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A dish consisting of a hollowed-out cob loaf (a large round bread), with a dip inside. Recipes for this dish can vary family-to-family. Common fillings include spinach dip or caramelised onion and bacon dip. Commonly eaten at barbeques. Cob loaves have seen a recent surge in popularity with many new, creative versions appearing. [19] [20] Kiwi ...
Kiwi onion dip's creation has been credited to Rosemary Dempsey, a home economist for Nestlé New Zealand in the 1950s or 60s. [1] [2] Dempsey was charged with finding new uses for products slipping down the sales charts, in this case onion soup mix, and tried a variety of other Nestlé products before hitting on the successful combination with reduced cream.
The third (1914) edition of the Edmonds 'Sure to Rise' Cookery Book. The Edmonds Cookery Book is a recipe book focusing on traditional New Zealand cuisine.It was first published as The Sure to Rise Cookery Book in 1908 [1] as a marketing tool by baking powder manufacturer Thomas Edmonds (today part of Goodman Fielder), but it is now known as a Kiwi icon.
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The Great Kiwi Bake Off is a New Zealand television baking competition based on The Great British Bake Off in which 12 amateur bakers compete in a series of baking challenges. [2] The show's first episode was aired on 16 October 2018 on TVNZ 2. The show is hosted by Hayley Sproull and Madeleine Sami, [3] with judges Dean Brettschneider and Sue ...
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Honeycomb toffee is known as hokey pokey (especially in the Kiwi classic Hokey Pokey ice cream) in New Zealand. A very popular ice-cream flavour consisting of plain vanilla ice cream with small, solid lumps of honeycomb toffee is also known as hokey pokey. It is also used to make hokey pokey biscuits.
Charles Diver's original recipe. The Regina Confectionery Company in Oamaru introduced pineapple chunks in 1952. [1] [2] Charles Diver, the confectionery chief and floor production-manager at Regina who would later formulate other classic Kiwi sweets, had the task of using up waste product from other lollies of the time.