Bread makers any good these days?

Bread makers any good these days?

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Discussion

dickymint

Original Poster:

24,335 posts

258 months

Tuesday 14th March 2023
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In particular this one...........

https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B09WVSYLZP/ref...

We do occasional make our own in a steam oven but finding it a bit of a bind lately. The one linked to also has an ice cream maker attachment (looks unavailable in the UK but can source it from Amazon DE) which is interesting.

TheInternet

4,717 posts

163 months

Tuesday 14th March 2023
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Why would you choose that over the go-to Panasonic ones?

Pflanzgarten

3,942 posts

25 months

Tuesday 14th March 2023
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I bought the Sage fancy pants one a couple of years ago-mainly due to it having the foldable bread paddle that meant you didn't get that annoying hole ripped out of the bottom of the loaf. Quite expensive but I got it on a discount from Lakeland in a January sale.

In all honesty, apart from the foldable paddle it makes no better bread than the £20 one I picked up from a charity shop. You can do more types with automated fruit and all that but I don't usually bother with all that.

I go through fits and starts of bread making and it's out of favour at the moment-I actually just moved the bread maker down to the utility room yesterday as it hasn't been used in months.

dickymint

Original Poster:

24,335 posts

258 months

Tuesday 14th March 2023
quotequote all
TheInternet said:
Why would you choose that over the go-to Panasonic ones?
Looks, lack of window? And no ice cream attachment.

oddman

2,321 posts

252 months

Tuesday 14th March 2023
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TheInternet said:
Why would you choose that over the go-to Panasonic ones?
Panasonic every time. We've had our SD253 a long time - must be best part of 20 years. I think we bought a new tin for it a while back as the non stick was going a bit. That was probably due to the odd time when I forgot to put the yeast in and woke up to a nicely naked brick.

We have used it 2 or 3 times a week for most of that time. Yes the paddle leaves a defect in the loaf but a small price to pay for something that does what it should do so well.

The original recommendation came from here.

RizzoTheRat

25,162 posts

192 months

Tuesday 14th March 2023
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dickymint said:
Looks, lack of window? And no ice cream attachment.
They all just look like a kitchen utensil to me, and I thought people generally advised against windows as they're less well insulated and get some condensation and cause flat spots on the bread?

Another Panasonic owner here, they're convenient but the crust is never as good as if I use the same recipe but cook in a tin in the oven.
Tin shape would be a bigger driver for me that looks and window, I find the panasonic tin isn't the best shape, it makes a very tall narrow loaf.

Ham_and_Jam

2,204 posts

97 months

Tuesday 14th March 2023
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It’s been asked many times, but the answer is always Panasonic when it comes to a breadmaker.

dapprman

2,316 posts

267 months

Tuesday 14th March 2023
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Can't remember the make of my first one, was comparatively cheap but a known name. Used it 2-3 times per week for about 3 years then it stopped heating up enough. Replaced it with a Panasonic. I must be the only person who's had a bad one as I bought based on reputation and comments here. Tin leaked so I could not use it for morning wake up fresh bread (which is what I used to do) and I found the results inconsistent.

Half tempted to get another one and have thought about it over the years, but I lack space and as I do not do breakfast these days it would not get the use.

Big Stevie

594 posts

16 months

Tuesday 14th March 2023
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I used to have a Panasonic SD bread maker but never succeeded at making edible bread, it was always heavy, never light. This was following the recipe in the instruction manual. Maybe I should have searched for different recipes?

hairy v

1,182 posts

144 months

Tuesday 14th March 2023
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oddman said:
Panasonic every time. We've had our SD253 a long time - must be best part of 20 years. I think we bought a new tin for it a while back as the non stick was going a bit. That was probably due to the odd time when I forgot to put the yeast in and woke up to a nicely naked brick.

We have used it 2 or 3 times a week for most of that time. Yes the paddle leaves a defect in the loaf but a small price to pay for something that does what it should do so well.

The original recommendation came from here.
Another vote for the SD253, had ours a similar time and still making good bread.

FredericRobinson

3,698 posts

232 months

Tuesday 14th March 2023
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hairy v said:
Another vote for the SD253, had ours a similar time and still making good bread.
And another, pizza bases, naans and everyday loaves, never a problem with it other than non stick wearing over time

dickymint

Original Poster:

24,335 posts

258 months

Tuesday 14th March 2023
quotequote all
hairy v said:
oddman said:
Panasonic every time. We've had our SD253 a long time - must be best part of 20 years. I think we bought a new tin for it a while back as the non stick was going a bit. That was probably due to the odd time when I forgot to put the yeast in and woke up to a nicely naked brick.

We have used it 2 or 3 times a week for most of that time. Yes the paddle leaves a defect in the loaf but a small price to pay for something that does what it should do so well.

