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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured
out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? Just sayin. nancy |
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![]() "Nancy Young" > wrote in message ... > Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured > out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just > a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > > Just sayin. > > nancy Who is this *they*?!? Just askin'. Shaun aRe, even split muffins here thanks. |
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![]() "Shaun aRe" > wrote > "Nancy Young" > wrote >> Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured >> out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just >> a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? >> >> Just sayin. > Who is this *they*?!? > Just askin'. > Shaun aRe, even split muffins here thanks. Oh, don't play like you don't know ... Thomas', that bakery from England. Came over here with the uneven muffins. nancy |
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![]() "Nancy Young" > wrote in message ... > > "Shaun aRe" > wrote > > > "Nancy Young" > wrote > > >> Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured > >> out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just > >> a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > >> > >> Just sayin. > > > Who is this *they*?!? > > > Just askin'. > > > Shaun aRe, even split muffins here thanks. > > Oh, don't play like you don't know ... Thomas', that > bakery from England. Came over here with the uneven > muffins. I don' believe you - they must be Americanian muffins not Englundiaish ones. Shaun aRe |
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![]() Nancy Young wrote: > Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured > out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just > a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > > Just sayin. > > nancy > > Also, no matter how you handle them, the two halves always stick together. But once you pry the halves apart, toast them, butter them and put some very special jam on them (Blushing Peach today, which has nothing to blush about), you forget all about the inconveniences that you encountered. This was a really good breakfast this morning! |
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![]() "Margaret Suran" > wrote > Nancy Young wrote: >> Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured >> out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just >> a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > Also, no matter how you handle them, the two halves always stick > together. But once you pry the halves apart, toast them, butter them and > put some very special jam on them (Blushing Peach today, which has nothing > to blush about), you forget all about the inconveniences that you > encountered. This was a really good breakfast this morning! I love english muffins for breakfast! Once you pry the larger 'half' out of the toaster and dig for the smaller one (with a metal knife, natch), you're good to go. nancy |
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![]() Nancy Young wrote: > > I love english muffins for breakfast! Once you pry the larger > 'half' out of the toaster and dig for the smaller one (with a metal > knife, natch), you're good to go. > Toaster oven. What I find amusing about English muffins is that they were (intelligently) designed to encourage you to slather on a lot of butter, yet cream cheese works so well on them. -ae, |
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![]() "aem" > wrote > Nancy Young wrote: >> >> I love english muffins for breakfast! Once you pry the larger >> 'half' out of the toaster and dig for the smaller one (with a metal >> knife, natch), you're good to go. >> > Toaster oven. Actually, I have been toying with the idea of getting a toaster oven, no, not to make toast, but I'm going to look at them. I think I'd really like one in the summer, especially. Or for the occasional leftover eggroll. > What I find amusing about English muffins is that they > were (intelligently) designed to encourage you to slather on a lot of > butter, yet cream cheese works so well on them. I do love both of those in unseemly quantities ... and english muffins make for great delivery systems. nancy |
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![]() Nancy Young wrote: > Actually, I have been toying with the idea of getting a > toaster oven, no, not to make toast, but I'm going to look > at them. I think I'd really like one in the summer, especially. > > Or for the occasional leftover eggroll. i love my toaster oven nancy. i use it all the time. it goes on the back porch in the summer so i bake / roast small stuff without heating up the house. i routinely roast a chicken leg quarter and a potato in it at the same time. great for biscuits too! |
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On Wed, 18 Jan 2006 10:44:40 -0500, "Nancy Young"
