On our radar: Brød & Taylor Sourdough Home

Brød & Taylor Sourdough Home

I’ve been waiting a very long time for a gadget like the Brød & Taylor Sourdough Home to be invented.

Some of you may have been following my sourdough journey for the past few years. I’m often bemoaning the chilliness of our kitchen (our current one AND the one in our previous house). The cold temperature causes my sourdough starter to be sluggish and makes my loaves slow to prove.

The Brød & Taylor Sourdough Home is the answer to that problem. It acts like a little tepidarium for my glass jar of starter, keeping it at the optimum temperature for the wild yeast to thrive.

Not only that, when I want a break from baking – and a pause in feeding my starter, it will chill it to allow it to go into a sort of hibernation. This will also suit bakers who have a kitchen that is too warm and makes their starter fizz with overactivity… something that I’ve never experienced!

It currently retails at £129.00.

BUY Brød & Taylor Sourdough Home HERE

Price Points: Cream stick blenders

Cream stick blenders

One of the most used gadgets in our kitchen is our trusty orange Billy; we’ve had it for years and years. We use him when making batter, soup, sauces, smoothies, calaloo and loads more.

In our previous house, we used to have a bright orange kitchen. Poor, old, orange Billy doesn’t look right in our new cream kitchen – I’d like to trade him in for one of these new cream stick blenders.

Here are three that I’ve found for sale online – in a range of prices. They’re all very attractive; the £26 option would suit me fine.  Much as I love Smeg and KitchenAid appliances, I don’t think I’d use the attachments that come included with the other two cream stick blenders – they’d take up precious storage space that we just don’t have.

  1. Haden stick blender: £26.05, Wayfair
  2. Cordless hand blender 5KHBBV53: £109.65, KitchenAid
  3. Smeg 50s retro style HBF02CRUK hand blender: £149.00, Currys

shop cream stick blenders

Some of the links on our blog are affiliate links. We may receive a small commission - at no cost to you - if you click through and make a purchase.
Prices & links correct at time of publication.

Smeg 50s retro style HBF02CRUK hand blender
Smeg 50s retro style HBF02CRUK hand blender
£149.00
Cordless hand blender 5KHBBV53
Cordless hand blender 5KHBBV53
£109.65
Haden stick blender
Haden stick blender
£26.05
Smeg 50s retro style HBF02CRUK hand blender
Smeg 50s retro style HBF02CRUK hand blender
£149.00
Cordless hand blender 5KHBBV53
Cordless hand blender 5KHBBV53
£109.65
Haden stick blender
Haden stick blender
£26.05
Smeg 50s retro style HBF02CRUK hand blender
Smeg 50s retro style HBF02CRUK hand blender
£149.00
Cordless hand blender 5KHBBV53
Cordless hand blender 5KHBBV53
£109.65
Haden stick blender
Haden stick blender
£26.05
Smeg 50s retro style HBF02CRUK hand blender
Smeg 50s retro style HBF02CRUK hand blender
£149.00
Cordless hand blender 5KHBBV53
Cordless hand blender 5KHBBV53
£109.65
Haden stick blender
Haden stick blender
£26.05
Smeg 50s retro style HBF02CRUK hand blender
Smeg 50s retro style HBF02CRUK hand blender
£149.00
Cordless hand blender 5KHBBV53
Cordless hand blender 5KHBBV53
£109.65
Haden stick blender
Haden stick blender
£26.05

Price Points: Water carbonators

Water carbonators

I may have mentioned at some point in the past that I’m not a great fan of drinking plain water. Also, if I really have to drink a glass of the stuff, I prefer fizzy water to flat. Finally, if I really, really must drink water, my favoured way of imbibing is adding a large glug of elderflower cordial.

I don’t like buying bottles of water – even less, if the bottles are plastic. The water that comes out of our taps makes its short journey from the Teifi Pools and tastes lovely! A water carbonator would be a great addition to our kitchen appliance repertoire. It would encourage me to drink more water.

Here are three water carbonators that I found online. I thought that a classic SodaStream would be the most affordable, however, their basic model comes in at £70.00. The Aarke carbonator is an absolute modernist beauty, and is available in a range of colours to complement any kitchen décor; black, gold, brass, copper, steel, white. However, I’d have to be sure that I’d be drinking a lot of fizzy water, every day of the week, to shell out over £100.00.

  1. MySoda Woody sparkling water maker, black: £52.80, Finnish Design Shop
  2. SodaStream Spirit Machine, black: £69.99, Argos
  3. Aarke Carbonator II water carbonator, including PET bottle, silver: £107.23, Amazon

shop water carbonators

Some of the links on our blog are affiliate links. We may receive a small commission - at no cost to you - if you click through and make a purchase.
Prices & links correct at time of publication.

