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  2. Cookie press - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cookie_press

    A cookie press is a device for making pressed cookies such as spritz cookies. It consists of a cylinder with a plunger on one end, which is used to extrude cookie dough through a small hole at the other end. Typically the cookie press has interchangeable perforated plates with holes in different shapes, such as a star shape or a narrow slit to ...

  3. Mirro Aluminum Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirro_Aluminum_Company

    Mirro is an American cookware brand owned by the French consortium Groupe SEB, a world's largest cookware manufacturer, through its Colombian subsidiary IMUSA. Between 1909 and 2003, it was an American company specialising in aluminium cookware called Mirro Aluminum Company , based in Manitowoc, Wisconsin .

  4. Cookie cutter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cookie_cutter

    A cookie mould typically has an ornate design debossed into the surface; the mould is pressed into the cookie dough to produce an embossed design. These moulds may be flat disks or may be in the shape of a rolling pin. Cookie press An automated or hand-operated cookie press, also called a cookie gun, is used to make large batches of cookies ...

  5. Cookie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cookie

    Pressed cookies are made from a soft dough that is extruded from a cookie press into various decorative shapes before baking. Spritzgebäck is an example of a pressed cookie. Refrigerator cookies (also known as icebox cookies) are made from a stiff dough that is refrigerated to make the raw dough even stiffer before cutting and baking. The ...

  6. Spritzgebäck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spritzgebäck

    Traditional holiday cookie plate with green tree-shaped spritz. Spritzgebäck (German: [ˈʃpʁɪt͡sɡəˌbɛk] ⓘ), also called a spritz cookie in the United States, [1] is a type biscuit or cookie of German and Alsatian-Mosellan origin made of a rich shortcrust pastry. When made correctly, the cookies are crisp, fragile, somewhat dry, and ...

  7. Pastry bag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pastry_bag

    A pastry bag (or piping bag in the Commonwealth) is an often cone- or triangular-shaped bag made from cloth, paper, plastic, or the intestinal lining of a lamb, that is squeezed by hand [1] to pipe semi-solid foods by pressing them through a narrow opening at one end often fitted with a shaped nozzle, for many purposes including in particular cake decoration and icing.

  8. Butter cookie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butter_cookie

    They also come in a variety of shapes such as circles, squares, ovals, rings, and pretzel-like forms, and with a variety of appearances, including marbled, checkered or plain. [2] Using piping bags, twisted shapes can be made. In some parts of the world, such as Europe and North America, butter cookies are often served around Christmas time. [3]

  9. Punching - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punching

    Where t is the sheet metal thickness, L is the total length sheared (perimeter of the shape), and UTS is the ultimate tensile strength of the material. Die and punch shapes affect the force during the punching process. The punch force increases during the process as the entire thickness of the material is sheared at once.