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  • Pie

    pie is a baked dish which is usually made of a pastry dough casing that contains a filling of various sweet or savoury ingredients. Sweet pies may be filled with fruit (as in an apple pie), nuts (pecan pie), fruit preserves (jam tart), brown sugar (sugar pie), sweetened vegetables (rhubarb pie), or with thicker fillings based on eggs and dairy (as in custard pie and cream pie). Savoury pies may be filled with meat (as in a steak pie or a Jamaican patty), eggs and cheese (such as quiches or British flans) or a mixture of meat and vegetables (pot pie).

    Pies are defined by their crusts. A filled pie (also single-crust or bottom-crust), has pastry lining the baking dish, and the filling is placed on top of the pastry but left open. A top-crust pie has the filling in the bottom of the dish and is covered with a pastry or other covering before baking. A two-crust pie has the filling completely enclosed in the pastry shell. Shortcrust pastry is a typical kind of pastry used for pie crusts, but many things can be used, including baking powder biscuitsmashed potatoes, and crumbs.

    Pies can be a variety of sizes, ranging from bite-size to those designed for multiple servings.

    Etymology

    A detail of a painting by Jan Brueghel the Elder (1568–1625) and Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640) depicting several bird pies. Cooked birds were frequently placed by European royal cooks on top of a large pie to identify its contents.[1]

    The first known use of the word ‘pie’ appears in 1303 in the expense accounts of the Bolton Priory in Yorkshire. However, the Oxford English Dictionary is uncertain to its origin and says ‘no further related word is known outside English’.[2] A possible origin is that the word ‘pie’ is connected with a word used in farming to indicate ‘a collection of things made into a heap’, for example a heap of potatoes covered with earth.[2]

    One source of the word “pie” may be the magpie, a “bird known for collecting odds and ends in its nest”; the connection could be that Medieval pies also contained many different animal meats, including chickens, crows, pigeons and rabbits.[3] One 1450 recipe for “grete pyes” that might support the “magpie” etymology contained what Charles Perry called “odds and ends”, including: “…beef, beef suet, capons, hens, both mallard and teal ducks, rabbits, woodcocks and large birds such as herons and storks, plus beef marrow, hard-cooked egg yolks, dates, raisins and prunes.”[4]

    History

    Antiquity

    Early pies were in the form of flat, round or freeform crusty cakes called galettes consisting of a crust of ground oatswheatrye, or barley containing honey inside. These galettes developed into a form of early sweet pastry or desserts, evidence of which can be found on the tomb walls of the Pharaoh Ramesses II, who ruled from 1304 to 1237 BC, located in the Valley of the Kings.[1] Sometime before 2000 BC, a recipe for chicken pie was written on a tablet in Sumer.[5]

    In the plays of Aristophanes (5th century BC), there are mentions of sweetmeats including small pastries filled with fruit. Nothing is known of the actual pastry used.

    A 19th-century depiction of a Roman feast, where pastry-covered meat dishes were served

    The Romans made a plain pastry of flour, oil, and water to cover meats and fowls which were baked, thus keeping in the juices. The Roman approach of covering “…birds or hams with dough” has been called more of an attempt to prevent the meat from drying out during baking than an actual pie in the modern sense.[4] The covering was not meant to be eaten. It filled the role of what was later called puff paste. A richer pastry, intended to be eaten, was used to make small pasties containing eggs or little birds which were among the minor items served at banquets.[6] The first written reference to a Roman pie is for a rye dough that was filled with a mixture of goat’s cheese and honey.[7]

    The 1st-century Roman cookbook Apicius makes various mentions of recipes which involve a pie case.[8] By 160 BC, Roman statesman Marcus Porcius Cato (234–149 BC), who wrote De Agri Cultura, notes the recipe for the most popular pie/cake called placenta. Also called libum by the Romans, it was more like a modern-day cheesecake on a pastry base, often used as an offering to the gods. With the development of the Roman Empire and its efficient road transport, pie cooking spread throughout Europe.[1] Wealthy Romans combined many types of meats in their pies, including mussels and other seafood.[9] Roman pie makers generally used vegetable oils, such as olive oil, to make their dough.[7]

    Medieval era

    In the Medieval era, pies were usually savoury meat pies made with “…beef, lamb, wild duck, magpie pigeon — spiced with pepper, currants or dates”.[9] Medieval cooks had restricted access to ovens due to their costs of construction and need for abundant supplies of fuel. Since pies could be easily cooked over an open fire, this made pies easier for most cooks to make. At the same time, by partnering with a baker, a cook could focus on preparing the filling.

