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When I was writing this answer I realized that I have no idea what to call the dips in muffin/cupcake tins. I used to call them cups but when I looked it up I found that the cups are the paper inserts or liners you put into the dips or whatever they are called.

What is the right terminology?

Joe
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GdD
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2 Answers2

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Looking at Amazon listings and Wikipedia Cup seems to be the correct terminology, or at least the most common one.

Alternative names I found are cavity and well, which also seem adequate.

The paper cups are known by many names including but not limited to cup liners, paper liners, muffin wrappers, muffin cases, baking liners among others.

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    I would add (muffin) cases as a name for the paper cups. – dbmag9 Jul 26 '22 at 12:58
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    At one bakery was asked to grab a 24hole rather than a 12. Nowadays I use individual aluminum 2.6" cups with paper liners on a standard tray. Easily stack to store, clean up only on sticky cups. Recycle mangled ones. Tipping out idividual muffins safer against damage. – Pat Sommer Aug 01 '22 at 05:30
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    I use ‘depression’ which also works for things like poffertjes pans – Joe Aug 01 '22 at 12:29
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I saw one recipe that called for "a 12-count muffin pan."

jconcord
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    So your contention is that “12 count” here doesn’t have its normal meaning of “there’s twelve things”, but instead means that each individual cup is called a “count”? – Sneftel Aug 01 '22 at 07:25
  • Presumably that's what the recipe author was thinking. Sounds 'generic' to me in that it would be suitable for poffertjes pans, etc. Seems that there is no one answer to the OP's question "What is the right terminology?" – jconcord Aug 02 '22 at 20:50