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Church Windows dessert. Church windows, also referred to as chocolate marshmallow logs, stained glass windows or cathedral windows are a multicolored dessert confection, popular in the United States. [1] [2] [3] Ingredients include chocolate, butter, nuts (often walnuts or pecans), mini-colored marshmallows and shredded coconut.
While the cake originates in England, its exact origins are unclear, [4] [5] with early recipes also using the alternative names "Domino Cake" (recipe by Agnes Bertha Marshall, 1898), "Neapolitan Roll" (recipe by Robert Wells, 1898), [6] or "Church Window Cake".
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East window. St Etheldreda's Roman Catholic Church, Ely Place, London. Designed by Joseph Edward Nuttgens and installed in 1952. Joseph Edward (Eddie) Nuttgens (1892 – 1982), in Germany spelt Nüttgens, was a stained glass designer in England who worked mainly on church windows.
A full-sized cartoon is drawn for every "light" (opening) of the window. A small church window might typically have two lights, with some simple tracery lights above. A large window might have four or five lights. The east or west window of a large cathedral might have seven lights in three tiers, with elaborate tracery. In medieval times the ...
Tears of wine show clearly in the shadow of this glass of 13.5% Caluso Passito dessert wine. The phenomenon called tears of wine (French: Larmes de vin; German: Kirchenfenster, lit. "church windows") is manifested as a ring of clear liquid, near the top of a glass of wine, from which droplets continuously form and drop back into the wine.