Do you treat yourself and eat a different style of breakfast on a weekend or do you prefer brunch late morning? Everyone has their favourite guilty pleasure whether it's a simple bacon butty or the Full English. My personal favourite is large roasted Portobello mushroom on a small soft breakfast bap, not forgetting the HP Sauce!
Anyway, moving on I thought I'd suggest something completely different but first a puzzle … when is a biscuit not a biscuit? Answer … when it's a scone!
To explain – in the USA what we call a biscuit they call a cookie and what they call a biscuit we call a scone. They are generally savoury, i.e. without sugar and usually made with buttermilk.
Famously there's “biscuits & gravy”. As so often is the case a lot of dishes or elements thereof are born out of lack of ingredients and using what was plentiful and, more to the point, cheap. The “biscuit” is described as soft and doughy and the “gravy” usually made with dripping from pork sausages adding flour and milk and then seasoning. Other cheaper cuts of meat would also be used.
Here's a snippet of background.
“Biscuits and gravy” is very popular in the Southern States i.e. North and South Carolina (but not exclusively). I mention the Carolinas only because I've spent time there and so can back up my mouth! It became a regional dish after the American Revolutionary War of 1775-1783.
Have you ever noticed how history repeats itself? Not that long ago I wrote at length about Cornish Pasties - this iconic delicacy evolved from humble and cheap beginnings to feed hungry tin miners who were underground for many hours. It's the same principle with biscuits and gravy – substitute tin mine with a day working on a plantation.
You probably won't be surprised to learn that there's a restaurant chain called Biscuitville in North Carolina and Virginia specialising in breakfast food and Southern cuisine.
What follows is my take on a “biscuit” - aka scone - as a breakfast choice and what to put with it!
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