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  2. Biscuit (bread) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biscuit_(bread)

    In the United States, a biscuit is a variety of baked bread with a firm, dry exterior and a soft, crumbly interior. In Canada it sometimes also refers to this or a traditional European biscuit. It is made with baking powder as a leavening agent rather than yeast, and at times is called a baking powder biscuit to differentiate it from other ...

  3. Biscuit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biscuit

    A biscuit, in many English-speaking countries, including Britain, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, India, and South Africa but not Canada or the US, is a flour-based baked and shaped food item. Biscuits are typically hard, flat, and unleavened. They are usually sweet and may be made with sugar, chocolate, icing, jam, ginger, or cinnamon.

  4. Digestive biscuit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digestive_biscuit

    Sometimes, the biscuit is dunked into the tea and eaten quickly due to the biscuit's tendency to disintegrate when wet. Digestive biscuits are one of the top 10 biscuits in the UK for dunking in tea. [5] The digestive biscuit is also used as a cracker with cheeses, and is often included in "cracker selection" packets.

  5. Biscuit tin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biscuit_tin

    Biscuit tins are steel cans [6] made of tin plate.This consists of steel sheets thinly coated with tin. The sheets are then bent to shape. By about 1850, Great Britain had become the dominant world supplier of tin plate, through a combination of technical innovation and political control over most of the suppliers of tin ore.

  6. Cookie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cookie

    Where biscuit is the most common term, "cookie" often only refers to one type of biscuit, a chocolate chip cookie. [5] However, in some regions both terms are used. The container used to store cookies may be called a cookie jar. In Scotland, the term "cookie" is sometimes used to describe a plain bun. [6]

  7. Hardtack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardtack

    The name is derived from "tack", the British sailor slang for food. The earliest use of the term recorded by the Oxford English Dictionary is from 1830. [3]It is known by other names including brewis (possibly a cognate with "brose"), cabin bread, pilot bread, sea biscuit, soda crackers, sea bread (as rations for sailors), ship's biscuit, and pejoratively as dog biscuits, molar breakers, sheet ...

  8. Bojangles has a 49-step biscuit-making process. The ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/bojangles-49-step-biscuit...

    Bojangles, a fast food chain specializing in fried chicken, has a 49-step process to making their buttermilk biscuits. ... "Biscuits were one of those cheap foods," he says. (Photo: Bojangles)

  9. Garibaldi biscuit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garibaldi_biscuit

    However, it is more likely it was first manufactured by the Bermondsey biscuit company Peek Freans in 1861 following the recruitment of Jonathan Carr, one of the great biscuit makers of Carlisle. [7] In the United States, the Sunshine Biscuit Company for many years made a popular version of the Garibaldi with raisins which it called "Golden Fruit".