If you are buying a larger turkey than usual, make sure it will fit in the oven.
“If you are buying a larger turkey than usual, make sure it will fit in the oven.”
— Mary Berry · Buying
The World Motivation
If you are buying a larger turkey than usual, make sure it will fit in the oven.
“If you are buying a larger turkey than usual, make sure it will fit in the oven.”
— Mary Berry · Buying
Explore more quotes by Mary Berry on topics like Buying, wisdom, and life lessons.
“If you are buying a larger turkey than usual, make sure it will fit in the oven.”
“The only time I'll use a microwave is to warm up a cup of coffee I've left too long before drinking.”
“I'm very keen on the family getting together around the table because you learn so much of what's going on. With a full tummy, they begin to talk to you. People now have busy lives, but once or twice a week, it's lovely to sit all around together.”
“At 17, I went away to Pau in the south of France for a few months to study domestic science - including cleaning windows with newspaper and water - while living with a Catholic family with 10 children.”
“As I was growing up, all meals, including breakfast, were family occasions, and you all sat down to eat together - and you had to finish everything as well.”
“When I thought I couldn't write recipes, my boss at the time advised, 'Write as you talk.'”
“Buying books is probably my biggest vice when I travel.”
“We usually let our husbands negotiate the house and the cars. But I never had a husband, so I was always buying my own houses and cars, so I knew how to negotiate.”
“Americans like buying American vs. buying from Chavez or buying from the Middle East.”
“It is true that some people are interested in the buying part of things... They want to buy everything from the movie reviews to the media net to the opinions and so on.”
“I started off in 1993 with one lorry. I wasn't one of those guys buying a business and gearing it up.”
“Most people who are selling their mineral rights, this is a once-in-a-lifetime transaction. The people who are buying, the landmen who are coming in, do it every day. So there's a little inequity there about knowledge.”