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Post by Someone in a tree on Aug 7, 2024 16:44:32 GMT
Something fun to distract from the riots What do you call them ? Obviously it's called breadcake
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Post by danb on Aug 7, 2024 16:51:07 GMT
Bap or Roll for me, although Northern me is very familiar with Barm(cake) too.
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Post by marob on Aug 7, 2024 17:23:22 GMT
Bap.
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Post by crowblack on Aug 7, 2024 17:36:06 GMT
Bun, barm, barmcake from family, bap more recently through supermarkets (NW).
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Post by TallPaul on Aug 7, 2024 17:40:46 GMT
Breadcake.
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Post by blamerobots on Aug 7, 2024 17:50:35 GMT
Rollllllll.
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Post by Musicality21 on Aug 7, 2024 18:14:31 GMT
It's a muffin!
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Post by mkb on Aug 7, 2024 18:26:56 GMT
Batch. Never realised it was not universal till I went to uni.
That's when I also discovered that people will happily judge you by the way you pronounce the "u"s in Bugs Bunny.
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Aug 7, 2024 18:43:44 GMT
It’s obviously a breadcake but in Manchester I have to choke out “barm” to be understood.
I was in Greggs the other week and I asked for a cream slice. She didn’t have a clue what I was talking about so I had to point at it. “Oh you mean a Bavarian” she says, accusingly.
What the frigg has Bavaria got to do with anything?
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Post by david on Aug 7, 2024 18:48:48 GMT
Barmcake for me. Though when I first moved over to West Yorkshire for Uni and asked for a toasted teacake and expecting something with currents in to arrive, I was a bit shocked to get a plain one instead.
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Post by anthony40 on Aug 8, 2024 7:39:36 GMT
I'd never heard of a Bap in my life till I moved to the UL.
In Australis, they're just bread rolls! What's so hard about that?
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Post by Someone in a tree on Aug 8, 2024 7:48:18 GMT
Barmcake for me. Though when I first moved over to West Yorkshire for Uni and asked for a toasted teacake and expecting something with currents in to arrive, I was a bit shocked to get a plain one instead. A teacake definitely has fruit in. Dont let anyone else tell you differently!
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Post by TallPaul on Aug 8, 2024 7:49:01 GMT
You'll notice there are more variations in Yorkshire than anywhere else. I have a colleague from Pontefract who calls a breadcake a scuffler. In Barnsley they call a breadcake a teacake and a teacake a current teacake, which is what you should have asked for, our david.
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Post by aspieandy on Aug 8, 2024 8:01:43 GMT
Crusty white rolls and soft white rolls. It's not hard, people.
Baps are bigger and flatter. Suits a burger and doings.
Empty, crap carbs though.
Lidl does those quite nice posh wholemeal rolls. Good with cheese.
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19,793 posts
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Aug 8, 2024 8:09:12 GMT
I don’t know how widespread it was but you used to be able to get Hovis miniature loaves to eat as a single serve bread item. They were identical to a full sized Hovis loaf, including the H O V I S branding baked in. Oh yes it was a special day when the mini hovis came out. A tin of salmon might be opened and a Bird’s Trifle whisked up.
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Post by happysooz2 on Aug 8, 2024 8:37:57 GMT
Batch. Never realised it was not universal till I went to uni. That's when I also discovered that people will happily judge you by the way you pronounce the "u"s in Bugs Bunny. 👋 Are you from Coventry or Liverpool? (Cov girl here.)
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Post by blamerobots on Aug 8, 2024 8:51:45 GMT
Crusty white rolls and soft white rolls. It's not hard, people. Baps are bigger and flatter. Suits a burger and doings. Empty, crap carbs though. Lidl does those quite nice posh wholemeal rolls. Good with cheese. Agree. Where are you from?! I'm South-east but maybe it shows that I don't go many places that I haven't heard it called anything than a roll.
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Post by theatreian on Aug 8, 2024 9:06:11 GMT
Having lived in various parts of England my home city, Liverpool it was a barmcake. Teacakes always had currants in them aka toasted teacake.The simple term roll is most used although with the 500 types of bread you get now it can mean something quite different.
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Post by amyja89 on Aug 8, 2024 9:48:56 GMT
Southern roll girl myself, though have slipped into bap territory when forgetting myself on occasion...
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Post by alece10 on Aug 8, 2024 9:54:13 GMT
I don’t know how widespread it was but you used to be able to get Hovis miniature loaves to eat as a single serve bread item. They were identical to a full sized Hovis loaf, including the H O V I S branding baked in. Oh yes it was a special day when the mini hovis came out. A tin of salmon might be opened and a Bird’s Trifle whisked up. I remember the mini Hovis loaves, not seen them in years.
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Post by danb on Aug 8, 2024 10:13:17 GMT
It’s obviously a breadcake but in Manchester I have to choke out “barm” to be understood. I was in Greggs the other week and I asked for a cream slice. She didn’t have a clue what I was talking about so I had to point at it. “Oh you mean a Bavarian” she says, accusingly. What the frigg has Bavaria got to do with anything? This really is (VW quote ahoy) my bete noire. I don’t know your specialist words Mr Gregg/person in a business. If you’d just label things properly, as per the law, we’d all know what it was. But having a jumble of useless cardboard rectangles roughly in front of your cakes helps nobody. “It is labelled” they’ll defensively whine…no, there is a label for it on display. Big difference. It may as well be next to your soup kettle for all the use it is!!!😂😂😂
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Aug 8, 2024 10:24:55 GMT
Same with custard slices. I asked for a custard slice, she corrects me “you mean a vanilla slice?”. Yes love, I mean a vanilla aka custard slice. I know what I mean, you know what I mean so is it really necessary to correct me? Just dish up the cakes, it’s not school time.
*Disclaimer* I’m not in Greggs every day buying cream buns 🙂
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Post by theatreian on Aug 8, 2024 10:35:49 GMT
I’m not in Greggs every day buying cream buns 🙂 I got down to the last 2 in a job at Greggs head office. For my waistline's sake thankfully I didn't get it!
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Post by mkb on Aug 8, 2024 10:40:28 GMT
Batch. Never realised it was not universal till I went to uni. That's when I also discovered that people will happily judge you by the way you pronounce the "u"s in Bugs Bunny. 👋 Are you from Coventry or Liverpool? (Cov girl here.) Nuneaton
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Post by anthony40 on Aug 8, 2024 10:48:29 GMT
This sounds like a conversation between McDonald's fries and regular chips that come with a burger at a pub.
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