HobNob

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HobNob biscuits
HobNob biscuits

A HobNob is a brand of biscuit made from rolled oats and jumbo oats, making it similar to a flapjack/digestive biscuit hybrid. They are mainly sold in the United Kingdom. It is made especially for dunking in tea, a liquid in which it does not lose its shape. Invented by Julien Pike the recipe was purchased by McVitie's who introduced the brand in Scotland in 1984. A milk chocolate-covered version was made available in 1987, and the biscuit is currently available in many varieties, including dark chocolate, chocolate orange, and HobNob bars. Other HobNob-branded snacks include a HobNob flapjack. [1]

The original tagline of the HobNob was "one nibble and you're nobbled"[2] , although it has been removed from the Chocolate Orange varieties.

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[edit] Etymology

The name comes from an earlier phrase, to hob or nob, meaning "to drink together, taking turns toasting one another," probably from Middle English habbe "to have" and nabbe, a contraction of ne + habbe, "to have not," hence, "to have and have not, to give and take." [3]

[edit] Popular Culture

  • Pundit Roddy Forsyth mentioned before taking part in the 28th of October episode of BBC Five Live's show Fighting Talk, that he had his "HobNob, my cup of tea" and that "everything is right with the world."
  • HobNobs are Keane's drummer Richard Hughes' favourite biscuit.
  • Comedian Peter Kay uses HobNobs in his trademark jokes in which he calls them "the Marines, the bloody SAS of the biscuit world!". Kay has also called them the "Steven Seagals of the biscuit world".
  • The fictional character Inspector Fowler from the TV series The Thin Blue Line, played by Rowan Atkinson, often mentions chocolate HobNobs as being his favourite sweet.
  • HobNob is the Nickname of esteemed playwright and social commentator Rebecca Hodgkinson. Interestingly, the etymology is related to Hobbit and a reported likeness to the creatures detailed by Tolkien, rather than a personal predilection to oat biscuits.
  • Hob Nob Anyone? an unofficial fanzine site dedicated to Reading Football Club. The name Hob Nob Anyone? is in reference to the Reading's association with biscuit making.
  • Comedian Peter Kay produced a skit in which he compared Rich Tea biscuits and HobNobs. He described how HobNobs were far more superior to Rich Tea biscuits due to their stability when dunked in a cup of tea.
  • Cartoonist Dave Kellett of Sheldon Comics often is given HobNobs at conventions after the February 16, 2006 comic he did about them.

[edit] References

  1. ^ United Biscuits
  2. ^ Justin Holloway (1999-06-24). Keeping up with the Jonesness. Salon. Retrieved on 2007-01-28.
  3. ^ hobnob. Dictionary.com. The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition, Houghton Mifflin Company, 2004. (accessed: September 24, 2006).

[edit] External links

Look up hobnob in
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