By the end of the week, he’d made rye, whole wheat, a disastrous gluten-free attempt, and a surprisingly good brioche. He started leaving loaves on neighbors’ doorsteps. A note on one read: Made with a Silvercrest. It’s not perfect, but neither am I.
He dusted off the manual (translated from German into broken English), measured flour, yeast, sugar, salt, water, and a glug of olive oil. The machine whirred to life—a hesitant, grinding sound, then a confident kneading thump-thump-thump. For three hours, the kitchen smelled like hope. silvercrest bread machine
The machine never made a perfect loaf. But on the last night before lockdown lifted, Leo sat alone in his small apartment, eating thick toast with honey, and realized the Silvercrest had done something more than bake bread. It had given him a rhythm, a purpose, and a quiet companion when the world outside had stopped making sense. By the end of the week, he’d made
He patted the machine’s warm lid. “Tomorrow,” he said, “we try sourdough.” It’s not perfect, but neither am I
The next day, he tried again. Less water. More salt. He stayed close, listening to the machine’s rhythms—a heart that had stopped in some stranger’s kitchen years ago and now beat again for him.
The old Silvercrest bread machine sat on the counter like a retired boxer—scuffed, slightly dented, but still ready for a fight. Leo had bought it for five euros at a charity shop, thinking he’d use it “someday.” Someday arrived on a rainy Tuesday when the pandemic lockdown had just been extended again.