    The earliest pie doughs were probably an inedible, stiff mixture of rye flour and water. The earliest pie recipes refer to coffyns (the word actually used for a basket or box), with straight sealed sides and a top; open-top pies were called traps.[10] Until the mid-16th century this British pie dough known as “cofyn” was used as a baking dish.[11][12] These pies were meant to be eaten with the hands. The hardened coffyn pastry was not necessarily eaten, its function being to contain the filling for baking, and to extend its shelf-life.[10] The thick crust was so sturdy it had to be cracked open to get to the filling.[3] This may also be the reason why early recipes focus on the filling over the surrounding case, with this development leading to the use of reusable earthenware pie cases which reduced the use of expensive flour.[13] Ceramic pie dishes were not used until the 16th century. Medieval pie crusts were often baked first, to create a “pot” of baked dough with a removable top crust, hence the name pot pie.[7]

    The first unequivocal reference to pie in a written source is in the 14th century (Oxford English Dictionary sb pie).[1] The eating of mince pies during festive periods is a tradition that dates back to the 13th century, as the returning Crusaders brought pie recipes containing “meats, fruits and spices”.[7][better source needed] Some pies contained cooked rabbits, frogs,[7] crows, and pigeons.[3]

    In 1390, the English cookbook A Forme of Cury had a recipe for “tartes of flesh”, which included a ground-up mixture of “pork, hard-boiled eggs, and cheese” blended with “spices, saffron, and sugar”.[14] The “cofyn” dough for the 14th-century apple pie recipe from The Forme of Cury was probably a simple mix of water and whatever flour was available in late middle ages.[15] The recipe included spices, apples, raisins pears and figs. The 14th-century French chef Taillevent instructed bakers to “crenelate” pie shells and “reinforce them so that they can support the meat”; one of his pies was high enough that it resembled a model of a castle, an illusion enhanced by miniature banners for the nobles at the event.[4]

    Pies in the 15th century included birds, as song birds at the time were a delicacy and protected by Royal Law. At the coronation of eight-year-old English King Henry VI (1422–1461) in 1429, “Partrich” and “Pecok enhakill” were served, alleged by some modern writers to consist of cooked peacock mounted in its skin on a peacock-filled pie. The expressions “eat crow” and “four and 20 blackbirds” are sayings from the era when crow and blackbirds were eaten in pies.[3] Cooked birds were frequently placed by European royal cooks on top of a large pie to identify its contents, leading to its later adaptation in pre-Victorian times as a porcelain ornament to release of steam.[1] The apple pie was first referenced in writing in 1589, when the poet R. Green wrote “Thy breath is like the seeme of apple pies”.[9]

    Medieval England had an early form of sweet pies called tarts and fruit pies were unsweetened, because sugar was a rare and costly status symbol.[3] In the Middle Ages, a pie could have several items as its filling, but a pastry would have only a single filling.[16]

    15th to 17th centuries

    A detail from Pieter Claesz‘ 1627 painting of turkey pie.

    Until the start of the 15th century, most pies were expected to contain meat or fish.[4] In the 15th century, more custard and fruit pie recipes began appearing, often with apples and figs and dried fruit like dates and raisins. Fresh fruit did not become widely used until sugar dropped in price during the 16th century.[4] The first cherry pie is recorded in the late 16th century, when Queen Elizabeth I was served cherry pie.[7] Elizabeth was often given gifts of quince or pear pies for New Year.[4]

    During the Shakespearean era, fruit pies were served hot, but others were served at room temperature, as they would be brought to the “…table more than once”.[4] Apple pies were popular in Tudor and Stuart times. Pippins were baked with clovescinnamondates and candied orange peelsRosewater was often added to apple pies.[17]