> wrote: > >"Margaret Suran" > wrote > >> Nancy Young wrote: >>> Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured >>> out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just >>> a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > >> Also, no matter how you handle them, the two halves always stick >> together. But once you pry the halves apart, toast them, butter them and >> put some very special jam on them (Blushing Peach today, which has nothing >> to blush about), you forget all about the inconveniences that you >> encountered. This was a really good breakfast this morning! > >I love english muffins for breakfast! Once you pry the larger >'half' out of the toaster and dig for the smaller one (with a metal >knife, natch), you're good to go. I have two words for you: Toaster oven. :-) serene, who never has to pry toast/muffins/bagels out of anywhere |
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On Wed, 18 Jan 2006 12:04:42 -0800, serene wrote:
> On Wed, 18 Jan 2006 10:44:40 -0500, "Nancy Young" > > wrote: > > >> Also, no matter how you handle them, the two halves always stick > >> together. But once you pry the halves apart, toast them, butter them and > >> put some very special jam on them (Blushing Peach today, which has nothing > >> to blush about), you forget all about the inconveniences that you > >> encountered. This was a really good breakfast this morning! > > > >I love english muffins for breakfast! Once you pry the larger > >'half' out of the toaster and dig for the smaller one (with a metal > >knife, natch), you're good to go. > > I have two words for you: Toaster oven. :-) > > serene, who never has to pry toast/muffins/bagels out of anywhere or you can switch to a Cuisanart toaster, which someone so eloquently said "ejects" the toast.... right out of the toaster and onto the counter, just like a cartoon. -- Practice safe eating. Always use condiments. |
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![]() Someone wrote: > > > > I have two words for you: Toaster oven. :-) > > > > serene, who never has to pry toast/muffins/bagels out of anywhere > > or you can switch to a Cuisanart toaster, which someone so eloquently > said "ejects" the toast.... right out of the toaster and onto the > counter, just like a cartoon. --------------------------- We had a dog, a big comical Irish Water Spaniel. As soon as he heard the toaster clicking away, he would rush to the scene, cock his head sideways, and wait for the toast to fly out of the toaster--and he would catch it in his mouth. If you wanted your own piece of toast, you had to put him on the other side of the door. Happy memories, Nancree |
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On Wed, 18 Jan 2006 22:27:43 -0800, sf >
wrote: >or you can switch to a Cuisanart toaster, which someone so eloquently >said "ejects" the toast.... right out of the toaster and onto the >counter, just like a cartoon. Ohmigod, I would *hate* that. Does it really do that? serene |
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"sf" > wrote in message
... > On Wed, 18 Jan 2006 12:04:42 -0800, serene wrote: > > > On Wed, 18 Jan 2006 10:44:40 -0500, "Nancy Young" > > > wrote: > > > > >> Also, no matter how you handle them, the two halves always stick > > >> together. But once you pry the halves apart, toast them, butter them and > > >> put some very special jam on them (Blushing Peach today, which has nothing > > >> to blush about), you forget all about the inconveniences that you > > >> encountered. This was a really good breakfast this morning! > > > > > >I love english muffins for breakfast! Once you pry the larger > > >'half' out of the toaster and dig for the smaller one (with a metal > > >knife, natch), you're good to go. > > > > I have two words for you: Toaster oven. :-) > > > > serene, who never has to pry toast/muffins/bagels out of anywhere > > or you can switch to a Cuisanart toaster, which someone so eloquently > said "ejects" the toast.... right out of the toaster and onto the > counter, just like a cartoon. I was lucky enough to buy a really good four slice toaster almost four years ago. It's a Hamilton Beach/Proctor Silex Intellitoast model of toaster. The box itself advertises several features, but the one that's the most useful after the toasting cycle is done is the toast boost function. Here's the specifics on the "toast boost" function: when the toast pops up, the levers can be manually lifted up about one half inch more. Lifting the levers up that extra distance also lifts the toast further out of the slots. (When the levers are released, they back drop down the same small amount to the original popped up position.) That's really helpful for smaller slices of toast, english muffins, and sliced bagels. (The specific model I have, according to the sticker at the bottom of the toaster, is model number 24508, type T28, series A2320S.) |
