August First maple biscuits Credit: Sally Pollak ©️ Seven Days
I don’t usually measure my food, but indoor activity is hard to come by these days so I thought I’d give it a whirl. Inspired by the item I was about to eat — if only I could open my mouth that wide — I tracked down the tape measure. Its target was leaning leftward on my bread board: a high-sheen maple biscuit from Burlington’s August First.

At its apex, I discovered, the biscuit is three inches high. But I prefer to slice it through the center and eat it by the half measure, roughly 1.5 inches of delight at a time.

By cutting the biscuit down the middle and toasting it, the inside cakey part acquires the coveted crisp of the biscuit’s crown. Everything’s better with butter, and August First’s $4 maple biscuit is no exception.

Or you can up the morning’s activity level by frying some bacon, making a sunny-side-up egg with melted cheddar on top, and placing the ingredients between two halves of a maple biscuit. Sticky and messy, but we’re in a hand-washing groove these days anyway.

Egg and bacon sandwich on a maple biscuit Credit: Sally Pollak ©️ Seven Days
Small Pleasures is an occasional column that features delicious and distinctive Vermont-made snacks or drinks that pack a punch. Send us your favorite little bites or sips with big payoff at food@sevendaysvt.com.

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Sally Pollak was a staff writer at Seven Days from 2017 until she retired in summer 2023. She started as a Food contributor before transitioning to the Arts & Culture team. Her first newspaper job was compiling horse racing results at the Philadelphia...