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2006-10-06 04:14:57 · 41 answers · asked by stephen m 3 in Education & Reference Trivia

41 answers

Did you know that a jaffa cake is a cake and not a biscuit. A biscuit goes soft when stale, a cake goes hard. Therefore a jaffa cake is a cake. A useless bit of information for yis all there!!

2006-10-06 04:25:24 · answer #1 · answered by spongebbob79 2 · 0 0

Biscuit

2006-10-06 04:37:42 · answer #2 · answered by Rachel H 1 · 0 0

It depends on which country that your in.

I've had 'biscuits' I'd call 'fruit cakes' ...to look at, but a 'bun' on the eating and taste. There area number of similar examples.

Here in the UK, what we calla 'biscuit' Americans call 'cookies' - because i think the word they use comes from the Dutch language (so I was told some years ago).


Sash.

2006-10-08 03:43:50 · answer #3 · answered by sashtou 7 · 0 0

Biscuit - specifically chocolate hobnobs which define biscuitry and should be aspired to by other biscuits.

I personally know a number of cakes which would happily trade their spongey goodness for just a single day as a chocolate hobnob.

2006-10-06 04:41:28 · answer #4 · answered by wondergecko 2 · 0 0

Cake!

2006-10-06 04:36:50 · answer #5 · answered by sei 1 · 0 0

both i'll have a jaffa cake .
its a biscuit and a cake at the same time

2006-10-06 04:22:22 · answer #6 · answered by andrew m 2 · 0 0

Chocolate fudge cake!

2006-10-06 04:49:16 · answer #7 · answered by claire 5 · 0 0

Cake - preferably carrot cake with cream cheese icing, mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm yummmmmy

2006-10-06 04:23:51 · answer #8 · answered by Mas 7 · 0 0

oh what a question got to be cake.unless the biscuit comes with a cuppa

2006-10-06 04:18:07 · answer #9 · answered by john b 2 · 0 0

cake

2006-10-06 04:26:07 · answer #10 · answered by angelinyourdreams99_us 3 · 0 0

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