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Get ready for winter baking with these recipes, featuring seasonal favorites like fruitcake and bûche de Noël, and classics like coffee cake and rum cake. Step Aside, Cookies—These 55 Cakes ...
An apple martini (appletini for short) is a cocktail containing vodka and one or more of apple juice, apple cider, apple liqueur, or apple brandy. Although the drink contains no vermouth by default, the term "apple martini" is consistent with the trend of calling any straight liquor in a martini glass a "martini," such as the saketini or other ...
Prepare cake batter as directed; pour into 2 greased and floured 8- or 9-inch round pans. Bake 30 to 35 min. or until toothpick inserted in centers comes out clean. Cool 10 min. in pans on wire ...
A cake associated with Epiphany in many countries; its ingredients vary, but traditionally there is a fève hidden inside. Kladdkaka: Sweden: A dense Swedish chocolate cake lacking baking powder. Klepon: Indonesia: A dessert formed from traditional green-colored balls of rice cake filled with liquid palm sugar and coated in grated coconut ...
Sour apple smash (apple vodka, pineapple rum, apple pucker, lemonade) [60] Spiked pineapple lemonade (vodka, pineapple, lemons or limes, mint, pineapple juice, lemonade) [ 61 ] Strawberry lemonade margarita (tequila, triple sec, strawberries, limes, frozen lemonade) [ 62 ]
The cakes are baked by volunteers in their home kitchens and are often decorated with the child's favourite theme. Popular examples are Peppa Pig, Spider-Man and football-themed cakes. [7] The cakes are free to the family while bakers pay for the ingredients, sometimes with the help of local sponsors.
Pound cake is a type of cake traditionally made with a pound of each of four ingredients: flour, butter, eggs, and sugar. Pound cakes are generally baked in either a loaf pan or a Bundt mold. They are sometimes served either dusted with powdered sugar, lightly glazed, or with a coat of icing.
A Soor ploom (Scots for "sour plum") is a sharp-flavoured, round, green boiled sweet originally associated with Galashiels, Scotland. They are sold loose by weight in paper bags, traditionally in "quarters" — a quarter of a pound. They are said to have been first made in 1337 in commemoration of a skirmish near Galashiels. A raiding party ...