    During the Puritan era of Oliver Cromwell, some sources claim mince pie eating was banned as a frivolous activity for 16 years, so mince pie making and eating became an underground activity; the ban was lifted in 1660, with the Restoration of the monarchy.[7] Food historian Annie Gray suggests that the myth of the Puritans “actively” banning mince pies came about “due to the defenders of Christmas” who reported Puritan vitriol “with a certain amount of exaggeration”.[18]

    It was in the 16th century that a puff paste began to be used to make flakier pie crusts.[19][20][21][22] In Gervase Markham’s 1615 book The English Huswife, there is a recipe for puff paste where the paste is kneaded, rolled thinly many times while layering with butter. This made a flaky butter pastry to cover meat for pies or for tarts.[23] There is also a pie recipe that calls for “an entire leg of mutton and three pounds of suet…, along with salt, cloves, mace, currants, raisins, prunes, dates, and orange peel”, which made a huge pie that could serve a large group.[14] According to Markham, crusts made with fine wheat flour required the addition of eggs to be sturdy enough for raised pies.[24]

    In the 17th century, Ben Jonson described a skilled pie cook by comparing the cook to a fortification builder who “…Makes citadels of curious fowl and fish” and makes “dry-ditches”, “bulwark pies” and “ramparts of immortal crusts”.[4]

    18th century

    In the Georgian era, sweetened pies of meat and dried fruits began to become less popular. In recipe books of the period sweet veal, sweet lamb or sweet chicken pies are given alongside recipes for unsweetened alternatives with the same ingredients made for those who could “no longer stomach the sweetened flesh meats enjoyed by earlier generations”.[17]

    Pumpkin pie was fashionable in England from the 1650s onward, then fell out of favour during the 18th century. Pumpkin was sliced, fried with sweet herbs sweetened with sugar and eggs were added. This was put into a pastry case with currants and apples. Pumpkin pie was introduced to America by early colonists where it became a national dish.[17]

    19th century

    During the 19th century, pies became, according to food historian Janet Clarkson, “universally esteemed” in a way that other foods were not.[2] In 1806 Mrs Rundell in her Observations on Savoury Pies in A New System of Domestic Cookery stated that ‘There are few articles of cookery more generally liked than relishing pies, if properly made’. Alexis Soyer, a celebrity cook of the 19th century said in his book Shilling Cookery for the People (1860) “From childhood we eat pies – from girlhood to boyhood we eat pies – in fact, pies in England may be considered as one of our best companions du voyage through life. It is we who leave them behind, not they who leave us; for our children and grandchildren will be as fond of pies as we have been; therefore it is needful that we should learn how to make them, and make them well! Believe me, I am not jesting, but if all the spoilt pies made in London on one single Sunday were to be exhibited in a row beside a railway line, it would take above an hour by special train to pass in review these culinary victims”.[2]

    United States (17th century-1980s)

    Main article: Pie in American cuisine

    The Pilgrims brought the pie recipes they knew from their home countries with them when they arrived to the colonies. Colonists appreciated the food preservation aspect of crusty-topped pies, which were often seasoned with “dried fruit, cinnamon, pepper and nutmeg”.[9] Their first pies included pies that were based on berries and fruits pointed out to them by the Native North Americans.[1]

    According to James E. McWilliams, American cooks “embraced the rough edges of American foodways to foster a pastoral ideal that promoted the frontier values that the colonists had once downplayed”.[25] Apple pie became popular, because apples were easy to dry and store in barrels over the winter.[26]

    Pie fillings could be made with very few ingredients to “stretch” their “meager provisions”.[27] These pies later came to be known as desperation pies. First originating in the 18th century they included pies like sugar cream pie and Kentucky transparent pie.[28] By the 19th century pies were a staple of the American family meal and women were responsible for figuring out how to make tasty pies that fit within the family budget.[29]

    Once the British had established Caribbean colonies, sugar became less expensive and more widely available, which meant that sweet pies could be readily made.[3] Molasses was popular in American pies due to the rum and slave trade with the Caribbean Islands, and maple syrup was an important sweetener in Northern states, after Indigenous people taught settlers how to tap maple trees and boil down the sap.[27] In the Midwest, cheese and cream pies were popular, due to the availability of big dairy farms.[27] In the US south, African-Americans enjoyed sweet potato pies, due to the widespread availability of this type of potato.[27]

