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RelentlessOblivion

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Ciabatta's not bad. I've had freshly baked bread from a roadside oven about halfway to Santa Fe that was awesome, but it's not easy to get there since it's a long way off from the exit you have to take to get there. I think they might also be closed now.

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Ciabatta's not bad. I've had freshly baked bread from a roadside oven about halfway to Santa Fe that was awesome' date=' but it's not easy to get there since it's a long way off from the exit you have to take to get there. I think they might also be closed now.[/quote'] The scent of freshly baked bread is undescribable :D Families of some of my friends bake their bread themselves. It always seemed fun to me to do as a family activity, but no one ever bothered trying. 'Why bake bread if there are 3 bakeries on a distance less than a kilometer', they'd probably say. I have no idea how far Santa Fe is, but assuming you live in Washington D.C., there must be some excellent bakers over there?
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I have no idea how far Santa Fe is' date=' but assuming you live in Washington D.C., there must be some excellent bakers over there?[/quote'] :lol: Santa Fe is in New Mexico, which is about two thousand miles away from Washington DC, on the other side of the country...I only study here, my family lives in Los Alamos (the real 'Nuke Town', thank you very much), which is about an hour's drive from Santa Fe. There probably are good bakers here, and they'd probably charge me both my nuts and one kidney for a muffin, the stingy price-gouging bastards.
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:lol: Santa Fe is in New Mexico, which is about two thousand miles away from Washington DC, on the other side of the country...I only study here, my family lives in Los Alamos (the real 'Nuke Town', thank you very much), which is about an hour's drive from Santa Fe. There probably are good bakers here, and they'd probably charge me both my nuts and one kidney for a muffin, the stingy price-gouging bastards.
Thousand miles for affordable and excellent bread. :shock: Hm, that's a shame. If I were completely sane, I'd go insane without some tasty bread...
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Trader Joe's sells partially baked rolls that we keep in the fridge until we're ready to eat them. Toss them in the oven at 425F for a few minutes and bingo' date=' fresh-baked rolls. A staple of my diet recently.[/quote'] I guess that would exceed normal rolls, but I'm curious though, would you say they can match the taste of freshly baked rolls?
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