Images of items I have purchased.

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Also its quite expensive compared to normal food (probs more nutritious though)

It's not that expensive, it costs £149 for a month's worth of 4 meals a day. If you added up everything that you eat over a month for most people it would work out more than that, especially if they are eating well. You are right that it's more nutritious though, probably not for someone who knows what they're doing and eats all the right things but certainly for someone like me who just eats whatever.

Do you not enjoy food/eating?
I'm intrigued why aswell...

I do enjoy food and honestly this is just a lazy way to control the calories i'm eating while i try to lose the weight i gained since having surgery last year. Blend up a day's worth the night before and i'm good to go, no worrying about what i'm eating and how may calories are in it.
 
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Wasn't going to add to the collection anymore but a bargain came along:

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The 1954 Mercedes-Benz W196 R Streamliner which marked Mercedes return to formula racing after the war. This one driven in the 1954 French Grand Prix by Juan Manuel Fangio, a race he won and then went on to win the drivers championship. :)
 
Its a food replacer.
I got a sampler, the taste is FAR too sweet and there is bits in. If you hate bits in yoghurt, you wont be able to drink it.
You can buy unflavored/unsweetened version and flavour it yourself, but the bits are still there.

Also its quite expensive compared to normal food (probs more nutritious though)

to avoid the bits there are these "spring balls" that you put in the mixer so there are no bits when you shake the whole thing.
 
Just a couple of kitchen gadgets.

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to avoid the bits there are these "spring balls" that you put in the mixer so there are no bits when you shake the whole thing.

Nope.
The bits are oats and other stuff, the balls dont do anything.
You'd have to have a very very fine blender (expensive) to get rid of the bits.
 
Nope.
The bits are oats and other stuff, the balls dont do anything.
You'd have to have a very very fine blender (expensive) to get rid of the bits.

I use an £18 breville blender (same one as in amigafan's pic above) for it and it only leaves very fine bits, not an issue for me at all.
 
It's awesome, I appear to have a good sample, but man my wallet hurts.

Edited the pic as I just noticed where I work was showing :D

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Those Haynes manuals are getting more ridiculous. The owners manual for the Millennium Falcon was bad enough but an owners manual for the moon?

Who even owns the moon and where can I get one?
 
Just a couple of kitchen gadgets.

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I have the hot cup VKJ318 - it's pretty good but I wish someone did a more upmarket version with stainless steel/glass instead of plastic. The one I have cost me £50 at the time, I'd pay more for one using better materials though.

Primary use is for cups of tea, I really like the variable thing on it because it let's me change how much water is dispensed each time.

I have a separate brita water filter jug, I'd recommend similar if you plan to use it a lot and you live in a hard water area. They do a Hot Cup with built in brita filter system but I prefer the versatility of using filtered water in other things.
 
I have a separate brita water filter jug, I'd recommend similar if you plan to use it a lot and you live in a hard water area. They do a Hot Cup with built in brita filter system but I prefer the versatility of using filtered water in other things.

We're fine - we have pretty soft water. I was looking at the variable one but it's only the wife that has hot drinks and we have standard sized mugs, so when this one came up for £20, thought why not :-)
 
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