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The Shredded Wheat Company began producing Triscuit in 1903 in Niagara Falls, New York. [2] The name Triscuit may have come from a combination of the words electricity and biscuit [3] or the commonly held belief that "tri" is a reference to the three ingredients used (wheat, oil, and salt), [4] [5] but this is disputed due to conflicting adverts and poor records. [6]
Triscuit crackers are baked whole wheat wafers. TUC crackers Ritz Crackers. Airly; Arnott's Shapes; Better Cheddars; Bremner Wafer; Captain's Wafers; Carr's; Cheddars; Cheese Nips; Cheez-Itz ...
The firm later introduced Fig Newtons, Nabisco Wafers, Anola Wafers, Barnum's Animal Crackers (1902), Cameos (1910), Lorna Doones (1912), Oreos (1912), [11] and Famous Chocolate Wafers (1924, which would be discontinued in 2023). [12] In 1924, the National Biscuit Company introduced a snack in a sealed packet called the Peanut Sandwich Packet.
Shredded wheat is a breakfast cereal made from whole wheat formed into pillow-shaped biscuits. It is commonly available in three sizes: original, bite-sized (¾×1 in) and miniature (nearly half the size of the bite-sized pieces).
Wheat Thins is a brand of baked whole grain snack food crackers distributed in the United States and Canada by Mondelez International. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The product is also available in Australia through wholesaler USA Foods. [ 3 ]
Cheese Nips, originally stylized as "Cheese-Nips", were introduced in 1955. [1] After the Kraft merger, they were known as "Kraft Cheese Nips". However, on November 21, 2019, there was a recall on Cheese Nips due to a plastic contamination. [3]
TRIticum + biSCUIT = TRISCUIT I could be wrong, of course, but as it is a biscuit made of wheat, a combination of the words for wheat and biscuit work really well. Now, if only I could find a source for that... mpbx 08:53, 10 March 2010 (UTC) Triscuits have three ingredients, so "tri" could mean three.
The name is derived from "tack", the British sailor slang for food. The earliest use of the term recorded by the Oxford English Dictionary is from 1830. [3]It is known by other names including brewis (possibly a cognate with "brose"), cabin bread, pilot bread, sea biscuit, soda crackers, sea bread (as rations for sailors), ship's biscuit, and pejoratively as dog biscuits, molar breakers, sheet ...