Carpeta wrote:
This thread is for discussing pastries around the world. What's in a name? What, to you, is a "biscuit" or a "muffin"? A "cookie" or a "bun"? A "pudding" or a "teacake"?
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Does your country have some regional pastries that might be unknown elsewhere? Am I mistaken in thinking "pastry" is a universal term for this category of food? Discuss! Images and descriptions welcome!
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UK here (though it varies depending on the part of the UK you're from, personally I'm from the North of England).
What we call a biscuit is typically sweet. Hard in texture.
For a muffin, that's a cake that's larger than a cupcake but not as big as a cake you'd divide and share with others. It can also be a form of bread, but I think that's more common in southern areas.
As for cookies, that's what I call large biscuits that are incredibly soft / gooey. If it goes hard when it goes off then it's a cookie to me, if it goes soft when it goes off then I consider it a biscuit.
Buns can be sweet or savoury depending on the context. Sometimes both if you're talking about iced buns.
I call anything that's a dessert a pudding. The main exception being a Yorkshire pudding, which isn't really a pudding at all.
When I think of teacakes, I either think of a chocolate covered marshmallow dome with a biscuit base, or bread with currents (sultanas, raisins) and sometimes spices (such as cinnamon) that you'd have with a cup of tea. I often ask people to clarify which kind they mean.
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Last edited by Lost_dragon on 17 Sep 2020, 4:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.