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The sidewalk and the street, the concrete and the clay
Last night's hurried bung-it-in-the-oven dinner was intended to be baked haddock with a herby crust. Breadcrumbs, mix in chopped herbs and olive oil, slap on top of fish, shove in oven. Done.
Except... well. The sliced bread had gone all pernicious. It looked fine, but had stealthily gone colourfully and fluffily off behind all the opaque bits of the plastic bag. No breadcrumbs :(
Except, lurking in the bread bin, overlooked, was the tiny, nobbly end of Saturday's baguette. Baguettes go a bit hard and dry when you've had them more than 35 minutes, so Saturday's French bready-product was rock solid.
I normally make breadcrumbs from fresh bread, rubbing slices between my hands. Occasionally, if I'm feeling very together, I put the slices out to go a little stale first. But four day old baguette? Not a chance.
On a whim, I tried grating it with a coarse grater. Bingo! A suitable-sized pile of breadcrumbs in no time. Probably even easier than normal.
Maybe everyone else already makes breadcrumbs like this. I just thought I'd mention it :)
Except... well. The sliced bread had gone all pernicious. It looked fine, but had stealthily gone colourfully and fluffily off behind all the opaque bits of the plastic bag. No breadcrumbs :(
Except, lurking in the bread bin, overlooked, was the tiny, nobbly end of Saturday's baguette. Baguettes go a bit hard and dry when you've had them more than 35 minutes, so Saturday's French bready-product was rock solid.
I normally make breadcrumbs from fresh bread, rubbing slices between my hands. Occasionally, if I'm feeling very together, I put the slices out to go a little stale first. But four day old baguette? Not a chance.
On a whim, I tried grating it with a coarse grater. Bingo! A suitable-sized pile of breadcrumbs in no time. Probably even easier than normal.
Maybe everyone else already makes breadcrumbs like this. I just thought I'd mention it :)
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I mostly only use breadcrumby stuff at Christmas for the stuffing. This involves buying a bloomer and letting it go stale whilst repeatedly fending people off from consuming it in the meantime. We're terribly non eco-friendly and put the surviving bread through a food processor, although your method sounds less wasteful.
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That's the way, that's the way it's meant to be
If it helps, breadcrumbs can be bagged and frozen, and used straight from the freezer.
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Nothing can be frozen! Nothing!
(I'm trying to empty the freezer so I can defrost its rather sorry iced-up arse, but somehow more things keep creeping in to fill the space...)
Re: That's the way, that's the way it's meant to be
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(it isn't the Kevin Rowland version, is it?)
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NP: Kevin Rowland - Concrete And Clay
No, I've never heard that before. I just know the Unit4+2 version.
I do recognise the album cover, though. Mostly from its repeated appearance on "terrible album cover" lists :)
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As for crumbs, baguettes and fishy stuff, I have nowt to say.
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Until last weekend I had a meat-grinder (apparently it wasn't dishwasher-safe). For soups and stuff, a potato-masher is good enough.
I do own an ok carving-knife. Your idea of grating bread to make bread-crumbs sounds good - will have to try it :)
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http://www.everten.com.au/kuhn-rikon-palm-whisk-small.html
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SLICED BREAD!!!!!!!
You buy white slice plastic innabag?
Have you no shame?
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I would use fresh breadcrumbs in a mix for eg. helping a nut loaf texture, but I'd use dry ones for a crust-type effect.
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