    By the 1870s, the new science of nutrition led to criticism of pies, notably by Sarah Tyson Rorer, a cooking teacher and food editor who warned the public about how much energy pies take to digest.[27] Rorer stated that all pie crusts “…are to be condemned” and her cookbook only included an apple tart, jelly and meringue-covered crackers, pâté, and a “hygienic pie” which had “apple slices or a pumpkin custard baked in biscuit dough”.[4] In 1866, Harper’s Magazine included an article by C.W. Gesner that stated that although we “…cry for pie when we are infants”, “Pie kills us finally”, as the “heavy crust” cannot be digested.[4]

    Another factor that decreased the popularity of pies was industrialization and increasing movement of women into the labour market, which changed pie making from a weekly ritual to an “occasional undertaking” on special occasions.[27] In the 1950s, after WWII, the popularity of pies rebounded in the US, especially with commercial food inventions such as instant pudding mixes, Cool Whip topping, and Jello gelatin (which could be used as fillings) ready-made crusts, which were sold frozen, and alternative crusts made with crushed potato chips.[27] There was a pie renaissance in the 1980s, when old-fashioned pie recipes were rediscovered and a wide range of cross-cultural pies were explored.[27]

    Regional variations

    Homemade meat pie with beef and vegetables.

    Meat pies with fillings such as steak, cheese, steak and kidney, beef and ale, lamb and mint, minced beef, or chicken and mushroom are popular in the United Kingdom,[30] Australia, South Africa and New Zealand as take-away snacks. They are also served with chips as an alternative to fish and chips at British chip shops.

    Pot pies with a flaky crust and bottom are also a popular dish, typically with a filling of meat (particularly beef, chicken, or turkey), gravy, and mixed vegetables (potatoes, carrots, and peas). Frozen pot pies are often sold in individual serving size.

    Fruit pies may be served with a scoop of ice cream, a style known in North America as pie à la mode. Many sweet pies are served this way. Apple pie is a traditional choice, though any pie with sweet fillings may be served à la mode. This combination, and possibly the name as well, is thought to have been popularized in the mid-1890s in the United States.[31] Apple pie can be made with a variety of apples; cultivars such as the Golden DeliciousPink LadyGranny Smith, and Rome Beauty are popular for usage in pies.[citation needed]

    In literature

    Cold pigeon pies and venison pasties appear in novels by Jane Austen, but also more generally in writing in the 18th century.[32] The character Mrs Elton, from the 1815 novel Emma, believes herself to be modern, but nevertheless plans to take ‘pigeon-pies and cold lamb’ to a country outing to Box Hill and consults George Turberville‘s 1575 work The Noble Art of Venerie (1575) for advice.[33]

    In the 1817 novel Persuasion, Jane Austen includes pies in her description of an old-fashioned Christmas spread, mentioning ‘tressels and trays, bending under the weight of brawn and cold pies’. In the whole of Persuasion, brawn and cold pies are the only specific mention of food; they are also the only Christmas foods to be mentioned in any of Jane Austen’s novels.[33]

    In the United States, a popular idiom is “American as apple pie”.[9] There pie, especially apple pie, became intertwined to the point that in 1902, The New York Times asserted that “pie is the food of the heroic” and “no pie-eating people can ever be permanently vanquished”.[3]

    The slang expression “to eat humble pie” comes from the umble pie, which was made with chopped animal offal. “It’s a piece of pie”, meaning that something is easy, dates from 1889.[16] “Pie-eyed”, meaning drunk, dates from 1904.[16] The expression “pie in the sky”, to refer to an unlikely proposal or idea, comes from “The Preacher and the Slave“, a 1911 Joe Hill song.[16]

    Pie throwing

    Main article: Pieing

    Cream filled or topped pies are favourite props for slapstick humour. Throwing a pie in a person’s face has been a staple of film comedy since Ben Turpin received one in Mr. Flip in 1909.[34] More recently, pieing has also become a political act; some activists throw cream pies at politicians and other public figures as a form of protest.

    Types

    Main article: List of pies

    Savoury

    • Savoury pies
    • A chicken and lamb pie
    • A traditional Cornish pasty filled with steak and vegetables
    • A chicken pie with a traditional pie bird

    Sweet

    Some of these pies are pies in name only, such as the Boston cream pie, which is a cake.

