Biscuit
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Variations in meaning
- In the
United States and sometimes in Canada, it is a small, soft, leavened bread, somewhat
similar to a scone, though
generally softer and fluffier. Although yeast may be used as a leavening
agent, it is often replaced or supplemented with baking powder or baking soda. A Southern regional variation
on the term, "beaten biscuit",
is closer to the British variety. In Canada, the British phrasing is also
commonly used as the country is part of the Commonwealth of
Nations.
- In Commonwealth
English, it is a small baked product that would be called
either a "cookie" or a "cracker" in the United States and
sometimes a "cookie" in English-speaking
Canada.[1] Biscuits in the United Kingdom and Ireland
may be savoury (savoury biscuits are often referred to as
"crackers") or sweet, such as chocolate biscuits, ginger nuts, custard creams, or the Nice biscuit. Although in Commonwealth
Nations, the term "cookie" may be synonymous with
"biscuit", a cookie is generally a softer baked product.
Etymology
The modern-day
confusion in the English language around the word "biscuit" is
created by its etymology.
The Middle French word bescuit is derived from
the Latin words bis (twice) and coquere,
coctus (to cook, cooked), and, hence, means "twice-cooked".[2] This is because biscuits were
originally cooked in a twofold process: first baked, and then dried out in a
slow oven.[3] This term was then adapted into English
in the 14th century during the Middle Ages, in the Middle English word bisquite, to represent
a hard, twice-baked product.[4]
However, the Dutch language from around 1703 had adopted the
word koekje ("little cake") to have a similar meaning for a
similar hard, baked product.[5] This may be related[citation needed]
to the Russian or Ukrainian translation, where "biscuit" has come to
mean "sponge cake". The
difference between the secondary Dutch word and that of Latin origin is that,
whereas the koekje is a cake that rises during baking, the biscuit,
which has no raising agent, in general does not (see gingerbread/ginger biscuit), except for the expansion of
heated air during baking.[citation needed]
When Europeans
began to emigrate to the United States, the two words and their "same but
different" meanings began to clash. After the American War of
Independence against the British, the word cookie became the word of
choice to mean a hard, twice-baked product.[citation needed]
Further confusion has been added by the adoption of the word biscuit for a
small leavened bread popular in the United States.
Today,
according to the American English dictionary Merriam-Webster, a cookie is a "small flat
or slightly raised cake".[5] A biscuit is "any of various hard
or crisp dry baked product" similar to the American English terms cracker
or cookie,[4] or "a small quick bread made from
dough that has been rolled out and cut or dropped from a spoon".[4]
In modern
Italian usage, the term biscotto is used to refer to any type of hard
twice-baked biscuit, and not only to the cantuccini as in the past.
History
Biscuits for travel
The need for
nutritious, easy-to-store, easy-to-carry, and long-lasting foods on long
journeys, in particular at sea, was initially solved by taking live food along
with a butcher/cook. However,
this took up additional space on what were either horse-powered treks or small
ships, reducing the time of travel before additional food was required. This
resulted in early armies' adopting the style of hunter-foraging.
The
introduction of the baking of processed cereals including the
creation of flour provided a more reliable source of food. Egyptian
sailors carried a flat, brittle loaf of millet bread called dhourra cake, while the Romans had a biscuit called buccellum.[6] Roman cookbook Apicius describes: "a thick paste of
fine wheat flour was boiled and spread out on a plate. When it had dried and
hardened, it was cut up and then fried until crisp, then served with honey and
pepper."
Many early
physicians believed that most medicinal problems were associated with digestion. Hence, for both sustenance and
avoidance of illness, a daily consumption of a biscuit was considered good for
health.
Hard biscuits
soften as they age. To solve this problem, early bakers attempted to create the
hardest biscuit possible. Because it is so hard and dry, if properly stored and
transported, navies' hardtack will survive rough
handling and high temperature. Baked hard, it can be kept
without spoiling for years as long as it is kept dry. For long voyages,
hardtack was baked four times, rather than the more common two, and prepared
six months before sailing.[7] To soften hardtack for eating, it was
often dunked in brine, coffee, or some other liquid or cooked into a skillet meal.
The more
refined captain's biscuit was made with finer flour.[citation needed]
At the time of
the Spanish Armada in 1588, the daily allowance on
board a Royal Navy ship was one pound of biscuit plus one gallon of beer. Samuel Pepys in 1667 first regularised naval
victualling with varied and nutritious rations. Royal Navy hardtack during Queen Victoria's reign was made by machine at the
Royal Clarence Victualling Yard at Gosport, Hampshire, stamped with the Queen's mark
and the number of the oven in which they were baked. Biscuits remained an
important part of the Royal Navy sailor's diet until the introduction of canned foods. Canned meat was first marketed in
1814; preserved beef in tins was officially added to Royal Navy rations in 1847.[6]
Confectionery biscuits
Early biscuits
were hard, dry, and unsweetened. They were most often cooked after bread, in a
cooling bakers' oven; they were a cheap form of sustenance for the poor.