Aarke Carbonator II water carbonator, including PET bottle, silver
Aarke Carbonator II water carbonator, including PET bottle, silver
£107.23
SodaStream Spirit Machine, black
SodaStream Spirit Machine, black
£69.99
MySoda Woody sparkling water maker, black
MySoda Woody sparkling water maker, black
£52.80
Aarke Carbonator II water carbonator, including PET bottle, silver
Aarke Carbonator II water carbonator, including PET bottle, silver
£107.23
SodaStream Spirit Machine, black
SodaStream Spirit Machine, black
£69.99
MySoda Woody sparkling water maker, black
MySoda Woody sparkling water maker, black
£52.80
Aarke Carbonator II water carbonator, including PET bottle, silver
Aarke Carbonator II water carbonator, including PET bottle, silver
£107.23
SodaStream Spirit Machine, black
SodaStream Spirit Machine, black
£69.99
MySoda Woody sparkling water maker, black
MySoda Woody sparkling water maker, black
£52.80
Aarke Carbonator II water carbonator, including PET bottle, silver
Aarke Carbonator II water carbonator, including PET bottle, silver
£107.23
SodaStream Spirit Machine, black
SodaStream Spirit Machine, black
£69.99
MySoda Woody sparkling water maker, black
MySoda Woody sparkling water maker, black
£52.80
Aarke Carbonator II water carbonator, including PET bottle, silver
Aarke Carbonator II water carbonator, including PET bottle, silver
£107.23
SodaStream Spirit Machine, black
SodaStream Spirit Machine, black
£69.99
MySoda Woody sparkling water maker, black
MySoda Woody sparkling water maker, black
£52.80

25 + 1 Wayfair baking essentials

Baking essentials inside my vintage kitchenette | H is for Home

As regular readers will know, I’m an ex-chef and remain a keen baker. Over the years, I’ve discovered which kitchen tools and appliances are vital and which ones lie neglected, collecting dust at the back of a cupboard.

With the help of Wayfair’s huge range of kitchenwares, I thought I’d share with you what I consider to be my baking essentials.

Wayfair baking essentials: 'Tools' | H is for Home

Tools

  1. Dihl 5.5L stand mixer – The workhorse of the kitchen, it’s a must for those jobs that require buckets of elbow grease; whipping up egg whites, mixing sponge batter and kneading bread dough.
  2. Premier Plus/Superior 9-piece knife block set – Every cutting job has its own particular knife. A long serrated one for slicing loaves of bread, a paring knife for peeling and so on. And a block or wall-mounted magnetic strip is essential for keeping them safe & sharp. Knives in drawers is not advised!
  3. 6-piece kitchen tool with holder set – We have a pot of bamboo spoons and spatulas beside the stove… crucial!
  4. Hans dough scraper – Not only does this scraper get your bread dough out of your mixer bowl with ease and no sticky fingers, it gets every last drop of batter into your cake tin.
  5. Original silicone brush – I find a silicone brush much better than a traditional one with bristles which tend to shed and end up sticking to the top of your pastry.
  6. Boxwood rolling pin (50.8cm) – When it comes to rolling pins, the longer the better. Too short, and your pastry ends up with lines and grooves all over it – causing you to over-roll and possibly overwork it. No one likes overworked pastry!

Wayfair baking essentials: 'Tins' | H is for Home

Tins, pans & racks

  1. 12-hole muffin pan – I’m not a big cupcake maker, but I’m very partial to muffins… chocolate, blueberry, apple & cinnamon… mmmm… This one’s non-stick, so you won’t need paper muffin cases. And don’t forget you need something to cook those Yorkshire puddings!
  2. Non-stick springform cake tin set – Every serious baker should have both round and square cake tins. Springform tins are the best, they’re so much easier to get delicate and sticky cakes out of – I don’t bake cheesecakes in anything else!
  3. 32.5cm non-stick rectangle baking sheet – I love home-made biscuits and cookies with my afternoon cup of tea. This is the best thing for cooking them on – ditto meringues, macarons and nut brittle. Like the rolling pin, the bigger the better. The more cookies you can get on your baking sheet, the quicker you can get the entire batched cooked off. Just make sure the one you buy isn’t too wide to fit into your oven!
  4. 27.94cm x 43.18cm cooling rack – If you’re going to be baking, you need somewhere for things to cool. If you leave a cake in the tin too long, it will get soggy or stick to the sides & bottom making it difficult to remove… and Mary Berry won’t like your soggy bottom!