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![]() Nancy Young wrote: > Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured > out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just > a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > > Just sayin. I don't know where you get yours but my Thomas' are all virgins... I fork em myself... and I have purty good aim with nooky, not so good with cranny Sheldon |
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In article >,
"Nancy Young" > wrote: > Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured > out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just > a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > > Just sayin. > > nancy > > I just slice 'em like a bagel...... :-) -- Om. "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a son-of-a-bitch." -Jack Nicholson |
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![]() OmManiPadmeOmelet wrote: > In article >, > "Nancy Young" > wrote: > > > Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured > > out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just > > a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > > > > Just sayin. > > > > nancy > > > > > > I just slice 'em like a bagel...... :-) I suppose you don't get your nooky and cranny buttered too often. |
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In article .com>,
"Sheldon" > wrote: > OmManiPadmeOmelet wrote: > > In article >, > > "Nancy Young" > wrote: > > > > > Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured > > > out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just > > > a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > > > > > > Just sayin. > > > > > > nancy > > > > > > > > > > I just slice 'em like a bagel...... :-) > > I suppose you don't get your nooky and cranny buttered too often. > No more than yours...... -- Om. "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a son-of-a-bitch." -Jack Nicholson |
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![]() OmManiPadmeOmelet wrote: > In article .com>, > "Sheldon" > wrote: > > > OmManiPadmeOmelet wrote: > > > In article >, > > > "Nancy Young" > wrote: > > > > > > > Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured > > > > out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just > > > > a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > > > > > > > > Just sayin. > > > > > > > > nancy > > > > > > > > > > > > > > I just slice 'em like a bagel...... :-) > > > > I suppose you don't get your nooky and cranny buttered too often. > > > > No more than yours...... Mine has no nooky, or cranny.... but drawn butter, enough to drown you! hehe |
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In article .com>,
"Sheldon" > wrote: > OmManiPadmeOmelet wrote: > > In article .com>, > > "Sheldon" > wrote: > > > > > OmManiPadmeOmelet wrote: > > > > In article >, > > > > "Nancy Young" > wrote: > > > > > > > > > Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured > > > > > out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just > > > > > a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > > > > > > > > > > Just sayin. > > > > > > > > > > nancy > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > I just slice 'em like a bagel...... :-) > > > > > > I suppose you don't get your nooky and cranny buttered too often. > > > > > > > No more than yours...... > > Mine has no nooky, or cranny.... but drawn butter, enough to drown you! > hehe > In your dreams babycakes....... ;-D -- Om. "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a son-of-a-bitch." -Jack Nicholson |
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_.-In rec.food.cooking, Nancy Young wrote the following -._
> Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured > out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just > a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? Then they would look fake and people wouldn't buy them. Sometimes defects are intentional because they add character or the appearance of authenticity. What gets me is that 'they' have many flavors out there including light and whole grain kinds but even these have high fructose corn syrup. Can I get healthy muffins without the HFCS. Is that too much to ask? -- .-')) fauxascii.com ('-. | It's a damn poor mind that ' ..- .:" ) ( ":. -.. ' | can only think of one way to ((,,_;'.;' UIN=66618055 ';. ';_,,)) | spell a word. ((_.YIM=Faux_Pseudo :._)) | - Andrew Jackson |
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![]() Faux_Pseudo wrote: > _.-In rec.food.cooking, Nancy Young wrote the following -._ > > Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured > > out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just > > a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > > Then they would look fake and people wouldn't buy them. Sometimes > defects are intentional because they add character or the appearance > of authenticity. > > What gets me is that 'they' have many flavors out there including > light and whole grain kinds but even these have high fructose corn > syrup. Can I get healthy muffins without the HFCS. Is that too much > to ask? Make your own? It is surprisingly easy (well I was surprised). IIRC the Joy of Cooking has a good recipe. John Kane, Kingston ON Canada |
