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What do you call a bread roll?

(123 Posts)
Cabbie21 Sun 24-Nov-24 08:26:51

Following on from the buns thread, what do you call a bread roll?
Roll in the south?
Teacake or breadcake in Yorkshire?
Cob in the Midlands.
Bap- where?

Aveline Sun 24-Nov-24 08:27:33

A roll.

tanith Sun 24-Nov-24 08:29:14

A roll, preferably crusty

ferry23 Sun 24-Nov-24 08:29:59

South east - a bread roll is a roll. Anything that isn't a bread roll is something else. grin

Georgesgran Sun 24-Nov-24 08:30:31

Bread bun (NE)

NannyJan53 Sun 24-Nov-24 08:30:47

Bap

NannyJan53 Sun 24-Nov-24 08:31:11

Meant to say...Black Country, West Midlands

ginny Sun 24-Nov-24 08:33:47

Usually a roll but if it is soft and floury on top it is a bap.

PaperMonster Sun 24-Nov-24 08:50:34

A bread roll to me is small and crusty, whereas a barmcake is larger and flatter. A tea cake has currants in. I’m NW England.

MissInterpreted Sun 24-Nov-24 08:51:06

ferry23

South east - a bread roll is a roll. Anything that isn't a bread roll is something else. grin

I'm in Scotland and I would say exactly the same!

keepingquiet Sun 24-Nov-24 09:18:27

Breadcake- where do I live?

BlueBelle Sun 24-Nov-24 09:19:54

A bread roll is a bread roll

Jane43 Sun 24-Nov-24 09:24:23

The long ones, such as the ones used to make hamburgers, we call rolls, the round, soft ones we call baps and the round, crusty ones we call cobs. To us anything called a tea cake has dried fruit in it.

mae13 Sun 24-Nov-24 09:31:53

Just a roll.

MissAdventure Sun 24-Nov-24 09:35:21

A roll.

Greyduster Sun 24-Nov-24 09:35:30

Here in South Yorkshire they are bread cakes or oven bottom cakes.
As others have said, tea cakes have dried fruit in them.

MissChateline Sun 24-Nov-24 09:41:48

Barm cake or oven bottom in Lancashire.

Fleurpepper Sun 24-Nov-24 09:42:52

Depends where I am at the time.

Tiley Sun 24-Nov-24 09:43:27

Bread roll on South West England.

Marmin Sun 24-Nov-24 09:47:48

A dangerous question. A cob for me. I saw some behind the bar in a Watford pub about forty years ago. I asked 'what is in your cobs?'
The barmaid called the manager, repeated my question and he threw me out for being obscene. I only wanted to know whether they were cheese or ham.

Georgesgran Sun 24-Nov-24 09:52:28

Of course we also have stotties up here in the North East too.

Kate1949 Sun 24-Nov-24 09:53:41

Here in Birmingham, if a roll is soft, it's a roll. If it's crusty, it's a cob.

MissInterpreted Sun 24-Nov-24 09:54:02

Jane43

The long ones, such as the ones used to make hamburgers, we call rolls, the round, soft ones we call baps and the round, crusty ones we call cobs. To us anything called a tea cake has dried fruit in it.

I'm curious as to what kind of 'long' roll you use for hamburgers? I've never seen a burger on anything other than a round roll of one kind or another.

BlueSapphire Sun 24-Nov-24 10:04:00

Always a bread roll, but my lovely Lancashire DM-in-law called them tea-cakes.

nanna8 Sun 24-Nov-24 10:24:49

I thought tea cakes had currants in them. Here a bread roll is a bread roll though there are ‘dinner rolls’ which are smaller and Turkish rolls which are bigger and made from Turkish bread. Then there’s hamburger rolls (usually softer white bread) and brioche rolls, the sweeter ones with a glaze on top.