Muffin or Barm

Davs 19 said:
Lavinda Past said:
The cookie monster said:
We know its barms in kent..

However its muffins round here..

No cookie.. bagels are round, muffins are little cakes with chocolate chips.

It's a BARM!

By the way... I may be rich and a bit posh but I'm not in Kent. You however are a wierd kent if you put your chips on a muffin




Being from Kent is obviously a breach of the code of conduct and as such your opinion counts for nothing re: this thread :)

Now, more than ever, it's a Muffin.....

Being from Levenshulme M19 makes me right...

I suspect that as seem to know so much about kent, you sir or madam, may well be a closet stretfordian...

It is a Barm
 
Lavinda Past said:
Davs 19 said:
Lavinda Past said:
No cookie.. bagels are round, muffins are little cakes with chocolate chips.

It's a BARM!

By the way... I may be rich and a bit posh but I'm not in Kent. You however are a wierd kent if you put your chips on a muffin




Being from Kent is obviously a breach of the code of conduct and as such your opinion counts for nothing re: this thread :)

Now, more than ever, it's a Muffin.....

Being from Levenshulme M19 makes me right...


I suspect that as seem to know so much about kent, you sir or madam, may well be a closet stretfordian...

It is a Barm



How very dare you ! :) Born and raised in M13 then M43 now M34.

Muffin.
 
Davs 19 said:
Lavinda Past said:
Davs 19 said:
Being from Kent is obviously a breach of the code of conduct and as such your opinion counts for nothing re: this thread :)

Now, more than ever, it's a Muffin.....

Being from Levenshulme M19 makes me right...


I suspect that as seem to know so much about kent, you sir or madam, may well be a closet stretfordian...

It is a Barm



How very dare you ! :) Born and raised in M13 then M43 now M34.

Muffin.

These southerners and their barms..

Muffin.
 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muffin_(English)
A muffin or English muffin is a small, round, flat (or thin) type of yeast-leavened bread, almost always dusted with flour or cornmeal, which is commonly served split horizontally, toasted, and buttered.[1] Muffins are eaten either as a snack alone or as part of a meal.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barm
Barm is the foam, or scum, formed on the top of liquor (i.e. fermented alcoholic beverages such as beer or wine, or feedstock for hard liquor or industrial ethanol distillation) when fermenting. It was used to leaven bread, or set up fermentation in a new batch of liquor. Barm, as a leaven, has also been made from ground millet combined with must out of wine-tubs[1] and is sometimes used in English baking as a synonym for a natural leaven.[2] Various cultures derived from barm, usually Saccharomyces cerevisiae, became ancestral to most forms of brewer's yeast and baker's yeast currently on the market.

[bigimg]http://s0.geograph.org.uk/geophotos/02/39/97/2399748_7f398323.jpg[/bigimg]
The magic MUFFIN in Miles Platting which is in a part of Manchester just around the corner from our ground, they didn't call it The Magic Barm did they?!?!
 
Who the f**k asks for a 'chip muffin"?
Isn't a muffin a cake anyway?

It's a balm, but just to throw it out there, when I worked in Northwich, they'd say a "batch".
That's about as wrong as a "muffin".
 
charliebigspuds said:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muffin_(English)
A muffin or English muffin is a small, round, flat (or thin) type of yeast-leavened bread, almost always dusted with flour or cornmeal, which is commonly served split horizontally, toasted, and buttered.[1] Muffins are eaten either as a snack alone or as part of a meal.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barm
Barm is the foam, or scum, formed on the top of liquor (i.e. fermented alcoholic beverages such as beer or wine, or feedstock for hard liquor or industrial ethanol distillation) when fermenting. It was used to leaven bread, or set up fermentation in a new batch of liquor. Barm, as a leaven, has also been made from ground millet combined with must out of wine-tubs[1] and is sometimes used in English baking as a synonym for a natural leaven.[2] Various cultures derived from barm, usually Saccharomyces cerevisiae, became ancestral to most forms of brewer's yeast and baker's yeast currently on the market.



[bigimg]http://s0.geograph.org.uk/geophotos/02/39/97/2399748_7f398323.jpg[/bigimg]
The magic MUFFIN in Miles Platting which is in a part of Manchester just around the corner from our ground, they didn't call it The Magic Barm did they?!?!



Even more evidence. If this was a boxing match it would've been stopped a long time ago.

Muffin

-- Sun May 20, 2012 10:16 am --

Nortilus said:
Who the f**k asks for a 'chip muffin"?
Isn't a muffin a cake anyway?

It's a balm, but just to throw it out there, when I worked in Northwich, they'd say a "batch".
That's about as wrong as a "muffin".

What has ointment got to do with this ?

Muffin
 

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