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Newtons are a Nabisco-trademarked version of a cookie filled with sweet fruit paste. "Fig Newtons" are the most popular variety (fig rolls filled with fig paste). They are produced by an extrusion process. [1] Their distinctive shape is a characteristic that has been adopted by competitors, including generic fig bars sold in many markets.
Nutter Butter, peanut-shaped cookies with a peanut butter filling; Nutty Bars, wafers with peanut butter covered in chocolate; Oatmeal Creme Pie, hand mounded oatmeal cookies with a creme filling; Oreo, a line of sandwich cookies—most notably a creme-filled chocolate sandwich cookie modelled after Hydrox manufactured by Mondelez International
Mincemeat is usually used as a pie or pastry filling. Traditional mincemeat recipes contain meat, notably beef or venison, as this was a way of preserving meat prior to modern preservation methods. [1] Modern recipes often replace the suet with vegetable shortening or other oils (e.g., coconut oil) and/or omit the meat. However, many people ...
Chocolate marshmallow pies differ from regular chocolate-coated marshmallow treats in that there is a cake- or cookie-like layer above as well as below the marshmallow filling – that is, the marshmallow filling is sandwiched between two layers of cake or cookie, the entirety then being enrobed in chocolate. Some local names for chocolate ...
Crosse & Blackwell is an English food brand.The original company was established in London in 1706, then was acquired by Edmund Crosse and Thomas Blackwell in 1830. It became independent until it was acquired by Swiss conglomerate Nestlé in 1960.
Twix Peanut Butter was introduced in 1983. It is a candy bar consisting of a chocolate cookie filled with peanut butter instead of caramel. Twix Salted Caramel is a variation of the original Twix bar. It has a chocolate cookie, but instead of the usual caramel center, it has a salted caramel center. Twix Cookies & Creme was introduced in 1991.
Summit was a candy bar manufactured in the early 1980s by Mars in the United States. Labeled "cookie bars" on the packaging, [1] but "candy bars" in some advertising, [2] they consisted of two wafers covered with peanuts, all coated in chocolate. In 1983, Mars changed to individual foil wrapping and promoted the bar as having 30% more chocolate ...
The first known cookie sales by an individual Girl Scout unit were by the Mistletoe Troop in Muskogee, Oklahoma, in December 1917 at their local high school. [13] In 1922, the Girl Scout magazine The American Girl suggested cookie sales as a fundraiser and provided a simple sugar cookie recipe from a regional director for the Girl Scouts of Chicago. [14]