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  2. Powdered sugar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Powdered_sugar

    Snow powder (or snow sugar) is a non-melting form of icing sugar used for visual appeal on cakes or pastries that require refrigeration. It usually contains glucose , starch , and anti-binding agents (such as titanium dioxide , which gives it a vibrant white color), and retains its structure and look even when dusted onto baked goods that are ...

  3. Royal icing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_icing

    The Oxford English Dictionary gives the first mention of royal icing as Borella's Court and Country Confectioner (1770). The term was well-established by the early 19th century, although William Jarrin (1827) still felt the need to explain that the term was used by confectioners (so presumably it was not yet in common use among mere cooks or amateurs). [3]

  4. Icing (food) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Icing_(food)

    Meringue, cooked egg white and sugar. Some icings, such as Italian meringue buttercream, are meringues with butter added, in which case they are classified as buttercreams. Seven-minute frosting is a soft meringue. It does not store well. Royal icing, uncooked egg white and sugar. Dries hard and keeps for months.

  5. Meringue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meringue

    French meringue, or basic meringue, is the method best known to home cooks. Fine white sugar (caster sugar) is beaten into egg whites. Italian meringue was invented by the French chef Lancelot de Casteau in 1604. It is made with boiling sugar syrup, instead of caster sugar. This creates a much more stable soft meringue which can be used in ...

  6. Méringue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Méringue

    The term meringue, a whipped egg and sugar confection popular in eighteenth-century France, was adopted presumably because it captured the essence of the light nature of the dance where one gracefully shifts one's weight between feet in a very fluid movement, animating the final section of the Haitian kontradans.

  7. Eton mess - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eton_mess

    Eton mess is a traditional English dessert consisting of a mixture of strawberries or other berries, meringue, and whipped cream. [1] First mentioned in print in 1893, it is commonly believed to originate from Eton College and is served at the annual cricket match against the pupils of Harrow School. Eton mess is occasionally served at Harrow ...