When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. English Muffins Should Be Your New Kitchen Staple - AOL

    www.aol.com/english-muffins-kitchen-staple...

    English Muffin Sweet Toast. Keeping with the sweet theme, english muffins make a great base for sweet toast. Toast each muffin slice, spread them with cream cheese or ricotta, and add your ...

  3. English muffin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_muffin

    English muffins are an essential ingredient in eggs Benedict and a variety of breakfast sandwiches derived from it, such as the McMuffin. These products are called English muffins to distinguish them from the sweeter cupcake-shaped products also known as muffins, although in the UK, English muffins are sometimes referred to simply as muffins. [3]

  4. Homemade English Muffins Recipe - AOL

    homepage.aol.com/.../homemade-english-muffins

    Just like English muffins are supposed to have. And once I looked at the recipe more closely, these muffins actually have more in common with pizza dough than they do with regular biscuits. For starters, they use yeast instead of a chemical leavener like baking powder. And secondly, they contain no fat. Sugar, yes, but no oil or butter of any kind.

  5. DIY English Muffins Recipe - AOL

    firefox-startpage.aol.com/.../diy-english-muffins

    1. Warm the milk in a small saucepan until it bubbles (about 185 degrees); remove from heat. Mix in the sugar, stirring until dissolved. Let cool until lukewarm.

  6. Homemade English Muffins Recipe - AOL

    www.aol.com/food/recipes/homemade-english-muffins

    Arm your stand mixer with your dough hook and dissolve the yeast and sugar in 1 cup of the water. Allow to foam for five minutes and then mix in all ingredients besides the flour and water.

  7. 15 Ways to Eat English Muffins, from Mini Pizzas to French Toast

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/15-ways-eat-english...

    Put away the butter and jam and try one of these elevated ideas for using English muffins.

  8. Toast (food) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toast_(food)

    The word toast comes from the Latin torrere 'to burn'. [3] In German, the term (or sometimes Toastbrot) also refers to the type of bread itself, which is usually used for toasting. [4] One of the first references to toast in print is in a recipe for Oyle Soppys (flavoured onions stewed in a gallon of stale beer and a pint of oil) from 1430. [5]

  9. Muffin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muffin

    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 ...