ᐅ Kitchen Appliances – Stove, Oven, Microwave, and Everything You Need!
Created on: 28 Sep 2018 11:06
A
Anoxio
So, I'm starting a new topic here to avoid overloading the house pictures thread.
I find the sliding doors for ovens quite interesting – but do they really offer any added value? I was also surprised to read that ovens now seem to be adopting a feature I dislike in microwaves: instead of setting temperature and possibly time, you input the "dimensions" of the food?! What is that supposed to achieve?! Personally, I think it’s terrible.
I find the sliding doors for ovens quite interesting – but do they really offer any added value? I was also surprised to read that ovens now seem to be adopting a feature I dislike in microwaves: instead of setting temperature and possibly time, you input the "dimensions" of the food?! What is that supposed to achieve?! Personally, I think it’s terrible.
C
chand198630 Sep 2018 21:13As [USER=30426]@bon1980 said.
By the way, the coffee buyers only taste the beans as drip coffee – when prepared this way, it tastes excellent and is simply good coffee. And that’s the kind you should use.
Before buying a coffee machine that costs thousands of euros and can’t even do that, and then criticizing TM users who spent less on a machine that can do much more,
you can enjoy coffee with a simple hand filter that costs only a few euros plus a grinder, as long as you invest in truly good beans. It’s just without crema and other fancy extras—pure and simple.
Maybe these expensive machines pay off if they can make something enjoyable from average beans. With each cup, you save some money on the machine.
(The sarcasm, in my opinion, is deserved but not entirely serious).
By the way, the coffee buyers only taste the beans as drip coffee – when prepared this way, it tastes excellent and is simply good coffee. And that’s the kind you should use.
Before buying a coffee machine that costs thousands of euros and can’t even do that, and then criticizing TM users who spent less on a machine that can do much more,
you can enjoy coffee with a simple hand filter that costs only a few euros plus a grinder, as long as you invest in truly good beans. It’s just without crema and other fancy extras—pure and simple.
Maybe these expensive machines pay off if they can make something enjoyable from average beans. With each cup, you save some money on the machine.
(The sarcasm, in my opinion, is deserved but not entirely serious).
ypg schrieb:
When kneading by hand, we’re definitely back in the category of “making something makes you happy.” It’s comparable to chopping wood. Oh yes, bread dough is a great stress reliever.