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2006-08-08 02:10:11 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Food & Drink Other - Food & Drink

4 answers

I'd say a cake...cos they're called jaffa cakes...although it is found in the buscuit aisle in asda. Hmmm... i'm confused now.

2006-08-08 02:14:06 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 3

A Jaffa Cake is a popular type of snack sold under a number of different brands, the market leader being McVitie's (United Biscuits). In the United Kingdom, Jaffa Cakes are classed as cakes for the purposes of taxation, but due to their size and high number per packaging, shops generally stock them within the biscuit section. The name is derived from Jaffa oranges.

McVitie's produce Jaffa Cakes in two different sizes (regular and mini) and in a number of different packaging formats (box, tube, pod and flow wrap).

Cake or biscuit?
Under UK law, no VAT is charged on biscuits and cakes — they are "zero rated". Chocolate covered biscuits, however, are classed as luxury items and are subject to VAT at 17.5%. McVitie's classed its Jaffa Cakes as cakes, but in 1991, this was challenged by HM Customs and Excise in court.[1] This may have been because Jaffa Cakes are about the same size and shape as some types of biscuit. The question which had to be answered was what criteria should be used to class something as a cake or biscuit. McVitie's defended the classification of Jaffa Cakes as a cake by producing a giant Jaffa Cake to illustrate that their Jaffa Cakes were simply mini cakes.

They also argued that the distinction between cakes and biscuits is simply that cakes go hard when stale, whereas biscuits go soft. It was demonstrated that Jaffa Cakes become hard when stale and McVitie's won the case.[2]

The issue was revisited in an article entitled 'Are Jaffa Cakes really biscuits?' published in the Journal of Unlikely Science (Volume 1, issue 7, 2005). [3] The article attempted to classify biscuits via a scientific analysis of various features (size, shape, filling etc.) and determined that the Jaffa Cake should be regarded as a biscuit, or 'pseudobiscuit'.

2006-08-08 09:16:57 · answer #2 · answered by Auntiem115 6 · 0 0

Jaffa cake is a biscuit with an orange jelly layer. Hope this answers your question

2006-08-08 09:17:06 · answer #3 · answered by Cool Chick 2 · 0 0

a muffin

2006-08-08 09:13:28 · answer #4 · answered by chef spicey 5 · 0 0

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