British (American): 1/4 lb of butter (a stick of butter) 6 fliud oz/16 TB (1 cup) Aubergine (eggplant) Back bacon/Gammon (Canadian bacon) Bain Marie (double boiler) Baking fat (shortening) Bap (soft white roll) Biscuit (cookie) Broad bean (fava bean) Brawn (head cheese) Chickpeas (Garbanzo beans) Cling film (Saran wrap) Cocktail stick (toothpick) Coriander (cilantro) Coriander seed (coriander) Cornflour (cornstarch) Courgette (zucchini) Digestive biscuits (Grahams crackers) Double cream (50% cream) Fillet steak (tenderloin) French beans (string beans) Frying pan (skillet) Golden syrup (light corn syrup) Greaseproof paper (parchment paper) Grilling (broiling) Hotcake/griddlecake (pancake) Hundreds and thousands (sprinkles) Icing sugar (confectioner's sugar) Jam (jelly) Jelly (jello) Lard (clarified pork fat) Morello cherrries (sour cherries) Pasty (turnover) Pawpaw (papaya) Pie-savoury (covered pie) Plain flour (all-purpose flour) Porridge oats (oatmeal) Profiterole (cream puff) Rapeseed oil (canola oil) Receipt (recipe) Rocket (arugula) Scone (biscuit) Sea-salt (kosher salt) Self-raising flour (self-rising flour) Semolina (cream of wheat) Single cream (5% cream) Sirloin steak (Porterhouse) Sorbet (sherbert) Streaky bacon (bacon) Sugar (granulated sugar) Sultanas (golden raisins) Swede (rutabaga) Swiss roll (jelly roll) Tart-sweet (pie) Toffee (taffy) Treacle (molasses) Whipping cream (35% cream) Wholemeal flour (wholewheat flour) I've seen things you people wouldn't believe...
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njgill
8 years ago
Scone (biscuit) Not direct equivalents
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Nomad310
8 years ago
If you think of a baking powder biscuit, they're pretty close. But biscuit is a very general term in the US.
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