Lawrence00
Senior Member
Learn something new every day. English muffins are NOT English. They are an American invention. The English have something called a Crumpet, and might use the stale ones to play something called Cricket 
A spoon can't hold as much butter as an English muffin.Have you just tried a spoon for that?
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That would be a good advertising point!A spoon can't hold as much butter as an English muffin.
I sure wouldn't but Whole Foods again!!Out of curiosity, I once bought a package of crumpets from Whole Foods. My impression was of dry. flavorless English muffins with far fewer "nooks & crannies"![]()
I'm pretty sure the Canadians use them to play Curling.Learn something new every day. English muffins are NOT English. They are an American invention. The English have something called a Crumpet, and might use the stale ones to play something called Cricket![]()
That's the cool part I guess, because it works. I have even marveled at rice cakes because they are mostly air too. Even a bag of potato chips is probably 60% air and very little potato, but we love them. That being said, I don't think I'm quite ready to run out and buy bottled Rocky Mountain Spring Air. Although I might if I lived in a high-rise apartment in downtown L.A.Yeah, but don't the nooks and crannies make the butter, jam, marmalade, or whatever, sink better into the muffin?

In the UK we call them: Crisps, elsewhere they are known as: Chips. What they have in common is that the bags are intentionally filled with nitrogen gas to prevent them from being crushed and to keep them fresh, but this results in bags that are often more than 50% air. Packaged Foods such as pasta and crackers are similar to chips, many snack bags, such as pretzels, are notoriously packed with more air than product.Thomas' English Muffins. It promotes the product boasting all the "nooks and crannies"
As we all know, those are air pockets. They are selling you air ...... and you're happy to pay for it. Now that's genius.