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  2. 5 Christmas Container Ideas To Add Long-Lasting Holiday Cheer ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/5-christmas-container...

    Want to make a grand impression? Fill charming vessels with branches and blooms.

  3. Chinese candy box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_candy_box

    The Cantonese candy box includes items that have traditional, linguistic, and cultural significance to the Cantonese people. The Lucky candy is a strawberry flavored hard candy packaged in a red aluminum wrapper likened to a red envelope. The most popular and long-standing version of this candy is produced by The Garden Company Unlimited. Like ...

  4. Food storage container - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_storage_container

    Wherever food is harvested, manufactured or distributed there is a need for containers to enable the food to travel securely and in good condition to the shop, warehouse or distribution depot. For many foods, especially those in their own individual containers such as canned vegetables, the common container is the corrugated fiberboard box ...

  5. Twelve-dish Christmas Eve supper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twelve-dish_Christmas_Eve...

    In Lithuania, herring (Lithuanian: silkÄ—) dishes are popular and diverse. Usually silkÄ— su morkomis (herring with carrots), or silkÄ— su grybais (herring with mushrooms) are served on Christmas Eve. Mushrooms, especially dried or pickled, are also one of the main ingredients used in Christmas Eve dishes.

  6. Cupcake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cupcake

    Some bakers still use individual ramekins, small coffee mugs, large tea cups, or other small ovenproof pottery-type dishes for baking cupcakes. Cupcakes are now usually baked in muffin tins . These pans are most often made from metal, with or without a non-stick surface , and generally have six or twelve depressions or "cups".

  7. Candy cane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candy_cane

    An early 1900s Christmas card image of candy canes. A common story of the origin of candy canes says that in 1670, in Cologne, Germany, the choirmaster at Cologne Cathedral, wishing to remedy the noise caused by children in his church during the Living Crèche tradition of Christmas Eve, asked a local candy maker for some "sugar sticks" for them.

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