This Article is From Oct 02, 2013

British PM doesn't know the cost of bread loaf, says he bakes his own

British PM doesn't know the cost of bread loaf, says he bakes his own

David Cameron, 46, who was educated at the elite Eton College and Oxford University, said he did not buy the cheapest sliced supermarket loaf as he used an electric breadmaker.

Manchester: British Prime Minister David Cameron admitted Tuesday he doesn't know the price of a loaf of bread - because he bakes his own.

British politicians are occasionally asked the price of basic household staples by the media to see how "in touch" they are with the rest of society, usually in a bid to trip them up.

Cameron, 46, who was educated at the elite Eton College and Oxford University, said he did not buy the cheapest sliced supermarket loaf as he used an electric breadmaker and flour made in his wealthy constituency in southern England.

"You get some of that, beautifully milled in the Cotswolds, you pop that in your breadmaker. You set the timer overnight so when you wake up there is this wonderful smell wafting through your kitchen," he told London's LBC radio.

"It takes 30 seconds to put in the ingredients."

He said his three children "like my home-made bread".

The presenter told him that the cost of a loaf of value supermarket bread is around 47 pence (76 cents, 56 euro cents).

Cameron, whose wife Samantha is the daughter of a baronet, is at his Conservative Party's annual conference in Manchester, northwest England, where he was due to make his keynote speech Wednesday.

His admission came after London mayor Boris Johnson - who Cameron followed through Eton and Oxford - admitted on BBC television he didn't know the cost of a pint of milk.

Told it was around half what he had guessed, the Conservative mayor conceded: "Well there you go, I don't know how much a pint of milk costs. So what?"

Michael Dugher, vice-chair of the opposition Labour Party said: "David Cameron is so out of touch he's almost a parody of himself.

"It comes as no surprise that he doesn't buy a value loaf of bread. The only surprise is when he said 'I have a bread maker' - most people will have assumed he had his own personal baker, rather than a machine."

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