actually yes. While biscuits are not sweet, more of a side with a meal to put jam, butter or honey on, and look exactly like what you made, scones are sweetened, usually cut in triangles, (sometimes round) sometimes topped with sugar or icing. So biscuits here are more like a bread, while scones are more like something to have with tea or coffee. At least in the USA.
Gotcha,, I have always made mine round. but I know the ones you mean a round cut almost through and baked in the round.
I some times make the plain ones with cheese or herbs or I have been known to use the same plain dough and drop as little dollops into beef stew, like a dumpling.
Sweet ones yes, to have with jam and cream, thick heavy cream in preference to whipped cream, Devonshire scald cream, yum.... qahtan
You might want to consider consolidating all your photos in one thread. You don't really need an individual one for every picture you take.
Yea but I don't know how to do that....... same as I cannot transfer some of my pictures from Photobucket to TFL.
qahtan
How thick was the dough when you cut them out?
Paul
I dunno I suppose about 1/2 inch they rise well over twice size. qahtan
These look like beautiful high rise biscuits to me. They are scones?
scones in UK, biscuits in U S A, is there a difference.????? qahtan
actually yes. While biscuits are not sweet, more of a side with a meal to put jam, butter or honey on, and look exactly like what you made, scones are sweetened, usually cut in triangles, (sometimes round) sometimes topped with sugar or icing. So biscuits here are more like a bread, while scones are more like something to have with tea or coffee. At least in the USA.
Gotcha,, I have always made mine round. but I know the ones you mean a round cut almost through and baked in the round.
I some times make the plain ones with cheese or herbs or I have been known to use the same plain dough and drop as little dollops into beef stew, like a dumpling.
Sweet ones yes, to have with jam and cream, thick heavy cream in preference to whipped cream, Devonshire scald cream, yum.... qahtan