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Evil One
05 Aug 2010, 20:21
What's your favourite (in the UK sense of the word) biscuit? I've left off the chocolate digestives/hobnobs because they would easily win! :twisted:

Wario
05 Aug 2010, 20:25
SHortbread Fingers :))

daveake
05 Aug 2010, 20:29
What's your favourite (in the UK sense of the word) biscuit? I've left off the chocolate digestives/hobnobs because they would easily win! :twisted:

:-)

I wondered why "Plain chocolate hobnob" was nowhere to be seen!

AndyK
05 Aug 2010, 20:32
Pink Wafer doesn't deserve to be in a list of "biscuits".

"Other" includes Foxes Ginger Crunch Creams which are the best of the non-chocolate options.

Evil One
05 Aug 2010, 20:37
Pink Wafer doesn't deserve to be in a list of "biscuits".

"Other" includes Foxes Ginger Crunch Creams which are the best of the non-chocolate options.
Find an admin who can change it then! :raspberry:

AndyK
05 Aug 2010, 20:42
Would be unethical to abuse my powers in such a way :p

suzieq
05 Aug 2010, 20:48
In US terms ...is a biscuit a cookie?

AndyK
05 Aug 2010, 20:54
In US terms ...is a biscuit a cookie?

No, it's a biscuit. You erronesouly call it a cookie. :))

In the same way that a pavement is still a pavement no matter what side of the Atlantic it's on as far as we're concerned in the UK :p

suzieq
05 Aug 2010, 21:22
No, it's a biscuit. You erronesouly call it a cookie. :))


I'll be sure to blame my parents because all my years, the biscuit was for the dog.

AndyK
05 Aug 2010, 21:28
Just to confuse you even more, biscuits are for dogs as well.

suzieq
05 Aug 2010, 21:54
They say English is the hardest language to learn.

Wario
05 Aug 2010, 21:59
what does cookie mean in Britain then?

suzieq
05 Aug 2010, 22:01
what does cookie mean in Britain then?

I reckon' something to do with computers and cleaning them out or enabling them.

A Slice Of English
05 Aug 2010, 22:02
Rich Tea for me. Just nothing better with a brew IMO.

And Wario, our cookies are specific TYPES of biscuits, usually a sweet biscuit with chocolate chips in it.

mszee
05 Aug 2010, 22:09
Yeah...NOT dog biscuit...something else...which is Caramel Latte Biscotti...and I am sure you Brits will have it too soon...ummm...or even sooner...

unbekannt
05 Aug 2010, 22:12
Now I'm hungry…

CarylB
05 Aug 2010, 22:18
what does cookie mean in Britain then?

It means cookie .. and cooies are cooked only once. Chewy, tending to be soft rather than crisp and crunchy. We have cookies in Britain. Just like those in the USA, usually higher fat content, they're different to biscuits; and moister, so aren't much good for dunking.

Biscuits are as Andy said, just that. Meaning twice cooked, (like biscotti) so they are dry and crisp; perfect for dunking as they can absorb liquid without dropping to bits. And they soften when they go stale; the basis of why Jaffa Cakes are cakes, as they go dry and harden when they get stale.

And as Andy says, a wafer isn't a biscuit .. it's a wafer, also cooked once.

Caryl

mszee
05 Aug 2010, 22:21
It means cookie .. and cooies are cooked only once. Chewy, tending to be soft rather than crisp and crunchy. We have cookies in Britain. Just like those in the USA, usually higher fat content, they're different to biscuits; and moister, so aren't much good for dunking.

Biscuits are as Andy said, just that. Meaning twice cooked, so they are dry and crisp; perfect for dunking as they can absorb liquid without dropping to bits. And they soften when they go stale; the basis of why Jaffa Cakes are cakes, as they go dry and harden when they get stale.

And as Andy says, a wafer isn't a biscuit .. it's a wafer, also cooked once.

Caryl

I thought all cookies are called biscuits...then I guess we call it biscotti...which is the same crap only in Italian...

A Slice Of English
05 Aug 2010, 22:24
Well whilst cookies are often slightly chewy, you also have the issue of "Maryland cookies" which are crisp and crunchy, not chewy ;p

CarylB
05 Aug 2010, 23:15
Well whilst cookies are often slightly chewy, you also have the issue of "Maryland cookies" which are crisp and crunchy, not chewy ;p

I'm not saying they're all named right :) .. Maryland Cookies have been around for years, a chocolate chip/nut biscuit launched as a variation on American cookies, but still baked twice to appeal to the UK taste for a crunchy biscuit. It's a brand name after all, and most people would regard them as biscuits, and they're on the biscuits shelf, as opposed to cookies which are generally in clear plastic containers and on or near the bakery section.

But biscuit means twice baked, and basically therein you have the difference between an American style cookie, and the European biscuit. And basically imo we do differentiate between American style cookies and biscuits here, whereas in the USA they call all varieties, whether crisp or not, cookies (probably because they have "biscuits" which are closer in shape and texture to our scones, although not twice baked .. so arguably mis-named "bis-cuit" ;) )

The point is surely that no-one in the UK is likely to refer to digestives, rich tea, Jammy Dodgers, custard creams or Nice as "cookies", but rather as "biscuits". Whereas we do have moist, chewy cookies, like those in the USA, which we too call cookies.

Caryl

AndyK
05 Aug 2010, 23:47
And as Andy says, a wafer isn't a biscuit .. it's a wafer, also cooked once.



A pink wafer isn't even food IMO. It's only use is representing a bath tub in a police reconstruction.

CarylB
06 Aug 2010, 00:19
Or (if not pink) making a small brick of ice-cream manageable :) Remember those?

Caryl

24K
06 Aug 2010, 00:58
No, it's a biscuit. You erronesouly call it a cookie. :))

In the same way that a pavement is still a pavement no matter what side of the Atlantic it's on as far as we're concerned in the UK :p

PMPL !

mszee
06 Aug 2010, 01:52
Did you know..and I am definitely NOT kidding...I've posted this here with actual link quoting Telegraph...more than half of Britons were injured by biscuits ranging from scalding from high tea/coffee while dunking...or breaking a tooth during the morning tea break...

I guess I'll stick with cookies...those...once baked...

Couch Potato
06 Aug 2010, 02:25
OHHHHH this is my kind of language my freind...ohh I love biscuits...mmmm Im going to have a few chocolate creams now

We should do a poll on the favourate Pie!!

MMMM Chicken and Mushroom

melon
06 Aug 2010, 13:26
Noooo, subway choc chip cookies are the best, followed closely by my mum's Peanut butter cookies

carole
06 Aug 2010, 13:44
We have tim tams here covered with dark chocolate and a raspberry filling, they are yummy!!!!!!

Carole

wolfy35
06 Aug 2010, 15:28
We should do a poll on the favourate Pie!!



Now that would be a poll worth voting for. Pork pies would have to be on it but would need 2 catagories, Supermarket/mass market or real butchers made ones.

As someone who lives near to a butcher who constantly wins prizes for his Porkers ( Growlers as we call them in Yorkshire ) I would vote for them no questions.

Back to biscuits however... Cant we just agree that they are all good?

cujo
08 Aug 2010, 09:40
You simply cannot beat a Jammy Dodger!

Couch Potato
09 Aug 2010, 01:47
I love pork Pies, but the crust has to be reallyy hard n crispy n the meat has to be nice and soft, not too big on the jelly mind. But I love pork pies...mm and yorkshire puds!!

as i tend to say alot ' Tha Cant wack a jammy dodger'

Rage Against
09 Aug 2010, 03:26
I'm not sure if it's a list of biscuits (cookies) or a list of bad porn star names. :D