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C. Quoi's 203 Breadbasket

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The 203 is a linen breadbasket. The lining is filled with cherry pits and can be microwaved to hold heat when you transport or serve the bread kept inside. The basket cinches shut for storing bread and opens for serving...

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Perhaps this can easily be copied and made for yourself? -regina

(Re-Edited from 11.22.06)-JR

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tabletop & servingware, fabric & textiles

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Comments (14)

Mmmm. Always wondered what I could do with left over cherry pits!

posted by Alana in Canada on 2006-11-22 17:39:15

rice would work... lentils, beans, etcetera

posted by test on 2006-11-22 19:35:38

What a great idea! All we need to do now is encourage (gently of course) people to bake their own bread!

posted by Tim on 2006-11-22 23:49:53

Why, doesn't it work on store-bought bread? :)

posted by patrick (the other one) on 2006-11-22 23:59:23

couple this with the 'no knead bread' recipe - i keep making it, and have nowhere to put it!
think you could wash it with the pits inside? then they wouldn't be dried.

posted by chanie on 2006-11-23 01:51:28

Ok. The grinch is here. I've known linen and buckseed to combust inside of a microwave.

Friendships and product development dreams---up in flames.

Be safe out there.

S

posted by Scott on 2006-11-23 13:47:14

I make something like this - rice poured into men's basic cotton socks (no sewing needed, just knot the top). Heat it for 3min, stays warm 1/2 hour. Reheat 2min, stays warm longer. Use to warm self & keep one apart to heat breads. Don't wash them.

Toss one in a cold bed about 15min before you get in. Delightful.

posted by Tara on 2006-11-27 11:15:44

Forgot - use about 2 cups of rice per sock.

posted by Tara on 2006-11-27 11:16:38

This is a great idea. But -

Scott -- Years ago I gave my grandma one of those things you heat up in the microwave and lay across your aching bones. It was filled with rice or linseed or something like that, I bought it at a booth at the Union Square xmas market, and she LOVED it... until the day she set it on fire in the microwave. Knowing grandma, who was I think 98 years old at the time, it's likely that she had turned it on for 30 min instead of 3 min or something like that, but anyway. It was very scary, and she never touched another microwave. So yeah, be safe out there.

posted by mjoe on 2007-11-21 17:03:52
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I used to have a hot water bottle alternative that was this same thing - a bag filled with cherry pits that was to be microwaved. It did hold heat but, once warm, it smelled SO bad, so so bad. The idea of storing porous foodstuffs inside it is simply ghastly!

posted by cardboard on 2007-11-21 17:04:25
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While it recycles cherry pits, it's not exactly green, if it has to be microwaved.

posted by Palmetto on 2007-11-21 18:59:21
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Patrick: LOL (as usual!)...

:)

I have a lovely handmade pottery disk that's supposed to be a breadwarmer ... you heat it up in either the microwave or oven, and put it at the bottom of the breadbasket to keep the contents warm (enclosing the bread in a cloth napkin helps, I would imagine). But I haven't used it yet ... so far, the thing has only been hanging on my kitchen wall!

posted by Jane on 2007-11-22 11:52:19
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What's wrong with a microwave? I.e. why is it not green? I don't believe its any less green than being here on apartmenttherapy.com but I may be wrong.

posted by SeanG on 2007-11-23 10:40:53
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Tara,

The rice in sock method sounds great. I especially like how easy it would be to dump out the rice after use and launder the sock.

At a hospital supply store, I bought corduroy bags filled with some type of grain or lentil and menthol smelling potpourri inside. Zap it in the microwave for four minutes and it stays warm for about 15 minutes. Gave it to many relatives, and they all loved it for sore backs and shoulders. But it was expensive, and also there was no way to wash the thing.

Would just add this to your directions:
Uncooked rice. Clean sock. : )

posted by gekko on 2007-11-23 22:39:48
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