English muffins are small, puck-shaped breads that are cooked on a griddle and popularly eaten for breakfast or brunch. They are typically cut in half horizontally, toasted and buttered, and may also be eaten with various sweet or savoury breakfast items such as fruit jelly or honey, eggs, sausage, bacon, spinach or cheese.
One of the key features of the English muffin is its irregular, honeycomb-like crumb, made up of numerous tiny air pockets that form throughout the dough during proving and cooking. Often referred to as ‘nooks and crannies’, this porous texture means that all those tasty toppings - think butter, egg yolks, melted cheese or hollandaise sauce - can really get inside an English muffin and infuse it with all their delicious flavours.
English muffins are popular in various English-speaking countries, including Great Britain, the USA, Australia and New Zealand. They are referred to as English muffins to differentiate them from sweet, cupcake-like American muffins, and also because they seem to have first been made in England.
There is a popular myth that the English muffin was first made in New York in the late nineteenth century by English immigrant Samuel Bath Thomas, who based them on a recipe for crumpets and began selling them to unsuspecting Americans as an English delicacy. It’s a great story, but sadly, it isn’t quite true, as recipes for muffins can be found in British cookbooks as far back as 1758. Thomas was a real person, however, and as founder of Thomas’ English Muffins, is likely to have played a part in popularising this breakfast favourite in the States.