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How can there not be a date yet?

That's another uniquely American thing. What you call biscuits I dont even think the rest of the world has a word for them. It looks like a scone.

The rest of us use biscuits for what you call cookies. Now we have cookies as well but they're a specific type of biscuit.

I'm pretty sure you just made up your culture as you went along and then it stuck.
 
I'm pretty sure you just made up your culture as you went along and then it stuck.
that's pretty much how every culture has developed, along with the usual conquests and other diffusion methods. In the very early colonial period in what became the U.S., wheat was not as easy to obtain as it was in Europe. Maize was easy to grow. It had not really caught on in Europe, being considered lower than oats and barley and therefore not even poverty food, but animal fodder at best. The American colonists were were more quickly to adopt maize from the local natives, eating it as hominy grits, popcorn, etc, branching into johnny cakes, cornbread, tortillas, etc.

It would take the rest of the world a little longer to adopt a lot o the new-world superfoods like maize, potatoes, tomatoes, chili peppers than they did chocolate.
 
Chips or crisps
Fries or Chips?
Trunk or boot?

IIRC, some Americanisms are rooted in words and phrases that came over with colonization and took root, but in England wound up in the dustbin of history. My curiosity (and Google) discovered a Guernsey biscuit that looks a lot like an American biscuit. Could be that food came to America and the name stuck.
 
What is wrong with those cookies? They look like they're made of rice or something.
611e712faae84800128eae51.jpg

See the topography of a perfectly produced cookie.
Observe other examples of biscuits.
Bourbon_biscuit.jpg

images

Your education is now complete. Have a nice day.
 
Oh okay. The lumpiness was unfamiliar to me.

I too have received new knowledge this day.
The "lumpiness" looks like they are made with flattened oats in the batter, especially considering the bowl of oats on the right side of the photo. Oatmeal raisin cookies are a popular recipe in the US. Sample recipe and more pictures here:

Personally, I prefer oatmeal cookies with chocolate chips instead of raisins.
Drop cookies like this often have a soft and chewy texture, different from crispy shortbread biscuits.

Kor
 
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The "lumpiness" looks like they are made with flattened oats in the batter, especially considering the bowl of oats on the right side of the photo. Oatmeal raisin cookies are a popular recipe in the US. Sample recipe and more pictures here:

Personally, I prefer oatmeal cookies with chocolate chips instead of raisins.
Drop cookies like this often have a soft and chewy texture, different from crispy shortbread biscuits.

Kor
Chocolate chips are the superior cookie augmentation. I feel world peace could be achieved shared over choc chip cookies.
 
Scones ARE like Irish Soda Bread, usually done very dry and on the hard side here, made for dipping in one's choice of drink.

Biscuits still have some moisture in them and are soft, even a day or two later if stored properly.
 
Maize was easy to grow. It had not really caught on in Europe, being considered lower than oats and barley and therefore not even poverty food, but animal fodder at best. The American colonists were were more quickly to adopt maize from the local natives, eating it as hominy grits, popcorn, etc, branching into johnny cakes, cornbread, tortillas, etc.
The native Mesoamerican people were, as a culture, some of the best plant-breeders and agronomists the world has ever known. They took a wild cereal grain, with tiny ears (I would guess no bigger than the "baby corn" occasionally found on salad bars), and individually husked kernels, and bred it into something that fed the entire Western Hemisphere. Along the way, they found, and bred, a mutant whose kernels, when cooked, would explosively turn themselves inside out, producing something that could be eaten as a cold breakfast cereal or as a warm snack, another mutant whose not-quite-ripe kernels were palatable and sweet. They discovered, probably by accident (maybe kernels getting mixed with fire ashes) that when the kernels are exposed to a strong base, the tough outermost layer of bran shriveled up and could be washed away, making them easier to grind. They found that CaOH worked even better than ashes. They eventually learned that the treated -- nixtamalized -- corn was more nutritious than untreated corn, because nixtamalization makes certain nutrients bioavailable to those of us who only have one stomach.
 
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