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The Nanaimo bar (/ n ə ˈ n aɪ m oʊ / nə-NY-moh) is a bar dessert that requires no baking and is named after the Canadian city of Nanaimo in British Columbia. [1] It consists of three layers: a wafer, nut (walnuts, almonds, or pecans), and coconut crumb base; custard icing in the middle; and a layer of chocolate ganache on top.
A date square is a Canadian dessert or bar cookie made of cooked dates with an oatmeal crumb topping. [1] [2] In the western provinces and states it is known as matrimonial cake. [3] [4] In Eastern Canada it can also be known as date crumbles. [5] It is often found in coffee shops as a sweet snack food.
Nanaimo bars—consists of three layers: a wafer, nut (walnuts, almonds, or pecans), and coconut crumb base; custard icing in the middle; and a layer of chocolate ganache on top. Most common in British Columbia, gaining its name sake from the Vancouver Island town of Nanaimo, BC. Nanaimo balls—a bite-sized variation of the British Columbian ...
Breakfast bars are a traditional food. Olson starts this episode with a healthy staple, the Granola bar. Then she steps things up with a distinctly Canadian treat, Nanaimo bar. To top things off, Olson shares her recipe and techniques for chocolate-covered caramel bars.
Nanaimo bar – a dessert bar that requires no baking, invented in Nanaimo around 1953. Pablum – infant cereal, invented by Frederick Tisdall, Theodore Drake, and Allan Brown in 1930. [11] Peanut butter – Canadian chemist Marcellus Gilmore Edson patented a way to make "peanut paste", also known as peanut butter in 1884. [12]
An assortment of desserts. A chocolate-strawberry crumble ball. Indian confectionery desserts (known as mithai, or sweets in some parts of India).Sugar and desserts have a long history in India: by about 500 BC, people in India had developed the technology to produce sugar crystals.
Moose milk is a traditional Canadian alcoholic mixed drink with roots in the historic celebratory events of the Canadian Armed Forces. [1] It is also served at the levée, a New Year's Day celebration held all levels of the Canadian governmental administrations to honour the member of the armed forces, from the federal level to municipalities.
The book's contents aren't available online, so it is left as an exercise for some diligent contributor to acquire a copy to verify the inclusion of a Nanaimo bar recipe in that book. —Largo Plazo 18:49, 9 August 2013 (UTC) I got a hold of it, and the Nanaimo bar isn't in it. I went back to Google Books, and now it isn't returning that book ...