Thank you all for your advice and comments. It is very encouraging.
I finally screwed up the courage to try it yesterday.
I took the Plain White Rolls no fuss recipe and compared it to the bread recipe in the spiral book that came with the TM.
I have one of those TM bread mat things and wanted to avoid the time that seemed to be involved in letting it rise in the TM.
The book recipe was essentially the same as the Plain White Rolls one, except that it had oil as well. It also used some grains, but the combined weight of the grains and the flour was the same as the Plain white Rolls recipe and all the other elements were identical.
I used Laucke's bread flour. I used the Plain White Rolls recipe, added the oil as per the book recipe, put the ingredients in in the order that the book recipe specified, turned on the air conditioner to warm up the room and put the dough in the mat to rise. I left it there a little longer than it said because I was interrupted, but as it was a cold day I figured that the extra time wouldn't do any harm.
I had a problem with the oven specifications because it said to put into a cold fan forced oven and turn on the temperature but don't use the fan forcing. That doesn't make sense to me because my oven either operates on fan forced or on regular principles but I can't have it on with the fan forced off unless I just use the elements.
So I used it as a standard oven (top and bottom elements).
I made roughly shaped rolls so that I didn't have to address the "bread tin" issue and because I thought they might cook more quickly this way. I brushed them with water in accordance with the instructions.
The bread rolls weren't bad at all, and I wasn't unhappy with them, but I did feel they were a tad doughy/heavy in the centre (ie judged against perfection or the rolls one buys from the shop).
What do I do to reduce any heaviness in the centre? I'm too unskilled to try to work out the chemistry in this.
Thanks all, very much