Wayfair baking essentials: 'Measures' | H is for Home

Measures

  1. Baking and candy digital thermometer – If you make jam, jelly or fudge a thermometer is vital. You can judge by eye or consistency, but a thermometer removes the guess work.
  2. Zing digital kitchen scales – I’m rubbish at approximating weights and volumes. Yes, I kind of know the weight of a bag of sugar… or a pint of milk. Some people can just toss flour, sugar, eggs and butter into a bowl, stick it in the oven and presto, a melt-in-the-mouth sponge cake is magically produced. I however, need to create or follow a recipe to the gram. These particular digital scales are great for a number of reasons. Firstly, it has a function that allows you to weigh an ingredient and then zero the scale so you can add additional ingredients. Secondly, you can weigh as little as a gram and as much as 5 kilos – in gram increments. And lastly, they’re orange!
  3. Maison 4-piece metal measuring spoons set – A lot of the recipes I make I find on US food blogger websites. Their ingredients are invariably measured in cups and ‘sticks’ of butter. I used to spend AGES finding their metric equivalents. Now that I have measuring cups that’s a thing of the past. And, by the way, a stick of butter weighs 113 grams.
  4. Stainless steel 6-piece measuring spoon set – Do any of the teaspoons in your house actually hold exactly a teaspoon? How about your tablespoons? No, mine neither. A basic bit of kit for adding baking powder, bicarb, spices, cocoa, coffee, extracts, food colouring etc to your bakes.
  5. 2-hour kitchen timer – I NEVER put anything into the oven without switching on the kitchen timer. I have a memory like a goldfish. I get distracted by the slightest thing, and next thing I know there’s a burning smell coming from the stove-top or the oven. What I like about this one is that it counts down two hours. Lots of bread & cakes need a 1-hour+ bake.
  6. Alessi Twisted measuring jug – I love this measuring jug – it’s a jug with a ‘twist’! Instead of there being the usual gradation markings up the outside of the vessel, they’re on the inside… in a spiral… so you look down into the interior for a bird’s eye view of the volume. Brilliant!

Storage

  1. 2-piece glass mixing bowl set – I have lots of different sized mixing bowls depending on the job I’m doing. These glass mixing bowls get the thumbs up from me because they are perfect for bread making. You can keep an eye on how your prove is going without peering under the cover and, unlike most mixing bowls, they come with useful lids.
  2. Clip top 6-piece Kilner preserving jar set – I have clip-top Kilner jars in every size; from diddy ones that hold spices to jumbo ones that can hold a couple of packets of spaghetti. They’re so much easier to stack & store and look so much more attractive than a mish-mash of opened boxes, bags and packets.
  3. Coverblubber set – I go on all the time about hating waste. These coverblubbers are an ingenious invention. Not only do they cover part-used pieces of fruit & veg such as pineapple, melon, cucumber, onion and avocado; they can be stretched over bowls and jugs to store the food and drink within. Think of all the cling-film – and fruit & veg – you’d save over time!
  4. Cake stand – The only way to keep the cakes that you lovingly bake and ice is under a domed cake stand. We always have a home-made cake on the go; our cake stand has pride of place in the centre of the kitchen table.

Real bread-making

  1. Bread storage bag – If you take the time & effort to bake bread, you don’t want to spoil your loaves & rolls by storing them in a plastic bag. This inner-coated fabric bag is designed to keep your bread fresher for longer.
  2. Pizza peel (35.99cm) – A pizza peel my be for sliding your home-made pizzas into a hot oven. However, I use it for getting all my breads into the oven with ease – especially the wetter dough ones such as ciabatta.
  3. Home made round loaf proving basket – I have a round basket (or banneton) and an oval one. I use the round one perhaps twice as much as the latter as I sometimes use it in conjunction with my Le Cloche. If you make sourdough bread, you need a proving basket.
  4. Marble chopping board (46cm) – The secret to rolling and kneading successful pastry and dough is having a cold work surface (and hands). A top tip is having a large expanse of marble to work upon.
  5. Cast iron baking stone – Ideal for cooking bread products both on the stove-top and in the oven. Crumpets, Welsh cakes, all manner of flat-breads, crepes & pancakes and pizzas.

Textiles Union tea towel

And one last thing…

Textiles Union tea towels
Perhaps the most important of my baking essentials. I don’t know where I’d be without a pile of these! I use them for handling hot pans, covering proving bread, dusting down floury work surfaces, drying the washing up… oh, and putting out the occasional accidental fire!

What baking essentials could you not do without?

shop baking essentials

Some of the links on our blog are affiliate links. We may receive a small commission - at no cost to you - if you click through and make a purchase.
Prices & links correct at time of publication.

Dihl 5.5L stand mixer
Dihl 5.5L stand mixer
Premier Plus/Superior 9-piece knife block set
Premier Plus/Superior 9-piece knife block set
6-piece kitchen tool with holder set
6-piece kitchen tool with holder set
Hans dough scraper
Hans dough scraper
Original silicone brush
Original silicone brush
Boxwood rolling pin (50.8cm)
Boxwood rolling pin (50.8cm)
Dihl 5.5L stand mixer
Dihl 5.5L stand mixer
Premier Plus/Superior 9-piece knife block set
Premier Plus/Superior 9-piece knife block set
6-piece kitchen tool with holder set
6-piece kitchen tool with holder set
Hans dough scraper
Hans dough scraper
Original silicone brush
Original silicone brush
Boxwood rolling pin (50.8cm)
Boxwood rolling pin (50.8cm)
Dihl 5.5L stand mixer
Dihl 5.5L stand mixer
Premier Plus/Superior 9-piece knife block set
Premier Plus/Superior 9-piece knife block set
6-piece kitchen tool with holder set
6-piece kitchen tool with holder set
Hans dough scraper
Hans dough scraper
Original silicone brush
Original silicone brush
Boxwood rolling pin (50.8cm)
Boxwood rolling pin (50.8cm)