By the seventh
century AD, cooks of the Persian empire had
learnt from their forebears the secrets of lightening and enriching bread-based
mixtures with eggs, butter, and cream, and sweetening them with fruit and
honey.[8] One of the earliest spiced biscuits was
gingerbread, in French pain d'épices,
meaning "spice bread", brought to Europe in 992 by the Armenian monk Grégoire de Nicopolis. He left Nicopolis Pompeii, of Lesser Armenia to live in Bondaroy, France, near the town of Pithiviers. He stayed there for seven years, and
taught French priests and Christians how to cook gingerbread.[9][10][11] This was originally a dense, treaclely (molasses-based) spice cake or bread.
As it was so expensive to make, early ginger biscuits were a cheap form of using up the
leftover bread mix.
With the
combination of the Muslim invasion of the Iberian Peninsula,
and then the Crusades developing the spice trade, the cooking techniques and
ingredients of Arabia spread into Northern Europe.[8] By mediaeval times, biscuits were made from a
sweetened, spiced paste of breadcrumbs and then baked (e.g., gingerbread), or
from cooked bread enriched with sugar and spices and then baked again.[12] King Richard I of England (aka Richard the
Lionheart) left for the Third Crusade
(1189–92) with "biskit of muslin", which was a mixed corn compound of
barley, rye, and bean
flour.[6]
As the making
and quality of bread had been controlled to this point, so were the skills of
biscuit-making through the craft guilds.[8] As the supply of sugar began, and the
refinement and supply of flour increased, so did the ability to sample more
leisurely foodstuffs, including sweet biscuits. Early references from the Vadstena monastery
show how the Swedish nuns were baking gingerbread to ease digestion in
1444.[13] The first documented trade of
gingerbread biscuits dates to the 16th century, where they were sold in
monastery pharmacies and town square farmers markets. Gingerbread became widely
available in the 18th century. The British biscuit firms of Carrs,
Huntley & Palmer,
and Crawfords were all
established by 1850.[14]
Hence, along
with local farm produce of meat and cheese, many regions of the world have
their own distinct style of biscuit, so old is this form of food.
Biscuits today
Most modern
biscuits can trace their origins back to either the hardtack ship's biscuit, or
the creative art of the baker:
- Ship's
biscuit derived: Digestive, rich tea, Abernethy,
cracker[citation needed]
- Baker's
art: Biscuit rose de
Reims
Biscuits today
can be savoury or sweet, but most are small at around
5 cm (2.0 in) in diameter, and flat. The term biscuit also applies to
sandwich-type biscuits, wherein a layer of "creme" or icing is sandwiched between two biscuits, such as
the custard cream, or a layer of jam (as in biscuits
which, in the United Kingdom, are known as "Jammy Dodgers")
Sweet biscuits
are commonly eaten as a snack food, and are, in
general, made with wheat flour or oats, and sweetened with sugar or honey.
Varieties may contain chocolate, fruit, jam, nuts, or even be used to sandwich
other fillings. Usually, a dedicated section for sweet biscuits is found in
most European supermarkets.
In Britain, the
digestive biscuit
and rich tea have a strong cultural identity as the
traditional accompaniment to a cup of tea, and are regularly eaten as such.
Many tea drinkers "dunk" their
biscuits in tea, allowing them to absorb liquid and soften slightly before
consumption.
Savoury
biscuits or crackers (such as cream crackers, water biscuits, oatcakes, or crisp breads) are usually plainer and commonly
eaten with cheese following a meal. Other savoury biscuits include the Jewish
biscuits known as matzos. Many savoury biscuits also contain
additional ingredients for flavour or texture, such as poppy seeds, onion or onion seeds, cheese (such
as cheese melts), and olives. Savoury biscuits also usually have a dedicated
section in most European supermarkets, often in the same aisle as sweet
biscuits. The exception to savoury biscuits is the sweetmeal digestive known as
the "Hovis biscuit",
which, although slightly sweet, is still classified as a cheese biscuit.
Savoury biscuits sold in supermarkets are sometimes associated with a certain
geographical area, such as Scottish oatcakes or Cornish wafer biscuits.
In general,
Australians, South Africans, New Zealanders, Kenyans, Indians, Pakistanis, Sri
Lankans, Singaporeans, and the Irish use the British meaning of
"biscuit" for the sweet biscuit. In both Canada and Australasia, the
terms biscuit and cookie are used interchangeably, depending on the region and
the speaker, with biscuits usually referring to hard, sweet biscuits (such as
digestives, Nice, Bourbon creams, etc.) and cookies for soft baked goods (i.e.
chocolate chip cookies). Two famous Australasian biscuit varieties are the ANZAC biscuit and the Tim Tam. This sense is at the root of the name of
the United States' most prominent maker of cookies and crackers, the National
Biscuit Company, now called Nabisco.
Biscuits and gravy
is a popular breakfast dish in much of North America, especially in the Southern United States.
It consists of soft, unsweetened dough biscuits covered in thick "country," "sausage," or
"white" gravy, also known as sawmill gravy, made from the drippings of cooked
pork sausage, white
flour, milk, and often (but not always) bits of sausage, bacon,
ground beef, or other meat. The gravy is often flavored with black pepper.
The entire wiki
link can be found at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biscuit
During hard times, even "drop
biscuits" can be pretty good for the hungry. One name our ancestors used
was indian pone. Basically one mixes some kind of flour with water, and
"drops" it on a surface cooker, like a fry pan. Of course one can
jazz it up, too.
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