"You can't use silver to buy a loaf of bread"

errol43 said:
Go to Zimbabwe, US$, GOLD OR SILVER will buy you a loaf of bread...1 gram gold = 1 loaf of bread or 2 ozs silver. or 10 trillion Zimbabwe dollar..

Regards Errol 43

I disagree with this, having recently been to a number of countries in Africa (including Zimbabwe) buying bread with Gold/Silver simply doesn't occur. It's just like here, if you want to buy something with Gold/Silver, you still have to convert it to fiat first. Zimbabwe actually doesn't have its own currency anymore - USD rules the roost and some places accept rand and other African currencies.
 
screaming eagle said:
errol43 said:
Go to Zimbabwe, US$, GOLD OR SILVER will buy you a loaf of bread...1 gram gold = 1 loaf of bread or 2 ozs silver. or 10 trillion Zimbabwe dollar..

Regards Errol 43

I disagree with this, having recently been to a number of countries in Africa (including Zimbabwe) buying bread with Gold/Silver simply doesn't occur. It's just like here, if you want to buy something with Gold/Silver, you still have to convert it to fiat first. Zimbabwe actually doesn't have its own currency anymore - USD rules the roost and some places accept rand and other African currencies.

I thought I mentioned US$. :)

Regards Errol 43
 
errol43 said:
screaming eagle said:
errol43 said:
Go to Zimbabwe, US$, GOLD OR SILVER will buy you a loaf of bread...1 gram gold = 1 loaf of bread or 2 ozs silver. or 10 trillion Zimbabwe dollar..

Regards Errol 43

I disagree with this, having recently been to a number of countries in Africa (including Zimbabwe) buying bread with Gold/Silver simply doesn't occur. It's just like here, if you want to buy something with Gold/Silver, you still have to convert it to fiat first. Zimbabwe actually doesn't have its own currency anymore - USD rules the roost and some places accept rand and other African currencies.

I thought I mentioned US$. :)

Regards Errol 43

You absolutely did, just wanted to get in before everyone jumped on the 'you can buy bread with PM's' bandwagon. :)
 
screaming eagle said:
errol43 said:
screaming eagle said:
I disagree with this, having recently been to a number of countries in Africa (including Zimbabwe) buying bread with Gold/Silver simply doesn't occur. It's just like here, if you want to buy something with Gold/Silver, you still have to convert it to fiat first. Zimbabwe actually doesn't have its own currency anymore - USD rules the roost and some places accept rand and other African currencies.

I thought I mentioned US$. :)

Regards Errol 43

You absolutely did, just wanted to get in before everyone jumped on the 'you can buy bread with PM's' bandwagon. :)


The day that we can buy bread with PM we probably find the baker prefer Renminbi. :|
 
scrooged said:
The bread we would make was that good it compensated the $50 worth of ingredients, energy and labour per loaf.

* flour is $8-$10 for a 10KG bag, assuming you aren't buying 'organic' ($30ish if you are; still cheaper than buying fluff bread in 700G loaves).
* dough can be made in 20 minutes
* the rest is waiting for it to rise (a few hours, normally)
* salt and yeast and oil are both low cost
* energy is probably 15-30 cents a loaf.
* my typical loaf is over 3x the weight of a regular fluff loaf without the poisons
* health...what is that worth?
 
SteveS said:
I once bought a breadmaker. One of those 'chuck everything in a push a button' jobbies.

It wasn't very successful, breaking before I had enough to build a retaining wall in the garden with the bricks it produced.

Breadmakers are notorious for having that 'non-stick' taste. The inside coatings are non-stick (which is bad for you, but I won't go into my non-stick rant) and the bread they produce always smells and tastes terrible to me. In my opinion the loaves are too small too.
 
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