When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Monte Carlo (biscuit) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monte_Carlo_(biscuit)

    While many such biscuits are moulded to a design, both sides of the Monte Carlo biscuit are rough. The biscuit layers have a mild taste of golden syrup , honey and coconut, and the cream layer consists of a vanilla flavoured cream filling surrounded by a thin toffee-like coating of raspberry jam.

  3. Arnott's Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnott's_Group

    The original Arnott's logo depicted a multi-coloured parrot sitting atop a T-shaped perch, eating a cracker biscuit. During a radio interview on ABC, William Arnott's great-great-great-grandson stated that the logo represents the proverb "Honesty is the best policy" where the phrase was constructed from "On his T, is the best pol' (polly) I see".

  4. List of brand name food products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_brand_name_food...

    Aero Biscuits; Afghan (biscuit) Afternoon Tea (biscuits) Arnott [15] Biscuit rose de Reims; Biscuits Fossier; Blue Riband; BN (biscuit) Breakaway (biscuit) Britannia Biscuits; Burton's; Cadbury Caramel Crunch; Cadbury Fingers; Cadbury Snack; Cadbury Snaps; Cameo Creme; Carr's; CBL Munchee Bangladesh; Ceylon Biscuits Limited; Cheddars; Chips ...

  5. Monte Carlo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monte_Carlo

    La Dame de Monte Carlo is a monologue for soprano and orchestra composed by Francis Poulenc in 1961 based on a poem from Jean Cocteau’s Théâtre de poche. [17] "Monte Carlo Nights" is a song by Grover Washington Jr composed in 2001. [18] "Goin' Down To Monte Carlo" is a song by Van Morrison composed in 2012. [18]

  6. List of foods named after places - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_foods_named_after...

    Biscuit rose de Reims — the city of Reims, Marne, Grand Est; Bourbon biscuit — British cookie named, via the House of Bourbon — the historic Bourbonnais region; Breton galette and Crêpe bretonne — the region of Brittany; Bugnes lyonnaise — the city of Lyon; Chantilly cake — indirectly after the castle at and village of Chantilly ...

  7. Crêpes Suzette - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crêpes_Suzette

    One claim is that it was created from a mistake made by a 14-year-old assistant waiter, Henri Charpentier, [2] in 1895 at the Maitre at Monte Carlo's Café de Paris. He was preparing a dessert for the future King Edward VII of the United Kingdom (then Prince of Wales ), whose guests included a beautiful French girl named Suzette.

  8. Category:Sandwich cookies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Sandwich_cookies

    Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us

  9. Garibaldi biscuit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garibaldi_biscuit

    They have a golden brown, glazed exterior and a moderately sweet pastry, but their defining characteristic is the layer of squashed fruit which gives rise to the colloquial names fly sandwiches, flies' graveyards, dead fly biscuits, [4] squashed fly biscuits, or in New Zealand, fly traps, because the squashed fruit resemble squashed flies.