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"Nancy Young" > wrote in news:dqljih$nt2$1
@news.monmouth.com: > Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured > out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just > a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > > Just sayin. > > nancy nancy, Write them. It's mad science. Has been for decades. ![]() ANdy |
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![]() "Andy" <q> wrote > "Nancy Young" > wrote >> Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured >> out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just >> a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > Write them. It's mad science. Has been for decades. > > ![]() (laugh) But then what kind of nonsense could I amuse myself with? I need lopsided breakfast bread. nancy |
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In article >,
"Nancy Young" > wrote: > "Andy" <q> wrote > > > "Nancy Young" > wrote > > >> Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured > >> out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just > >> a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > > > Write them. It's mad science. Has been for decades. > > > > ![]() > > (laugh) But then what kind of nonsense could I amuse myself > with? I need lopsided breakfast bread. > > nancy > > But generally when you send complaints to a company, they send you coupons...... ;-) Got some free cat food that way! <lol> -- Om. "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a son-of-a-bitch." -Jack Nicholson |
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![]() OmManiPadmeOmelet wrote: > In article >, > "Nancy Young" > wrote: > > > "Andy" <q> wrote > > > > > "Nancy Young" > wrote > > > > >> Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured > > >> out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just > > >> a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > > > > > Write them. It's mad science. Has been for decades. > > > > > > ![]() > > > > (laugh) But then what kind of nonsense could I amuse myself > > with? I need lopsided breakfast bread. > > > > nancy > > > > > > But generally when you send complaints to a company, they send you > coupons...... ;-) > > Got some free cat food that way! <lol> Generally when you give a product compliments you get twice as many coupons. |
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Sheldon wrote:
> OmManiPadmeOmelet wrote: > >>In article >, >> "Nancy Young" > wrote: >> >> >>>"Andy" <q> wrote >>> >>> >>>>"Nancy Young" > wrote >>> >>>>>Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured >>>>>out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just >>>>>a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? >>> >>>>Write them. It's mad science. Has been for decades. >>>> >>>> ![]() >>> >>>(laugh) But then what kind of nonsense could I amuse myself >>>with? I need lopsided breakfast bread. >>> >>>nancy >>> >>> >> >>But generally when you send complaints to a company, they send you >>coupons...... ;-) >> >>Got some free cat food that way! <lol> > > > Generally when you give a product compliments you get twice as many > coupons. > hey, you oculd try both and get lots of coupons ![]() -- saerah http://anisaerah.blogspot.com/ "Peace is not an absence of war, it is a virtue, a state of mind, a disposition for benevolence, confidence, justice." -Baruch Spinoza "There is a theory which states that if ever anybody discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable. There is another theory which states that this has already happened." -Douglas Adams |
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In article .com>,
"Sheldon" > wrote: > OmManiPadmeOmelet wrote: > > In article >, > > "Nancy Young" > wrote: > > > > > "Andy" <q> wrote > > > > > > > "Nancy Young" > wrote > > > > > > >> Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured > > > >> out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just > > > >> a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > > > > > > > Write them. It's mad science. Has been for decades. > > > > > > > > ![]() > > > > > > (laugh) But then what kind of nonsense could I amuse myself > > > with? I need lopsided breakfast bread. > > > > > > nancy > > > > > > > > > > But generally when you send complaints to a company, they send you > > coupons...... ;-) > > > > Got some free cat food that way! <lol> > > Generally when you give a product compliments you get twice as many > coupons. > Hmmmmm... Might have to try that. Orchid was dying. Granted, she is 16 years old but 1/2 siamese. Three trips to the vet, no joy. Gave her Pen' injections as needed but she still ended up a snotty nose fur covered skeleton. :-( This started about a year ago. We generally feed Purina dry food and Friskies canned since they like it. Most of the cats are healthy, a couple are fat. Orchid has a passion for Tuna, so I started offering her 9 lives "tuna select". A dark tuna with egg bits, and protected her from the other cats when she ate so she could eat all she wanted. Over the past couple of months, she has improved and is actually putting on weight! :-) She is now strong enough again to jump up into her "protected" feeding area, and is getting the strength to meow again. She was so weak, she had lost her voice. Even her backbone is nearly covered again. Her mother lived to be nearly 19 so maybe she will make it to that age now. Her sister, Athena, does not even look geriatric and is still going strong. Appears that 9 lives canned is far superior to Friskies. We will probably be switching the entire gang over to it now. If I tell this story to 9 lives, think they will send me coupons???? ;-) -- Om. "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a son-of-a-bitch." -Jack Nicholson |
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Nancy Young wrote:
> "Andy" <q> wrote > >>"Nancy Young" > wrote > >>>Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured >>>out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just >>>a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > >>Write them. It's mad science. Has been for decades. >> ![]() > > (laugh) But then what kind of nonsense could I amuse myself > with? I need lopsided breakfast bread. If you make your own, you could cut them vertically and just imagine how much fun that would be. A column I wrote back in the last century about them. And a variant that's utterly decadent. Enjoy. Pastorio ----------------------------- English muffins explained I never had an English muffin in England. At least, not one I recognized. I did have crumpets, though and they seemed like distant cousins to what I had had in this country. I liked theirs better. Think about this for a minute. What is bread like when it’s been in a package for a week or more? Right. At least starting to get stale, what with all the magical chemistry going on inside the plastic wrap. Same for the muffins. They are not, how you say, at the peak of flavor and texture. English muffins are a kind of yeast bread and they should prove to be fairly easy. There are two distinct techniques for shaping English muffins. Take your choice. And we’ll look at a variation that produces the most luxuriously sensuous texture you’ve ever seen in a baked product. And we’ll see about crumpets. What are crumpets, anyway? We’ll see that, too. To bake them, you’ll need a griddle and I prefer cast iron. Even heat is the most important question and however you get there is fine. We’re going to make a sponge and let it rise until it collapses by itself. Whoa, Bob. How about a little explanation of the technical terms? Right. Mix everything together holding back part of the flour so that the resulting batter is thickly liquid. That’s a sponge. While it rises, big bubbles form and it looks like, all together now, a sponge. You thought this was going to be hard. Since it’s thinner than the usual bread dough, it will rise for a while and then simply collapse under its own weight. Then we’ll put the rest of the flour in. In answer to the question of that fellow over there, I don’t know if it can be started in a bread machine. ENGLISH MUFFINS Makes about a dozen 4-inch or a dozen and a half 3-inch muffins 1/8 cup warm water to dissolve yeast (105 - 120 degrees) 1 packet dry yeast (or equivalent in other forms) 1 cup water, room temperature 1/2 cup scalded milk, cooled to about 120 degrees 1 tablespoon sugar 1 teaspoon salt 4 cups all-purpose flour 3 tablespoons butter at room temp extra flour or cornmeal extra butter In a bowl large enough to handle the risen dough (maybe 4 quarts or so), combine water and yeast, stir and let dissolve for a couple minutes. Add water, milk, sugar and salt to yeast. Gradually add half of the flour and mix well. Cover and put aside until the sponge has risen and collapsed, at least an hour and up to two hours. Mix in the soft butter then add the rest of the flour and mix in well. Here’s where the two different methods of shaping the muffins comes in. Shaping with rings: Muffin rings (or flan rings or tuna fish cans or cat food cans or whatever) or any other kind of metal rings have been traditional in shaping the muffins. They’re metal rings about two inches tall and look like cans with both ends open. Grease the rings and put them on prepared cookie sheets for the final rising. The cookie sheets may be greased or floured or have a thin layer of corn meal on them to keep the muffin dough from sticking. Put rounds of dough in them that fit snugly against the sides from 1/2 to 3/4 inch deep. Let them rise until they’re doubled. Shaping without rings: On a floured board, shape the dough into a sheet about 1/2 inch deep. Use a well-floured rolling pin and work gently. Cut the dough into 3- or 4-inch circles and put on prepared cookie sheets to rise until doubled. To bake the muffins: When the muffins are fully risen, heat a buttered griddle until hot but not smoking. Gently slide a spatula under the muffins and put them on the griddle. Remove the rings. Turn muffins once after the first side is a light-medium brown. That’s it. *The impossibly smooth variant is, of course, based on fat. I sometimes make English Muffins using cream instead of the water and milk called for in the recipe. When you toast and eat them, they don’t need butter.