Muffin or Barm

Well what do you call an American muffin?
you mean a little cake? An American Muffin maybe?...although I don't buy them anyway.

The American Cake/Muffin is not English........get it into your thick barmy skulls.

It certainly isn't proper Manc ....like what I am you daft yonner OOT cunts.

This is a CHIP MUFFIN for true mancs...not yanks, yonners or OOT dickheads

35d12za.jpg
 
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you mean a little cake? An American Muffin maybe?...although I don't buy them anyway.

The American Cake/Muffin is not English........get it into your thick barmy skulls.

It certainly isn't proper Manc ....like what I am you daft yonner OOT cunts.

This is a CHIP MUFFIN for true mancs...not yanks, yonners or OOT dickheads

35d12za.jpg

mate.. you do know that barm is a northern term?
 
I'll leave you with THE MUFFIN MAN (you decide)

The rhyme is first recorded in a British manuscript of around 1820 preserved in the Bodleian Library with lyrics very similar to those used today:

Do you know the muffin man?
The muffin man, the muffin man.
Do you know the muffin man
Who lives in Drury Lane?

Victorian households had many of their fresh foods delivered; muffins would be delivered door-to-door by a muffin man. The "muffin" in question was the bread product known in the United States as English muffins, not the much sweeter cupcake-shaped American variety. Drury Lane is a thoroughfare bordering Covent Garden in London.

The rhyme and game appear to have spread to other countries in the mid-nineteenth century, particularly the US and the Netherlands. As with many traditional songs, there are regional variations in wording. Another popular version substitutes "Dorset Lane" for Drury Lane.

NO BARMS IN 18 fucking 20 ;)
 
I'll leave you with THE MUFFIN MAN (you decide)

The rhyme is first recorded in a British manuscript of around 1820 preserved in the Bodleian Library with lyrics very similar to those used today:

Do you know the muffin man?
The muffin man, the muffin man.
Do you know the muffin man
Who lives in Drury Lane?

Victorian households had many of their fresh foods delivered; muffins would be delivered door-to-door by a muffin man. The "muffin" in question was the bread product known in the United States as English muffins, not the much sweeter cupcake-shaped American variety. Drury Lane is a thoroughfare bordering Covent Garden in London.

The rhyme and game appear to have spread to other countries in the mid-nineteenth century, particularly the US and the Netherlands. As with many traditional songs, there are regional variations in wording. Another popular version substitutes "Dorset Lane" for Drury Lane.

NO BARMS IN 18 fucking 20 ;)

So the cockneys call it a muffin.
We are from the north in a city built on imigrantion and it was those imigrants that not only made this city the greatest in the world. In order to survive they had to mutate words from their own languages
so thank you to the Irish, Germans, Polish etc that built this great city we have a word that all nations could understand for this oven baked deliciousness. They called it a Barm.
 
Martin samuelsen played ,on trial, for west ham uniteds academy side in their game against brighton&hove albion

I'll leave you with THE MUFFIN MAN (you decide)

The rhyme is first recorded in a British manuscript of around 1820 preserved in the Bodleian Library with lyrics very similar to those used today:

Do you know the muffin man?
The muffin man, the muffin man.
Do you know the muffin man
Who lives in Drury Lane?

Victorian households had many of their fresh foods delivered; muffins would be delivered door-to-door by a muffin man. The "muffin" in question was the bread product known in the United States as English muffins, not the much sweeter cupcake-shaped American variety. Drury Lane is a thoroughfare bordering Covent Garden in London.

The rhyme and game appear to have spread to other countries in the mid-nineteenth century, particularly the US and the Netherlands. As with many traditional songs, there are regional variations in wording. Another popular version substitutes "Dorset Lane" for Drury Lane.

NO BARMS IN 18 fucking 20 ;)

In Landon possibly where I grew up in Manchester its barm, where I live now St Annes its a barm and where I work Preston it's a barm
 
a true barm is at the bottom of the oven, a semi raised cooked bread product, that holds it's chips and vinegar and rises fully in situ.

the other is a dough filled with air product that cant handle chips.

edit. oven bottom is somewhere in the ultimate answer
 

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