Seems pretty basic to me and only good if you butter them.

  • @[email protected]
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    114 hours ago

    If something is called “[Nationality] [Food]” or similar, it’s probably not related to that nationality.

    New York Fries isn’t from New York.

    Boston Pizza is not from Boston.

    Hawaiian pizza is not Hawaiian.

    French fries aren’t French.

    • @[email protected]
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      53 hours ago

      The only one I can speak to here is that french fries are french cut, meaning making long thin strips.

  • @Acamon
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    94 hours ago

    I’m British, and if you offered most British people “a muffin” they would assume you meant the American style sugar and oil affair. Some people do enjoy an “English muffin” but they’re not very popular, much less loved than crumpets, which themselves are probably below scones. The main use I see of them is as the base of Eggs Benedict, which works because they are basic and go well with butter. A white chocolate & blueberry muffin is a much more controversial paring for poached eggs and hollandaise.

    • Bizzle
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      12 hours ago

      Scones 👍

  • @[email protected]
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    8 hours ago

    Please don’t ascribe preference to other cultures. I’m british, and I had to google what you even meant by that. It’s a breakfast muffin, and they’re okay. I have one from time to time, no complaints, but I tend to order a breakfast wrap from McDonalds instead of a McMuffin.

    The fact that it’s not a traditional part of a full English should tell you something.

    • @[email protected]
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      7 hours ago

      “It’s ok” is the most accurate description possible I think.

      Disclaimer: I’m not British (hello from the other side of the north sea), but I’ve spent enough time all over the UK to have eaten them.

      I’d put it in the category of foods that some in a region probably enjoy, while being hard to find elsewhere. Like the deep fried Mars bar and cornish pasty: “It’s OK”

      • @NukedRat
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        97 hours ago

        You take that back about cornish pasties! I don’t live in Cornwall anymore and that’s the one thing I miss the most from there food wise. I can get them where I am now but they are not the same.

        • @[email protected]
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          47 hours ago

          I’m not taking it back. It is my firm opinion that they’re OK. I was just never very fond of meat + pastry/batter. I can see why some like them, but that combo was never part of my diet growing up, and as such, it ends up in the same category as Pie or Beef Wellington for me.

    • @Today
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      27 hours ago

      Sometime in the last 5-10 years, McD’s changed their English muffins. They used to be good, now they have a weird, too fluffy texture even if you get then extra toasted.

  • @Whelks_chance
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    237 hours ago

    As an Englishman I don’t even know what they are, I’ve only ever heard them mentioned on US television

    • @someguy3OP
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      -177 hours ago

      You call them muffins, we call them english muffins. Because what we call muffins you apparently call buns.

        • @someguy3OP
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          7 hours ago

          What we call an English Muffin. Which people from England have informed me they call a muffin.

          What we call a Muffin. Which people from England have informed me they call a bun. Which yes is not eaten with butter, or jam, or anything else that you might spread on an English muffin.

          You really don’t need to resort to personal attacks.

          • palordrolap
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            33 hours ago

            Small cakes baked in greaseproof paper cups are called buns in some parts of the country, but they’re about a quarter of the size of the US-style muffin. They’re also known as fairy cakes, party buns and possibly a handful of other names to avoid confusion with other baked goods that may also be called buns.

            The person who said that many of us here think of the US-style muffin when muffins are mentioned is telling the truth. (Edit: clarification)

            Now if you want a local delicacy (I use the term loosely) that has a well-known name and origin within England, with widespread appeal and no doubt large consumption, look no further than Yorkshire puddings. I ate one myself earlier today as part of a meal.

          • @[email protected]
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            7 hours ago

            Those people were the weird ones, then. This is a bun.

            If you do weird things, like mistaking muffins for bread rolls, I’m gonna call you weird. It’s not a personal attack, it’s an accurate description based on what I can see. You seem to have been misinformed, but are also trying to explain my own culture to me incorrectly, so I downvoted you. I think that’s fair.

              • @[email protected]
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                4 hours ago

                To me, they’re synonyms. Buns, rolls, baps… There’s a ton of other terms for it, too, but those are the ones I use.

            • @someguy3OP
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              -237 hours ago

              My last message to you is that acting like that is a personal attack and you shouldn’t do that IRL or online.

              • @[email protected]
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                197 hours ago

                You’re here trying to explain my own culture to me, and you’re not even right about it, and you’re upset I’m upset about it? Is the phrase “personal attack” just your way of demonising the consequences of your own actions?

                • @someguy3OP
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                  -187 hours ago

                  Sigh, ok one more message. If you said “I think you are incorrect, we call this …” that would be fine and polite manners. But you didn’t do that. You went for a personal attack. Yes calling people weird is a personal attack. Ok I’m out.

  • @[email protected]
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    199 hours ago

    The Anglos prefer muffins with nooks. Saxons like ones with crannies. Anglo-Saxons prefer English muffins which have both nooks and crannies.

  • @[email protected]
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    8 hours ago

    I like em, not british.

    Definitely gotta butter (or jam) them, I use butter and everything bagel seasoning (post-toast) on the regulars and butter and brown sugar on the blueberry ones (pre-toast, get it slightly caramelized and perfect, leave some salted butter on the counter so it spreads without heat.) But I mean c’mon what are you out here just eating dry ass plain toast or bagels? You always have to butter, jam, cream cheese, sandwichitize, etc, (for store bought anyway, fresh baked is another animal entirely)!

    • @someguy3OP
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      -58 hours ago

      You eat (american) muffins without anything else.

      • Drusas
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        24 hours ago

        You can, but most are better if you slice them in half and put butter in there.

      • @[email protected]
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        66 hours ago

        If you’re not buttering those too you’re doing it wrong, but also they fill those with sugar before you get them so I don’t need to put more on. They’re basically cupcakes without frosting.

  • nocturne
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    38 hours ago

    I did not realize the English liked them so much, hell I did not even think they were English.

    • snooggums
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      106 hours ago

      I always assumed English Muffins are English like French Fries are French.

      • nocturne
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        22 hours ago

        I looked up their history, they were invented by an English expat in New York. They are a yeast or sourdough version of a crumpet.

  • @[email protected]
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    58 hours ago

    Fresh free range egg from my chickens, nice slice of cheddar cheese, and a sausage patty are pretty good on them, too.

    Or some peanut butter if you are in a rush.

  • @spittingimage
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    17 hours ago

    I eat 'em toasted with peanut butter for breakfast most days. Just got finished with one. I don’t know what the deal is, so I’m going to invent one: a medieval French chef sold his soul for the recipe and the English adopted them as a reminder that all French bakers should go to the devil!

  • @Mango
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    18 hours ago

    IMO they’re one of the better handles for Jimmy Dean microwave sandwiches because they hold together better. The croissants are also good. The biscuit disintegrates.