* Split the muffins for toasting with a scallop-bladed knife or use two forks back to back. The former gives you nice even surfaces to butter (or jelly). The latter gives you the famous "nooks and crannies" of advertising fame a few years back. Your call. Crumpets are like English muffins except they’re different. To the above recipe, add another cup of milk at the beginning, maybe a cup and 1/8 to get a more liquid batter. You have to use the rings because the dough will be more loose. Otherwise, it’s the same technique. The texture of the crumpets will be denser and the crumb will be smaller and more elegant. Marmalade seems to be made for crumpets. |
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![]() "Bob (this one)" > wrote in message ... > Nancy Young wrote: > > "Andy" <q> wrote > > > >>"Nancy Young" > wrote > > > >>>Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured > >>>out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just > >>>a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > > > >>Write them. It's mad science. Has been for decades. > >> ![]() > > > > (laugh) But then what kind of nonsense could I amuse myself > > with? I need lopsided breakfast bread. > > If you make your own, you could cut them vertically and just imagine how > much fun that would be. A column I wrote back in the last century about > them. And a variant that's utterly decadent. Enjoy. > > Pastorio > ----------------------------- > English muffins explained > I never had an English muffin in England. At least, not one I > recognized. I did have crumpets, though and they seemed like distant > cousins to what I had had in this country. I liked theirs better. > Think about this for a minute. What is bread like when it’s been in a > package for a week or more? Right. At least starting to get stale, what > with all the magical chemistry going on inside the plastic wrap. Same > for the muffins. They are not, how you say, at the peak of flavor and > texture. > English muffins are a kind of yeast bread and they should prove to be > fairly easy. There are two distinct techniques for shaping English > muffins. Take your choice. And we’ll look at a variation that produces > the most luxuriously sensuous texture you’ve ever seen in a baked product. > And we’ll see about crumpets. What are crumpets, anyway? We’ll see > that, too. > To bake them, you’ll need a griddle and I prefer cast iron. Even heat > is the most important question and however you get there is fine. > We’re going to make a sponge and let it rise until it collapses by > itself. Whoa, Bob. How about a little explanation of the technical > terms? Right. Mix everything together holding back part of the flour so > that the resulting batter is thickly liquid. That’s a sponge. While it > rises, big bubbles form and it looks like, all together now, a sponge. > You thought this was going to be hard. > Since it’s thinner than the usual bread dough, it will rise for a while > and then simply collapse under its own weight. Then we’ll put the rest > of the flour in. In answer to the question of that fellow over there, I > don’t know if it can be started in a bread machine. > ENGLISH MUFFINS > Makes about a dozen 4-inch or a dozen and a half 3-inch muffins > 1/8 cup warm water to dissolve yeast (105 - 120 degrees) > 1 packet dry yeast (or equivalent in other forms) > 1 cup water, room temperature > 1/2 cup scalded milk, cooled to about 120 degrees > 1 tablespoon sugar > 1 teaspoon salt > 4 cups all-purpose flour > 3 tablespoons butter at room temp > extra flour or cornmeal > extra butter > In a bowl large enough to handle the risen dough (maybe 4 quarts or so), > combine water and yeast, stir and let dissolve for a couple minutes. Add > water, milk, sugar and salt to yeast. Gradually add half of the flour > and mix well. Cover and put aside until the sponge has risen and > collapsed, at least an hour and up to two hours. Mix in the soft butter > then add the rest of the flour and mix in well. Here’s where the two > different methods of shaping the muffins comes in. > Shaping with rings: Muffin rings (or flan rings or tuna fish cans or > cat food cans or whatever) or any other kind of metal rings have been > traditional in shaping the muffins. They’re metal rings about two inches > tall and look like cans with both ends open. Grease the rings and put > them on prepared cookie sheets for the final rising. The cookie sheets > may be greased or floured or have a thin layer of corn meal on them to > keep the muffin dough from sticking. Put rounds of dough in them that > fit snugly against the sides from 1/2 to 3/4 inch deep. Let them rise > until they’re doubled. > Shaping without rings: On a floured board, shape the dough into a sheet > about 1/2 inch deep. Use a well-floured rolling pin and work gently. Cut > the dough into 3- or 4-inch circles and put on prepared cookie sheets to > rise until doubled. > To bake the muffins: When the muffins are fully risen, heat a buttered > griddle until hot but not smoking. Gently slide a spatula under the > muffins and put them on the griddle. Remove the rings. Turn muffins once > after the first side is a light-medium brown. That’s it. > *The impossibly smooth variant is, of course, based on fat. I sometimes > make English Muffins using cream instead of the water and milk called > for in the recipe. When you toast and eat them, they don’t need butter.