Oh So English Muffins

Oh So English Muffins
It's amazingly easy to make English Muffins in your Thermomix
It’s amazingly easy to make English Muffins in your Thermomix

Now that I live in France, I find it amusingly à propos that I should want to make English muffins 😉 The truth is, we had just moved here in mid-December and in the unusually hectic run-up to Christmas I had forgotten to buy the English muffins for our traditional Christmas day breakfast of Eggs Benedict. Or rather, English muffins are not readily available in French supermarkets and the nearest Marks and Spencer is a mere 90-minute drive away. And while I consider myself lucky to have access to a Marks and Spencer in France, alas it is closed on Christmas Day – and I am mighty glad it is.

I like to activate my yeast by mixing it with the liquids in my recipe and heating it to 37 degrees C in my Thermomix
I like to activate my yeast by mixing it with the liquids in my recipe and heating it to 37 degrees C in my Thermomix

But never fear, Thermomix is here and so is the World Wide Web and its millions of happy Thermomix cooks who blog their recipes and creations. So on Christmas morning I searched the web and found an interesting English Muffin recipe on The Opies: Family Food blog. It looked pretty good so I decided to take advantage of the hard work and research that the author had already done – so grateful, many thanks! – and use this recipe. I looked at it long and hard and there was something puzzling me about the first two steps of the recipe so I simplified it by combining the first two steps into one. Lo and behold, I made the most amazing, light, delicious and authentic-looking English Muffins that were even better than store bought. They are full of the wonderful nooks and crannies that typify English Muffins and they are marvellous when split with a fork. ThermoHubby John loved them and they solved our Eggs Benedict problem quite nicely, thank you!

Just 20 seconds/Speed 3 and your English Muffin dough is beautifully mixed
Just 20 seconds/Speed 3 and your English Muffin dough is beautifully mixed

Because there are only two of us and it looked from Mrs Opie’s photos that the recipe made quite a few muffins I actually halved it quite successfully and still made 12 beautiful English Muffins – well, ok then, eleven beautiful and one mutant muffin. But all delicious, rest assured!

So with renewed thanks to Mrs Opie (Andrea) and to my Best Friend in the Kitchen, here is the simplest yet recipe for Thermomix English Muffins!

Look at these beautiful babies! Thermomix English Muffins are absolutely delicious and very versatile
Look at these beautiful babies, ready to rise again and then cook! Thermomix English Muffins are absolutely delicious and very versatile

Simplest Yet Thermomix English Muffins
I have simplified this delicious recipe for lazy cooks like me, and also halved it. I used extra strong bread flour instead of plain flour and the muffins turned out beautifully. Makes 12 muffins.

Ingredients
120 g milk
15 g sugar
1 sachet (7 g) instant yeast or 20 g fresh yeast
120 g water
25 g butter
375 g plain flour or extra strong bread flour
1 tsp. salt

Method

  1. Place milk, sugar, yeast, butter and water in TM bowl and heat 37°C/5 minutes/Speed 1 to activate the yeast. Leave for about 10 minutes (go make yourself a cup of coffee or even take a quick shower!) then whisk 2 seconds/Speed 5 to froth it up.
  2. Add the flour and salt and mix 20 seconds/Speed 3 or until the dough comes away from the sides of the bowl. Set the speed dial to the lid locked position and knead for 2 minutes. Place dough in a lightly greased bowl, cover with oiled cling film or a clean tea towel and let rise for about 30 to 45 minutes or until doubled in size. (Here I was wrapping the final Christmas presents and setting the table.)
  3. Punch down, then roll out to about ½ inch thick. Cut rounds with biscuit cutter, drinking glass, or empty tuna can (what a wonderful idea, Mrs Opie!) and place on a sheet of waxed paper/baking parchment sprinkled with cornmeal or polenta. Dust tops of muffins with cornmeal/polenta, cover and let rise ½ hour. (This is where I opened the Champagne on Christmas morning and I’m sure you can find something to do for 30 minutes or so!)
  4. Heat a greased heavy-based frying pan or flat skillet. Cook the muffins for about 15 minutes in total – the first 5 minutes with the lid on (this helps them to rise and reduce the density of the muffin) – then flipping them every few minutes until cooked through. Using a simmer mat on a gas hob will allow enough heat through to get a good rise but prevent the bases burning. I used an induction hob and watched them carefully. When cooked, place on a wire rack to cool, then split and enjoy.
From flour to muffin on Christmas morning - with professional-looking results thanks to Thermomix
From flour to muffin on Christmas morning – with professional-looking results and loads of nooks and crannies, thanks to Thermomix

In New England we have a thing about “fork split” English muffins and to me that’s the best way to serve these beautiful babies. Insert the tines of a fork all the way around the edge of each muffin and then gently break apart to reveal beautiful nooks and crannies that will catch the lashings of butter that melt into them. This to my mind is infinitely superior to slicing English muffins open with a knife!

