It is basically a scone, but it's what we call a biscuit. I think the main difference is ours are never really sweet, whereas scones quite often are.What the hell is that thing in the bottom left of that image, Blade. Looks like a Scone.
It is basically a scone, but it's what we call a biscuit. I think the main difference is ours are never really sweet, whereas scones quite often are.What the hell is that thing in the bottom left of that image, Blade. Looks like a Scone.
What the hell is that thing in the bottom left of that image, Blade. Looks like a Scone.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cookie
Judging by this, no one is wrong and no one is right. It's just the Yanks being awkward again.
English logic dictates that: A biscuit goes soft when it grows stale and a cake goes hard when it grows stale. Scones are cakes and cookies are biscuits, so even if a Oreo was a cookie it would still be a biscuit.
What the hell is that thing in the bottom left of that image, Blade. Looks like a Scone.
It is basically a scone, but it's what we call a biscuit. I think the main difference is ours are never really sweet, whereas scones quite often are.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OreoOreo is a trademark for a popular sandwich cookie by the Nabisco Division of Kraft Foods. The current design consists of a sweet, white filling commonly referred to as 'cream' or 'creme', sandwiched between two circular chocolate or golden cookie pieces.