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[Closed] Favourite bakery product - Aka how good are crumpets?

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[#7185711]

I bloody love crumpets. Marmite, marmalade, melted cheese - it takes everything. Do t think it's possible to eat too many or get bored of them, or even burn them in the toaster.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:13 am
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Crumpets are all very well but are you forgetting that pies come from bakeries?


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:15 am
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Just don't get crumpets..tasteless things


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:17 am
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Yum Yums. Never has a baked good been more aptly named.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:24 am
 cp
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tasteless things

??!


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:24 am
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You think crumpets are the best thing to come out of a bakery?

Better than pies? Or sausage rolls? Or cheese and onion pasties? Steak bakes?

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:27 am
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The best Bakery Product is the Amandes from the Boulangerie in Larchant. They take yesterday's stale Pain au Chocolats, squash them and slice them in half, fill with frangipane and top with almond paste and brown sugar and put them back in the oven to crisp up.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:27 am
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Crumpets are reliable. You *can* get a bad pie.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:31 am
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Anyhow, it hardly seems right that the best bakery product isn't baked.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:32 am
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Love a Friday bakery thread.

Any kind of hot pastry product is full of win, or mechanically separated innards.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:33 am
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Yum Yums are pointless, a really rubbish doughnut, that not any good IME.

I would like to suggest that Co-Op specialised bread (normally a limited/small selection) is worth searching out.. A really alternative to even our local bakers bread (great but not exciting white or malted/whole meal loaves).. Their onion rolls are to die for... Mediterranean, Moroccan, garlic, Apple/beetroot loafs have become like crack cocaine to me!


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:33 am
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yum-yums are disgusting. It shows how low the once great bakeries of this green and pleasant land have come that a yum-yum should be considered good. Its a travesty of a cheap approximation to a doughnut. Real bakery doughnuts with a crsipy skin, real sugar and decent jam in cannot be beaten.

Or of course a pasty. Two particularly great pasties spring to mind: Philps pasties in Hayle for a bone fide cornish variety; or the pasties available from Ewenny post office, south wales, for a range of flavours. Steak and stilton being a personal favourite.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:35 am
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Crumpets are reliable. You *can* get a bad pie.

[b]BURN THE HERETIC!!!!![/b]


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:37 am
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It's the cheese and bacon wrap for me. Cheese + bacon + pastry. Everything you could want. I'll take 3 please.

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:43 am
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There's only one thing better than a fresh cream apple turnover. And that's two of them.

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:44 am
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Has anyone posted a link to all this loveliness on the overeating thread? 😀


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:46 am
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Do 'Patisserie' items count?

If so those fresh strawberry and custard tarts - nomnomnom

If not, a freshly baked baguette is the swiss army knife of baked goods - great in may situations.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:48 am
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The Greatape makes a good point there - I usually have one of these as a chaser


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:48 am
 kcal
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butteries FTW. Like croissants, but salty and lardy. 🙂


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:50 am
 Solo
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Croissant with black coffee, preferably outside in the early sunshine. It's the [b]only[/b] way to live!


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:51 am
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Philps pasties in Hayle for a bone fide cornish variety

100% agree about the pasties...... Driving down overnight tonight to get some. Only 600 miles. Might stay for a couple of weeks and squeeze in a bit of a holiday while i'm there anyway. 😀

[b]Greggs / supermarket[/b] yum-yums are disgusting. It shows how low the once great bakeries of this green and pleasant land have come that a yum-yum should be considered good.

FTFY. We're talking about actual bakers, right? 😕


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:56 am
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Greenodd bakery aloo pastie, washed down with a house brick sized vanilla slice for me today.

To paraphrase one of the greatest poets of our age. 'they make my pee-pee go b-boing boing boing'


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 10:59 am
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The chocolate twist:

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 11:00 am
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If, in the spirit of the Tour de France, we can pop over the channel, there is nothing quite like fresh croissants, eaten in warm early morning french sunshine and washed down with strong balck coffee.

To be honest any properly bakery/patisserie made baked good is a marvel, a testament to human endeavour and intellect far surpassing such brick-a-brack as the Mona Lisa or Hamlet 😆


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 11:15 am
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Don't like crumpets normally, but made my own and now know what they are supposed to taste like.