    Fruit

    Many fruit and berry pies are very similar, varying only the fruit used in filling. Fillings for sweet or fruity are often mixed, such as strawberry rhubarb pie.

    Other

    • Fried pie – a smaller pie that is deep-fried instead of being baked; it can have any filling.
    • Tart – a pie with no top crust, often filled with fruit
  • Muffin

    muffin or bun is an individually portioned baked product; however, the term can refer to one of two distinct items: a part-raised flatbread (like a crumpet) that is baked and then cooked on a griddle (typically unsweetened), or a (often sweetened) quickbread that is chemically leavened and then baked in a mold. While quickbread “American” muffins are often sweetened, there are savory varieties made with ingredients such as corn and cheese, and less sweet varieties like traditional bran muffins. The flatbread “English” variety is of British or other European derivation, and dates from at least the early 18th century, while the quickbread originated in North America during the 19th century. Both types are common worldwide today.

    Etymology

    One 19th century source suggests that muffin may be related to the Greek bread maphula, a ‘cake baked on a hearth or griddle’, or from Old French mou-pain ‘soft bread’, which may have been altered into mouffin.[1] The word is first found in print in 1703, spelled moofin;[2] it is of uncertain origin but possibly derived from the Low German Muffen, the plural of Muffe, meaning ‘small cake’, or possibly with some connection to the Old French moufflet meaning ‘soft’, as said of bread.[3][4] The expression muffin-man, meaning a street seller of muffins, is attested in a 1754 poem, which includes the line: “Hark! the shrill Muffin-Man his Carol plies.”[4]

    Quickbread muffins

    Alternative namesAmerican muffin
    TypeQuick bread
    CourseTraditionally breakfast
    Place of originUnited States
    Main ingredientsFlour, eggs, leaveningvegetable oilsugar
    Ingredients generally usedBlueberries, chocolate, poppyseeds, or bran
     Cookbook: Quickbread muffin  Media: Quickbread muffin

    Quickbread muffins (sometimes described in Britain as “American muffins”[5]) are baked, individual-sized, cupcake-shaped foods with a “moist, coarse-grained” texture.[6] Muffins are available in both savoury varieties, such as cornmeal and cheese muffins, or sweet varieties such as blueberry, chocolate chip, lemon or banana flavours. Sweetened muffins range from lightly sweetened muffins to products that are “richer than many cakes in fat and sugar.”[6] They are similar to cupcakes in size and cooking methods, the main difference being that cupcakes tend to be sweet desserts using cake batter and which are often topped with sugar icing (American frosting). Muffins may have solid items mixed into the batter, such as berries, chocolate chips or nuts. Fresh baked muffins are sold by bakeriesdonut shops and some fast food restaurants and coffeehouses. Factory baked muffins are sold at grocery stores and convenience stores and are also served in some coffeeshops and cafeterias.

    History

    Recipes for quickbread muffins are common in 19th-century American cookbooks.[7][8] Recipes for yeast-based muffins, which were sometimes called “common muffins” or “wheat muffins” in 19th-century American cookbooks, can be found in much older cookbooks. In Fannie Farmer‘s Boston Cooking-School Cook Book, she gave recipes for both types of muffins, both those that used yeast to raise the dough and those that used a quick bread method, using muffin rings to shape the English muffins. Farmer indicated that stove top “baking”, as is done with yeast dough, was a useful method when baking in an oven was not practical.[9] Over the years, the size and calorie content of muffins has changed: the 3-inch muffins grandmother made had only 120 to 160 calories. But today’s giant bakery muffins contain from 340 to 630 calories each.[10]

    Manufacture

    Quickbread muffins are made with flour, sieved together with bicarbonate of soda as a raising agent. To this is added butter or shortening, eggs and any flavourings (fruit, such as blueberries, chocolate or banana; or savouries, such as cheese).

