — first one bought sometime last century. Used 2-3 times a week, every week, apart from when we're on holiday & then we really miss 'good' bread.

mrsshpub

904 posts

184 months

Wednesday 2nd September 2015
quotequote all
21TonyK said:
Before you or she buys just be aware that what they is limited, they take up space and take longer than making bread by hand.
However…. You're not tied to the kitchen at certain time intervals to do what needs to be done. A big 'plus' is that you can put the ingredients in before you go to bed & have fresh, warm bread for breakfast.

They also take the 'hassle factor' out of making more specialised breads because you can use one of the dough settings to do the work then do a bit of shaping & cook in a 'normal' oven.

truck71

2,328 posts

172 months

Wednesday 2nd September 2015
quotequote all
21TonyK said:
SD-2501 is the one that was recommended to me.

Before you or she buys just be aware that what they do is limited, they take up space and take longer than making bread by hand.

Maybe I didn't give it enough of a chance but its now at the back of the under stair cupboard.

Edited by 21TonyK on Wednesday 2nd September 18:49
This. I make mine by hand and it takes half the time and delivers a far superior loaf. Once you practice it you can almost do it in your sleep.

-Pete-

2,892 posts

176 months

Wednesday 2nd September 2015
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We bought a 2nd hand Panasonic for £30, I use it once or twice a week, every loaf of bread is brilliant, and it takes 5 minutes in total including cleaning up. Who can do it by hand in 5 minutes? I normally use 80% white 20% wholemeal or brown flour, add golden linseeds, often with sunflower and/or pumpkin seeds, works out around 75p per loaf.

Juggsy1

73 posts

109 months

Wednesday 2nd September 2015
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They are big and bulky and make an odd shaped loaf, well ours does, but they are handy. Don't use ours as much as we could but when we do it does excellent work. Chuck it all in program and forget it till it finishes.
Wouldn't be without it. Think it's a Russell Hobbs but can't check as daughters borrowed it.

truck71

2,328 posts

172 months

Wednesday 2nd September 2015
quotequote all
-Pete- said:
We bought a 2nd hand Panasonic for £30, I use it once or twice a week, every loaf of bread is brilliant, and it takes 5 minutes in total including cleaning up. Who can do it by hand in 5 minutes? I normally use 80% white 20% wholemeal or brown flour, add golden linseeds, often with sunflower and/or pumpkin seeds, works out around 75p per loaf.
Lol, you're quite right- the effort to make your own is significantly more. I mean't time to produce a loaf.

LordHaveMurci

12,043 posts

169 months

Wednesday 2nd September 2015
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Bought a Panny a few months ago, gets used a lot. Haven't experimented enough despite buying a decent bread making book though.

Craikeybaby

10,411 posts

225 months

Thursday 3rd September 2015
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My girlfriend bought one (not a Panasonic) for £10 from a friend the other week, so far we've used it twice and the bread has been good both times. According to my smart meter it does seem to use a lot of electricity though.

I was expecting it to be more tat the we don't really have room for in the kitchen, but I'm actually pretty impressed with it.

RizzoTheRat

25,165 posts

192 months

Thursday 3rd September 2015
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Can't remember which model, but another vote for Panasonic from me.

However since getting a Kenwood Chef I've used it a lot less. Using the exact same recipe I can produce a better loaf kneading it in the Kenwood and cooking it in a tin in the oven, without it ever touching the worktop so no mess whatsoever. However I can only do that on evenings when I'm at home (usually around 4 hours from start to finish and then leave it to cool overnight), whereas I can just bung the ingredients in the breadmaker and set it to be ready when I get up.

LordHaveMurci

12,043 posts

169 months

Monday 22nd February 2016
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Thread resurrection, good deal today on Panny: http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00WB95JD6?ref_...

Murph7355

37,715 posts

256 months

Monday 22nd February 2016
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LordHaveMurci said:
Thread resurrection, good deal today on Panny: http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00WB95JD6?ref_...
That's a great price. I paid £130 6mths ago.

Even at the higher price it's a great machine. Ours is in daily use...

miroku

261 posts

153 months

Monday 22nd February 2016
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Do not do this! My wife "invested" in one of these contraptions and after weeks of Date bread, Nut bread, Banana bread etc etc the kids and I would have paid £10 for a white sliced loaf.
Can you imagine a bacon sarnie with date/banana etc bread? Do not go there!
Offending item is now locked in a cupboard. Wife or Breadmaker? I'll leave you to guess.

miroku

261 posts

153 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2016
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Wow, was my post that bad?
Maybe everyone has gone " yep, recognise that"
By the way, Cheese/walnut and apricot bread is not good.
HTH

steve2

1,772 posts

218 months

Tuesday 23rd February 2016
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I have a Panasonic and use it about once a month but the last two attempts to make bread have resulted in the dough not rising for some reason, will give it another go at the weekend