Pain au chocolate for me though, in France, from a proper boulangerie. Nom, Nom.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 11:17 am
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Have you tried Morrissons salt and pepper baguettes? Referred to in our house as crack cocaine bread, due to its unbelievable moreish-ness.

Get a load of cheese in and you can keep going at it like Mr Creasote

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 11:19 am
 beej
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A good chocolate twist is very hard to beat. Our place keeps overcooking them though, and not enough creme pat inside.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 11:21 am
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Cinnamon swirl, apricot danish or the ultimate, fresh cream vanilla slice.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 11:24 am
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Have you tried Morrissons salt and pepper baguettes? Referred to in our house as crack cocaine bread, due to its unbelievable moreish-ness.

They sound like Lidl bretzels, amazing things and great with a beer.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 11:30 am
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We happened across Hambleton Bakery, while looking for a suitable refreshment stop a few weeks ago on a Sunday ride.

There is one in Oakham, but we ended up in the one on the Cottesmore Road nr Exton.

I had a Pecan Bun, which filled me with a LOT of joy!! It was like a small Danish shape with loads of pecans on it & like a nutty spread stuff in it that I don't know the name of. It had been drizzled with some kind of caramel coating that had gone hard & crispy.
In fact, I might have to make a trip this weekend & savour some more of their delights......

They also had amazing English muffins cut up into sample sized chunks with their own jam on! Mmmmmmm!

Is it lunch time!? Writing all that had made me starving!!


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 11:35 am
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Shout out for the humble custard tart, and its done-with-a-wee-bit-more-panache Portuguese cousin, the pastel de nata.

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 11:41 am
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I like a cake, who doesn't, but I think the peak of good bakery work is a beautifully baked croissant. Not too crumbly, buttery but not greasy, tasty but not too rich, a real work of art. Morning sun, Gauloises, good coffee and a copy of Le Figaro optional.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 11:44 am
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Actually, all this fancy stuff is nice but I'm a bread geek. If you're ever in Derbyshire go to The Loaf in Crich and try their Sauerlander Schwarzbrot. I'm a sucker for a good long fermented Whey Bread too.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 11:44 am
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Pain au chocolat with a coffee, else a steak and haggis pie. Oh my...


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 11:56 am
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thinking about it made me go early. Now i feel very full and sleepy. Just in time for the conference call I haven't done the work for. Time for a nap.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 11:58 am
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Pikelets are better than crumpets.

There, I've said it.

Don't like crumpets normally, but made my own and now know what they are supposed to taste like.

I'd be interested to see your recipe, if you feel like sharing? I've been experimenting with home-made ones and they're not quite right yet.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 12:01 pm
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Supermarket 'bakery' products are dire*

*Lidl excepted.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 12:02 pm
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Supermarket 'bakery' products are dire*

Yeah, yeah.... go and get some Morrisons salt and papper/crack cocaine bread tonight and some decent cheeese (Garstang blue is perfect) then come back and tell me that its crap, rather than that you finished the lot, stuffing it into your gob until you felt sick


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 12:06 pm
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My local morrisons is like a manky wee 70's corner shop, but on a larger scale.

I'll stick with the Germans thanks. Cheese sounds nice though!.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 12:11 pm
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Oh now then... Pastel de Nata you say? This is like Daddy or Chips, Daddy or Chips. Memories of PdN on a Portugese seafront with a decent-sized 'spresso... But it s a bit different to hot buttered crumpets at home.

I'm torn.

And talk of pies brought memories of *the best (steak) pie ever*, but you'll have to go [url= http://www.orkneyfoodanddrink.com/williamsons ]here[/url] to get one.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 12:28 pm
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lidl's apple turnovers (especially when they were 3 for £1) are a personal fave.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 12:30 pm
 Kit
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As someone with a gluten intolerance, can I just say that you bunch of ****ing ****s can ****ing shove your ****ing bakery thread right up your ****ing ****.

*weeps*


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 12:47 pm
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You have my condolences Kit.

In the interests of research I'm just having a steak bake and a sausage roll from the nations favourite purveyor of pastry based produce 😀


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 12:51 pm
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You could just take some great photos of pastries, Crutherz, and sell them for big bucks.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 12:54 pm
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If we are talking pies etc then I'll have a macaroni pie or a Forfar Bridie. If we allowed them over the border the Cornish pastor would be finished.


 
Posted : 10/07/2015 12:58 pm
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