    Commercial muffins may have “modified starches”, corn syrup (or high-fructose corn syrup), xanthan gum, or guar gum to increase moisture content and lengthen shelf life (as well, these gums can make added solids, such as chocolate chips, disperse more evenly in the batter).[6]

    Bran muffins

    Oat bran muffins

    Bran muffins use less flour and use bran instead, as well as using molasses and brown sugar.[6] The mix is turned into a pocketed muffin tray, or into individual paper moulds, and baked in an oven. Milk is often added, as it contributes to the appealing browning appearance.[6] The result are raised, individual quickbreads.[5] The muffin may have toppings added, such as cinnamon sugar, streusel,[6] nuts, or chocolate chips.

    Poppyseed muffins

    Poppyseed muffins on a plate

    Poppyseed muffins (or poppy seed muffins) contain poppy seeds. Poppy seeds were already popular in most parts of the world for their taste and texture—as well as the narcotic characteristics of the opium poppy plant they are harvested from. In modern times, growing poppy seeds is a difficult business for American farmers, due to the risk of heroin production. Other countries have fewer difficulties with permitting the growth of poppies for the seeds alone, which have very low (but still present) levels of opium alkaloids, such as morphine. As other countries began imitating the American muffin, the occasional use of poppy seeds to flavor them spread as well. Although poppy seeds cannot be used as a narcotic due to very low levels of opium alkaloids,[11] they do have enough that drug tests are often fooled and give out false positives after an otherwise drug-free person consumes just a few poppyseed muffins.[12] Because of this, all poppyseed pastries place the person who consumes them prior to a test at a high risk of being inaccurately considered a drug user.[13]

    Lemon is a common paired flavour with poppyseeds in muffin-making.

    Nutrition

    Harvard University’s Nutrition Source states that while many fruit muffins may seem “…to be a better breakfast than their donut neighbors” at your local coffeeshop, with their “…often refined flours, high sodium, and plenty of added sugar…and large portion size, they’re far from the optimal food choice to start your day.”[14] Consumers think that commercial muffins are a healthier choice than donuts; however, according to Registered Dietician Karen Collins, yeast or raised donuts have from 170 to 270 calories each (cake doughnuts have from 290 to 360 calories), while large bakery muffins have from 340 to 630 calories each and 11 to 27 grams of total fat.[10] “Most muffins are deceptively high in fats”, with up to 40% fat content, which many consumers are not aware of.[6]

    The type of muffin can have a big impact on its fat and sugar content; one major fast food chain’s low-fat berry muffin has 300 calories, whereas the same restaurant’s chocolate chunk muffin has 620 calories.[15] Harvard’s Nutrition Source recommends smaller-sized, whole-grain muffins with reduced sugar content, liquid plant oil instead of shortening or butter, and added wholesome foods such as nuts (or nut flour), beans (or bean flour), or fresh fruit or vegetables.[14]

    Muffin tops

    See also: Muffin top

    The muffin top is the crisp upper part of the muffin, which has developed a “browned crust that’s slightly singed around the edges”.[16] They were the focus of a 1997 Seinfeld sitcom episode, “The Muffin Tops” (episode 21 of season 8), where the character Elaine, who only eats the tops when she buys a muffin, realizes that a bakery selling just the tops could be successful. Once the business is running, she has to figure out what to do with the muffin bottoms, which proves difficult.

    In 2018, McDonald’s restaurant announced they were planning to sell muffin tops as part of their McCafe breakfast menu.[17]

    Bakeware and baking aids

    A typical muffin pan

    Muffin tins and muffin pans are typically metal bakeware which has round bowl-shaped depressions into which muffin batter is poured. Muffin tins or pans can be greased with butter or cooking spray, to lessen the issue of batter sticking to the pan. Alternatively, muffin cups or cases are used. Cups or cases are usually round sheets of paperfoil, or silicone[18] with scallop-pressed edges, giving the muffin a round cup shape. They are used in the baking of muffins to line the bottoms of muffin tins, to facilitate the easy removal of the finished muffin from the tin. The advantage to cooks is easier removal and cleanup, more precise form, and moister muffins; however, using them will prevent a crust from forming.