The original recommendation came from here.
Another vote for the SD253, had ours a similar time and still making good bread.
I understand brand loyalty and it's great to hear about the longevity of your machines but surely things have moved on in 20 years? Our old Rangemaster oven gave us great service (and food including bread) for many years then we built a kitchen extension and fitted two Nef ovens that both have bread functions and one that is full steam - it was a revelation by comparison!



Murph7355

37,714 posts

256 months

Tuesday 14th March 2023
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dickymint said:
I understand brand loyalty and it's great to hear about the longevity of your machines but surely things have moved on in 20 years? Our old Rangemaster oven gave us great service (and food including bread) for many years then we built a kitchen extension and fitted two Nef ovens that both have bread functions and one that is full steam - it was a revelation by comparison!
Not when you consider what they do.

Stir up ingredients. Timed waits. Heat.

(Panasonic here smile).

BIRMA

3,808 posts

194 months

Tuesday 14th March 2023
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I've had a Panasonic for over a year now, apart from the paddle it always produces superb bread. I bought it when I could no longer get decent 'nutty flavoured' brown bread. Now I make one a week and it's always perfect.

dickymint

Original Poster:

24,335 posts

258 months

Tuesday 14th March 2023
quotequote all
Murph7355 said:
dickymint said:
I understand brand loyalty and it's great to hear about the longevity of your machines but surely things have moved on in 20 years? Our old Rangemaster oven gave us great service (and food including bread) for many years then we built a kitchen extension and fitted two Nef ovens that both have bread functions and one that is full steam - it was a revelation by comparison!
Not when you consider what they do.

Stir up ingredients. Timed waits. Heat.

(Panasonic here smile).
So no significant improvements in the last 20 years and Pana rules the roost? I'm surprised other manufactures even bother wink

To be honest this is more Wifey's idea as I don't make bread as often as I used to and all She wants is a simple way (without all the mess and time) to get a decent fresh daily loaf.

In an ideal world I'd like a bread maker that could reproduce my last attempt at a Tiger Loaf ............




dickymint

Original Poster:

24,335 posts

258 months

Saturday 25th March 2023
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Just to wrap this up. Gastroback works fine and the Ice cream attachment arrived the other day from Amazon DE and a doddle to use. This is the first time I've ever made ice cream. This one is a simple recipe using cream, condensed milk, semi skimmed milk and vanilla extract - delicious thumbup



Strange that other manufactures don't offer this as an attachment to their bread machines!!

Big Stevie

594 posts

16 months

Saturday 25th March 2023
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Anyone able to share their bread recipe when using the Panasonic SD bread maker please. Following the recipe in the instructions didn’t work for me.

Mr.Grooler

1,179 posts

225 months

Monday 27th March 2023
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I can’t see a bread maker recipe going very far wrong, assuming the machine is working ok?

We’ve had rubbish loaves when the dried yeast has been getting a bit old - is yours ok?

And are you keeping the yeast dry - ie. Put it in the pan first, put the flour over the top then add the liquid so the yeast is kept dry until the bread maker starts the mixing?

Wombat3

12,151 posts

206 months

Monday 27th March 2023
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We make bread using a Magimix now. We do 2 at a time

250g flour ( you can use white, wholegrain or a mixture, whatever you like)
4g dried yeast
Heavy pinch of salt
150ml tepid water with a dash of olive oil

Stick the dry stuff in the machine with a plastic dough blade, switch it on & add water slowly

When it comes together into a dough let it run for just over a minute.

Stick it in a bowl covered with a plate & leave for 2 hours (wipe the bowl with olive oil first)

Take it out & shape it into a loaf by hand & leave it for 10 mins (see youtube)

Slash the top with a sharp knife, dust with flower & bake at 200 for 30 minutes on a pizza stone. Dump some boiling water in a roasting tin in the bottom of the oven to make steam when you put it in.

Never misses, can look a bit rustic till you get the hang of the shaping bit!


AdamAJP

190 posts

177 months

Monday 27th March 2023
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Use our Panasonic every 2-3 days, recipie as follows in case helpful…

Ingredients in order of addition:
0.5-1 tsp salt
~25g Olive oil, other oil or butter
400-430ml water
600g flour
+ seeds etc (if milled then add a little more water).
1-2tsp Allinsons easy bake yeast (not dried active)

Troubleshooting:
- insufficiently risen = add water (tepid helps), add yeast.
- slightly more water & yeast for brown/wholemeal/rye flours.
- longer programs produce better bread.
- stronger flours may improve how well bread holds together.
- remove from bread maker the instant the program ends.

Really struggle with supermarket bread (at least the sliced stuff) now and don’t think I’ve purchased any since early 2020 when I purchased the Panasonic. It was a huge upgrade in bread quality from the previous bread maker.

My favourites include a Brazil nut and walnut bread and a very unhealthy brioche dough that I then remove and shape into buns before cooking in the barbecue with the burgers.