Thermomix Eggs Benedict with English Muffins and Hollandaise Sauce, all made in the Thermomix, of course!
Thermomix Eggs Benedict with English Muffins and Hollandaise Sauce, all made in the Thermomix, of course!

We ate our English muffins fresh from the pan as Eggs Benedict with poached eggs, smoked salmon and Thermomix Hollandaise Sauce (of course). If you and your guests can resist these homemade delights and there are any left over, they can be stored in plastic bags and then fork split and toasted to a crispy golden finish.

Many, many thanks again to Andrea Opie for her brilliantly clear recipe and for rescuing our 2013 Christmas Day breakfast. It was very comforting to be able to respect our family traditions so soon after moving to our new home in France.

ThermoHubby John and I wish you all a fabulous end to 2013 and a brilliant New Year in 2014, filled with fast, easy, healthy, economical and creative Thermomix cooking!

Bon appétit !

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18 thoughts on “Oh So English Muffins”

  • Many thanks, Yvonne, I simply made a very good recipe even easier with Thermomix! I hope you enjoy these English muffins and

    Happy Thermomix cooking!

  • I have been looking for an English Muffin Recipe, I shall have to try these tomorrow, they sound delicious, can’t wait.

  • Hi Emily, thanks for your comment. This is a brilliant recipe and much easier than I ever thought to make such delicious muffins.

    Almost any size cutter will work, even as Mrs Opie says, a good old tuna tin with both top and bottom cut out 😉 That’s about the right size, as these babies rise upwards but not too much outwards. I’d say about 3 inches / 8 cms in diameter would work.

    I had nearly forgotten what a joy it was to make homemade English muffins so thanks for reminding me Emily! I shall make another batch for Sunday breakfast.

    Happy Thermomix cooking!

  • Can’t wait to try your recipe as we go through 6 muffins in a sitting easily and they are EXPENSIVE!!! What size cutter works best? Do they rise outwards as well as upwards? Thanks!

  • Thanks for your lovely comment, Amanda, I’m delighted this recipe worked as well for you as it did for me! Homemade English muffins are so satisfying both to make and to eat 😉

    Happy Thermomix cooking and thanks for reading Why Is There Air!

  • This was AMAZING!!! Best english muffin recipe I’ve ever made. I didn’t leave them to rise for a half hour after cutting them out due to time restrictions, and they still turned out fluffy an delicious! Thanks so much for sharing 🙂

  • Thanks so much for your lovely comment, Klara! I’m delighted that you have used this recipe – twice even – and that you’ve found the perfect size glass for the perfect size muffins. What a great idea to use Thermomix almond milk, butter and olive oil instead of the full complement of dairy. Well done and happy Thermomix cooking!

  • This is the second time I have used your English muffin recipe. The first lot I cut with the biggest glass I had in the house but they ended up a little small, nevertheless delicious! This time around I used another glass we had stashed and never use, which is the perfect size to make generous sized muffins. They again turned out super yummy and they look so beautiful! Just to let you know, I get sick from milk so I used thermie almond milk, half home made thermie butter and half olive oil and they turned out perfect! Thank you so very much for sharing this great and easy recipe! 🙂

  • Hi Lucy, thanks for reading Why Is There Air and for asking your question. As with most yeast breads, overnight slow rising in the refrigerator develops taste and texture and although I have not been organised enough to try this myself I would have thought it would work a charm. I have posted your question on the Why Is There Air Facebook page and hope other readers out there will share their experiences. Go on over to the page and Like it, and do let me know how your overnight English muffins turn out! https://www.facebook.com/pages/Why-is-There-Air/137609556277263

  • Hi! Excited to try these. Do you think I could shape them then refrigerate overnight to cook in the morning? Thanks.

  • Gosh thanks Uncle Natty for noticing that I forgot to tell you what to do with the butter! Oops! You of course put it into the TM bowl with the milk, sugar, yeast and water and melt it gently. I have updated the recipe accordingly and am very grateful for your eagle eye!

  • Excellent, Nora, I’m so pleased – and not at all surprised, it’s such a good recipe. Happy New Year to your and your family, too! Meilleurs voeux de bonheur et de santé pour 2014 et Happy Thermomix Cooking!

  • So, I made them this morning and they were FABULOUS! Thank you so much for the recipe, everybody adored them and I will be making them often it looks like!

  • Well then, Nora, I’m doubly pleased I published it tonight 🙂
    The results are really amazing and delicious. I was delighted at how nicely they came out. Bon appétit pour demain!

  • This recipe comes in the nick of time as I was planning to make eggs Benedict tomorrow and wanted to do English muffins to go with it. This promises to be a fantastic breakfast!

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