Warrigal
SF VIP
- Location
- Sydney, Australia
What is a biscuit served with veal?When I first moved to the US……
I asked where the lift was and no one knew what I was talking about.
I was asked if I wanted a biscuit with my veal and I was excited thinking I was getting dessert as well.
I couldn’t understand how jelly could stay on the peanut butter sandwich.
When I asked the grocery guy where the rock melon was he was clueless.
A warm round thing that is usually sliced in half, and has gravy poured over it, as a side dish to a main meal. A typical example in the USA is "biscuits and white gravy" as a breakfast side dish. In America a biscuit is not what it is in the rest of the English speaking world. JImB.What is a biscuit served with veal?
@Ronni, what’s a rock melon when it’s at home?When I asked the grocery guy where the rock melon was he was clueless.
A cantaloupe . The term rock melon is used in Australia. JImB.@Ronni, what’s a rock melon when it’s at home?
A biscuit is a mix of flour, salt, baking powder, butter or lard, pince of sugar & buttermilk to form a soft dough with no kneading required. Depending on the recipe, it can be either rolled & cut out with a round cutter & put on a baking sheet, dropped in large spoonfuls on a baking sheet or made into floured balls & put in a hot cast iron skillet or baking pan. They are baked until fluffy, golden brown & served hot. You can serve them with any meal or have them as a snack w/butter & jam during the day.What is a biscuit served with veal?




Biscuits in Canada look like this....Link. McVitie's Canada Americans would call them cookies. Isn't English a simple language ? JimB.
Our biscuits originated in Europe, but over many years cooks here added other ingredients, but didn't change the name. They fluffy version didn't happen until baking powder appeared in the mid-1800's.I never understood why the US calls something that is soft and fluffy a biscuit.
Cantaloupe.@Ronni, what’s a rock melon when it’s at home?
Yup, that's how Papa ended up emphasis on British English growing up, but then turned both main languages into International parlez!
Where did you live in Canada ? Jim inToronto.Yup, that's how Papa ended up emphasis on British English growing up, but then turned both main languages into International parlez!
Just the now, I was online looking for stationary that I'd used at work in Canada. Unfortunately, had to use the British term in order to find item I was specifically looking for
A simple search for "Index Cards" turned into "Lined Cards" which I finally found at Poundland hehehe. The subtlety of twang, lingo, slang and all.
Add to that the local just to our area French, then the French from relatives from The Netherlands and adding the regional parts of French from France and it's a Babylon Tower all over again.
Everyday, I have to think rapidly into which item I'm looking for. Example, two days ago went to butcher. Explaining which baked meat pastry I was looking for.
So, I said... "It definitely had puff pastry, minced beef and onions. Although not certain if it had swedes and/or mashed potatoes..."
He said... "Cornish Pastie?" Nope, I said. Then "Bridie's?" Yes! I've now a butcher for life. The Bridies were sublime lol!
It’s a typo, that’s what it isWhat is a biscuit served with veal?
McDonalds did not invent fries!I'm sorry, all you UKers, it's fries and chips. It's nice about the history of "crisps", but it's still fries and chips.
No McDonalds, in the US, every asked, "Do you want "chips" with that?" Since the first burger hit the grill, it's been, "fries"- you can't argue with that kind of history, especially from McDonalds.
BTW, in the US, we eat fish and chips, so go figure.![]()
Oh, hard tack!As you say, and also in the UK, a biscuit is as the link you provided. A typical British 'biscuit' is hard and can be 'snapped' in half. Traditional British biscuits were baked twice to remove moisture so they would last longer in storage, particularly when being kept on board a British Royal Navy sailing ship.
The word 'biscuit' is then appropriate when taking this into account: 'biscuit,' bis-cuit, meaning twice-cooked.
In the UK, there is pottery called 'Biscuit ware,' named so because it is pottery that is fired twice in a kiln. I never understood why the US calls something that is soft and fluffy a biscuit.
You can tell @fuzzybuddy that but I don't think he'll go for it.McDonalds did not invent fries!
The Belgians did that in the 17th century.
American soldiers brought the word "fries" back to the US
after the war.