Bagel

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Bagel
Thanks, I hate it
Cube Croissants
My brain is very YES, BUT, NO about this. The outside looks like a very heavy cube of wood. The inside looks like fluffy delicious butteryness. The outside also looks like delicious cronch. I want to bite it but also not because I might hurt my teeth.
I’m feeling glitchy about it. IDK MAN
The Great Teacake Confusion: A Linguistic Battlefield
Picture this: a seemingly innocent request for a ham teacake unleashes a tempest of linguistic chaos. What could have been a simple bakery order turned into a heated debate on regional dialects, bread products, and the meaning of a teacake. Brace yourselves; this blog will take you on a rollercoaster ride of bread bun battles and linguistic fisty cuffs!
As a colleague innocently asked me what I wanted from the bakers, little did I know that my answer would ignite a maelstrom of confusion. "A ham teacake, please," I replied politely. But oh boy, I had no idea what was coming.
My colleague returned from the shop, brandishing a white bag containing my dinner, suspiciously nodding at it, and said, "I asked for what you asked for." As I looked inside, I saw the familiar bread product that my family affectionately called a teacake. Innocently, I debagged my dinner, thinking all was well.
But wait! The teacake debate was far from over. My colleague insisted that what I held was a "roll." I retorted, "Well, it's a teacake to me!" A showdown between regional dialects had begun.
Suddenly, a voice chimed in, declaring, "That's not a teacake...a teacake contains raisins!" This unexpected attack hit me like a linguistic Pearl Harbor. The battle for regional supremacy had escalated, and my West Cumbrian spirit was ready to fight back. "No! That's a fruit teacake!" I shot back.
Back in my little industrial seaside town, teacakes were teacakes, eaten with ham, chicken, turkey at Christmas, cheese, jam, and all manner of fillings. There was never any debate or fist-shaking. But as I moved away, I discovered that innocent bread product was a linguistic grenade, capable of destroying friendships and causing linguistic wars.
Let's dive into the ring of linguistic fisty cuffs! Some call teacakes bread buns or barm cakes, while others throw "muffins" into the mix. And let's not forget "oven bottoms" and "baps," which add to the confusion.
The term "bread roll" seems straightforward, but it, too, falls into a grey area, with different shapes and definitions. My colleagues' preferences for stotties only added to the linguistic chaos.
Imagine working in a bakery on the Cumbria-Lancashire border—what a challenge that would be! Convincing colleagues about the existence of bread buns might require Prozac within the first hour. But don't worry; evidence from South Yorkshire may provide some support.
So, buckle up for the Great Teacake Confusion, where linguistic battles are fought over seemingly innocent bakery orders. Bread buns, teacakes, muffins, oven bottoms, and baps collide in a whirlwind of dialects and regional preferences. Get ready for a linguistic rollercoaster ride that'll leave you craving answers—and maybe a teacake or two!
So, what do you call those little bread products is it a teacake or a roll? Does balm just stick in your throat?
Join the debate!
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What is Gluten?
Gluten is a plant protein found mostly in cereal grains such as wheat, rye, spelt, kamut, emmer, einkorn and triticale, and barley. Its chemical composition consists of two primary amino acids known as Gliadin and Glutenin. These amino acid sequences are composed of four main proteins: globulins, prolamins, albumins, and glutelins. Different types of grain contain different concentrations of the…
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