    A variety of sizes for muffin cases are available. Slightly different sizes are considered “standard” in different countries. Miniature cases are commonly 1 to 1.25 in (25 to 32 mm) in diameter at the base and .75 in (19 mm) tall. Standard-size cases range from 1.75 to 2 inches (44 to 51 mm) in diameter at the base and are 1.25 to 1.5 in (32 to 38 mm) tall. Some jumbo-size cases can hold more than twice the size of standard cases. Australian and Swedish bakers are accustomed to taller paper cases with a larger diameter at the top than American and British bakers.[19]

    • Pumpkin muffins in muffin cups
    • A chocolate muffin
    • Home-made berry muffins
    • vegan lemon poppyseed muffin
    • Blueberry muffin, a common flavor

    Flatbread muffins

    Alternative namesEnglish muffin
    TypeLeavened bread
    CourseTraditionally breakfast
    Place of originUnited Kingdom
    Main ingredientsFlour, yeast
    VariationsRaisins
     Cookbook: Flatbread muffin  Media: Flatbread muffin

    Flatbread muffins (known in the United States and elsewhere as “English muffins“; or simply as “muffins” or “bakery muffins”[6]) are a flatter disk-shaped, typically unsweetened yeast-leavened bread; generally about 4 in (10 cm) in diameter and 1.5 in (3.8 cm) tall. It is of English or European origin. Rather than being entirely oven-baked, they are also cooked in a griddle on the stove top and flipped from side-to-side, which results in a flattened shape rather than the rounded top seen in baked rolls or cake-type muffins.[20] “Cornmeal and bran are sometimes substituted for some of the flour.”[21] These muffins are popular in Commonwealth countries and the United States. Flatbread muffins are often served toasted for breakfast. They may be served with butter or margarine, and topped with sweet toppings, such as jam or honey, or savoury toppings (e.g., round sausage, cooked egg, cheese or bacon). Flatbread muffins are often eaten as a breakfast food (e.g. as an essential ingredient in Eggs Benedict and most of its variations), accompanied by coffee or tea.

    History

    A Victorian-era muffin man ringing a bell.

    Recipes for English muffins appear in published cookery books from the early 18th century,[22] although the product is undoubtedly older than that.[23] In the Oxford Companion to Food, Alan Davidson states that “[t]here has always been some confusion between muffins, crumpets, and pikelets, both in recipes and in name.”[24] The increasing popularity of flatbread muffins in the 19th century, is attested by the existence of “…muffin men [who] traversed the town streets at teatime, ringing their bells” to sell them.[24] The bell-ringing of muffin men became so common that by the 1840s, the British Parliament passed a law to prohibit bell ringing by muffin men, but it was not adhered to by sellers.[24]

    “Mush muffins (called slipperdowns in New England) were a Colonial [American] muffin made with hominy on a hanging griddle.”[25] These and other types of flatbread muffins were known to American settlers, but they declined in popularity with the advent of the quickbread muffin. The flat muffin was re-introduced to the American market in 1880 as “English muffin” by English-American baker Samuel Beth Thomas (whose baked-goods company Thomas survives to this day). Thomas called the product “toaster crumpets”, and intended them as a “more elegant alternative to toast’ to be served in fine hotels.[26] The English muffin has been described as a variant form of a crumpet, or a “cousin”, with the difference being the location of the holes; in a crumpet, the holes go all the way to the top, whereas with an English muffin, the holes are inside.[26] In 1910, Fred Wolferman of Kansas City, Missouri began making denser English muffins at his family grocery, using empty tin cans as molds.[27]

    Preparation of flatbread “English” muffins[28]

    • The dough
    • is cooked in rings
    • and then cooled
    • before it is split
    • and finally toasted.

    Bakeware

    Muffin rings are metal cookware used for oven-baking or griddle-cooking flatbread muffins. They are circle-shaped objects made of thin metal. The rings are about one inch high.

    Muffineer was originally a sugar shaker, looking like a large salt cellar with a perforated decorative top, for spreading powdered sugar on muffins and other sweet cakes. Later, in the 19th century, the term was also used to describe a silver, or silver-plated, muffin dish, with a domed lid and a compartment below for hot water, used to keep toasted English muffins warm before serving.

    The Muffin Man” is a traditional nursery rhyme, children’s song or children’s game of English origin from 1820.

    A well-known reference to English muffins is in Oscar Wilde‘s 1895 play The Importance of Being Earnest.

    As symbols

    American muffins appear as state symbols in three US states: