Play video games. Bake bread. Learn to code. Create music. Maybe create a game of my own some day. Release it 100% for free because all my needs are met.
… oh, and sex. Lots of sex. But I think that goes without saying
Weird tangent. For a busy bread lover, have you considered a bread maker? I still make loaves by hand time to time, but with a bread maker my place regularly smells like a lovely cottage and im eating delicious fluffy bread a few times a week.
It’s one of those purchases I didnt know I would love and I end up using so regularly. It really changed my life for the better.
I had a bread maker and it drove me batty, it was like Schrodinger’s bread box. Put ingredients in, and then no control over what happens. Maybe bread, maybe brick, no way to adjust it. I gave it to the neighbor because it was causing anxiety.
Now, for quite a few years I do make sourdough.(long enough my high school age kids can’t remember before I did) . That is bread making. A long runway to adjust the timing, and really at any point you can throw it in the fridge and go to work, start again when you have time. And plenty of opportunity to touch the dough to understand what it needs. Near 100% success with this, vs. about 60% with yeasted dough and bread maker.
Play video games. Bake bread. Learn to code. Create music. Maybe create a game of my own some day. Release it 100% for free because all my needs are met.
… oh, and sex. Lots of sex. But I think that goes without saying
Weird tangent. For a busy bread lover, have you considered a bread maker? I still make loaves by hand time to time, but with a bread maker my place regularly smells like a lovely cottage and im eating delicious fluffy bread a few times a week. It’s one of those purchases I didnt know I would love and I end up using so regularly. It really changed my life for the better.
I had a bread maker and it drove me batty, it was like Schrodinger’s bread box. Put ingredients in, and then no control over what happens. Maybe bread, maybe brick, no way to adjust it. I gave it to the neighbor because it was causing anxiety.
Now, for quite a few years I do make sourdough.(long enough my high school age kids can’t remember before I did) . That is bread making. A long runway to adjust the timing, and really at any point you can throw it in the fridge and go to work, start again when you have time. And plenty of opportunity to touch the dough to understand what it needs. Near 100% success with this, vs. about 60% with yeasted dough and bread maker.
I haven’t, but I could maybe see myself doing that