Multi-Million/Billionaires Owning Farms
Society & Culture1 min ago
I have just re-discovered the joys of my toastie maker, however I seem to have lost the skill in making them and the toasties fall apart while cooking. I wouldn’t mind too much but the burnt-on food is a nightmare to clean off. Obviously as it’s an electrical appliance I can’t put it in with the washing up, so do any of you know the best way to get the plates really clean without causing any damage?
Thanks
Claire
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.One gadget I wouldnt be without is a small black bag thingy ( cant remember its name) which you put your toastie into BEFORE you put it into the toastie maker. It cooks the same but your toastie maker stays spotless. The bag can be washed & reused over and over again. (It's the same material as those washable grill pan liners). I bought mine from Lakeland Plastics.
www.lakelandlimited.co.uk
I work in a community centre where the only food the kitchen serves is toasted sandwiches - use the cheapest bread possible (the lower moisture makes it crispy), butter the outside only, grate the cheese and use less than you think you need. We have Morphy Richards 4 sandwich toasters and the best bit is the plates come out - there's clips and just the metal plates with the sandwich indentations fall out, so you can put them in the dishwasher. The toasters are only around �20 a piece, and I'm sure the two sandwich ones are less than 15. They came with some plates to make a George Formby style grill thing, but we never use them. Super!
Before we had these toasters we just used to wipe them while they were still warm (once it'd baked on it was a scrubbing job) but using less cheese stops it spilling out.
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