The Arrowroot
Name: Arrowroot
Manufacturer: McVitie’s
Price: £1.50
Packet weight: 200g
Summary: A biscuit of a misnomer
Dunkability: Reasonable
Allergy advice: May contain nuts, but probably no arrows or roots
Review
In the long run-up to our official Third Official Blog, we’ve
Following a week-long biscuit blitz to celebrate National Biscuit Day, which we noted solemnly on 29th May before descending into seven days of biscuit-based bedlam, we’ve decided to take a step back and enjoy a more sedate side of the biscuiting world, the humble Arrowroot biscuit.
An even-more-humble cousin of the already-quite-humble-enough Rich Tea biscuit, and derived from roots taken from the arrow tree, the Arrowroot has good form, appropriately thin with a nice breakage when being bitten into, snapped, or dashed against a wall in a disappointed fit of rage.
Any fits or rage are dependent upon your intake, as the main attribute is its ability to absorb the grinding action as you wear it down, and channeling it back in boring glory (also known as blory). Like realising that the reflection mimicking you in the mirror has taken a demonic existence of its own, and in truth you now mimic it, as you eat it, this biscuit wears you down in turn.
Official recommended consecutive intake, as such, is a maximum of three biscuits in any 30-minute biscuit eating session.
The decoration of the biscuit is a good source of review content. Adorned with thematic arrows, and a lovingly-developed typeface, there is a strong resemblance to attractive doilies. This makes the Arrowroot a prime candidate for a situational comedy sketch regarding a hilarious mix-up between the biscuit and ubiquitous ornamental mat.
This biscuit is truly designed with those who find the Rich Tea too exhilarating in mind. Less sweet, more dry, and with an endless supply of talking points for those interesting social events, it’s best experienced once, inexplicably twice, and then forgotten about for several weeks of procrastination.

