I use my George for making toasties also. Only problem is it doesn't seal them quite as well as a proper toastie maker. Fine if it is cheese or whatever. Not so good for baked beans or anything else a bit runny.
Ahh, nothing beats taking a bite of your toastie then getting 3rd Degree burns from Baked-Beans-turned-Magma exploding out the sides
if im perfectly honest you cant beat the toasty sandwich bags there good for 500+ toasties and relativly cheap just stick em in the toaster
however if you want one that seals the toastie the one linked above is ideal
I've got one that is billed as a "Panini Press". The plates inside are completely flat, making it very easy to clean. Despite the posh name it makes perfectly good toasted sandwiches. It doesn't seal the edges, but in some ways that's actually better as you don't get the erupting-volcano-in-the-mouth effect when you bite into it. I've not used it for ages though.
I used to have them all the time, my mum purchased a random machine and it wasn't amazing. Recently my housemate has purchased a cheapo Breville machine and it is much better, My original was also Brevile, so yeah get one of those!
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