* > Split the muffins for toasting with a scallop-bladed knife or use two > forks back to back. The former gives you nice even surfaces to butter > (or jelly). The latter gives you the famous "nooks and crannies" of > advertising fame a few years back. Your call. > Crumpets are like English muffins except they’re different. To the > above recipe, add another cup of milk at the beginning, maybe a cup and > 1/8 to get a more liquid batter. You have to use the rings because the > dough will be more loose. Otherwise, it’s the same technique. The > texture of the crumpets will be denser and the crumb will be smaller and > more elegant. Marmalade seems to be made for crumpets. Crumpets - you mean the round things with kinda, open at the top vertical tubular holes running right through, right? Kinda somewhat rubbery/elastic texture in the middle? That's what we call crumpets. If they are thinner and square, called pieklets (sp?!?) by some here. Marmalade would be sacrilege on those! Toast them (no one slices these things BTW!) butter, and heaps of it. You want it to start oozing out, dripping out of the crusty base, then a nice slice of cheese on top before it cools, so it wilts a little, would go well. I'd dust mine with powdered chiles too, of course. Hmmmm, crumpet... Shaun aRe - Marmalade, pah, heheheheh... |
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![]() "Shaun aRe" > wrote > Crumpets - you mean the round things with kinda, open at the top vertical > tubular holes running right through, right? Kinda somewhat rubbery/elastic > texture in the middle? That's what we call crumpets. If they are thinner > and > square, called pieklets (sp?!?) by some here. Are you talking about a bialy? nancy |
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![]() "Nancy Young" > wrote in message ... > > "Andy" <q> wrote > > > "Nancy Young" > wrote > > >> Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured > >> out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just > >> a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > > > Write them. It's mad science. Has been for decades. > > > > ![]() > > (laugh) But then what kind of nonsense could I amuse myself > with? I need lopsided breakfast bread. Muffins are bread now, right, heheheheh... Shaun aRe |
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![]() "Shaun aRe" > wrote > Muffins are bread now, right, heheheheh... Here ya go, brit boy. http://thomas.gwbakeries.com/history.cfm |
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![]() "Nancy Young" > wrote in message ... > > "Shaun aRe" > wrote > > > Muffins are bread now, right, heheheheh... > > Here ya go, brit boy. > > http://thomas.gwbakeries.com/history.cfm Eee, where's the humour gone from Usenet?!? Heheheh... Shaun aRe |
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In article >,
"Nancy Young" > wrote: > Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured > out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just > a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? This may be sacrilege to english muffin purists, but I eat english muffins several times a week and I have learned that the only way to split them evenly is to slice them with a serrated knife. |
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![]() Stan Horwitz wrote: > In article >, > "Nancy Young" > wrote: > > >>Seems to me after all this time they'd have figured >>out a way to fork split them so that the halves are just >>a teensy bit more even, not like 70/30? > > > This may be sacrilege to english muffin purists, but I eat english > muffins several times a week and I have learned that the only way to > split them evenly is to slice them with a serrated knife. Oh, Stan, How could you? You will be burned at the stake, I am afraid. How terrible. You used a Serrated Knife, no less. Poor, poor you. I am drinking my fourth and last cup of breakfast coffee, black, strong and hot and eating a toasted English Muffin with cream cheese and Cherry Amaretto Jam. Before toasting it, I carefully pulled apart the two halves of the muffin, which resulted in one large half in my right hand and a mess of crumbs in my left one. (Not all halves are created equal.) The jam, made and given to me by a dear friend, made up for all the crumbs, which I ate with a spoon, without toasting them. ![]() |
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