Prize Loaf: Slice 3

Carr’s Flour Mill, Silloth. By Oliver Dixon, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=9307747
Carr’s CC Flour advertisements in local Cumbria newspapers, Summer 1907. Images retrieved from British Newspaper Archive.

  1. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Rich-Desserts-Captains-Thin-1831-1931/dp/0099748916 ↩︎
  2. Incidentally, note that UK Flour Millers (https://www.ukflourmillers.org/) have their offices at 21 Arlington Street, London. This address might be of interest to keen readers of the Random Treasure blog, because by a remarkable coincidence previous posts in this blog have touched upon events at other addresses in the same short street: the drowning of a cat at Number 4 (read about it here), and the death of a banker at Number 20 (read about it here). ↩︎
  3. West Cumberland Times, 22 September 1906, Page 3, retrieved from British Newspaper Archive ↩︎

One thought on “Prize Loaf: Slice 3

  1. Having seen your tea cups from the tea service, I feel that the second or third prize of the biscuit barrel was far higher on the scale of handsomeness. Certainly the now much lamented one that passed through my hands was and it also held value better.

    I don’t remember any particular place being mentioned on the inscription so I suspect Carr’s must have bought a job lot and had them all inscribed together.

    I was surprised to read your sad tale of a poorly competed and attended show. It may well depend upon location but the village halls of my North Yorkshire are well used and any such show is still fiercely competitive. Especially since Covid, when there was a massive revival of home baking and crafts generally.

    If only I could win another Carr’s biscuit box with one of my splendid sour dough loaves…

    Jos.

    P.S. Buy that premium flour, you will be surprised at what a difference it makes. Especially when making bread.

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