Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The madeleine (French pronunciation:, English: / ˈ m æ d l eɪ n / or / ˌ m æ d l ˈ eɪ n / [1]) or petite madeleine ([pə.tit mad.lɛn]) is a traditional small cake from Commercy and Liverdun, two communes of the Lorraine region in northeastern France.
Biscuiterie Saint-Michel is a French food company, a subsidiary of St Michel Biscuits, which produces and markets dry pastries (cookies) under the St-Michel brand name. It was founded in 1905 in the coastal town of Saint-Michel-Chef-Chef , where is still standing the original factory.
The traditional version is as wide as a cake and served in slices, but individual, cupcake-sized ones are becoming more popular. Salt Lake City’s Les Madeleines , Martha Stewart , and chef ...
An assortment of petit fours, which are small confectioneries.Some petit fours are also savory. Religieuse is made of two choux pastry cases filled with crème pâtissière, [5] covered in a ganache of the same flavor as the filling, and then joined/decorated with piped whipped cream.
A traditional Taiwanese cake commonly made using eggs, egg yolk, low-gluten flour, honey and a small portion of sugar. The cake filling leaks out when sliced, similar in appearance to a volcano. Conversation: France: A patisserie developed in the late 18th century that is made with puff pastry, filled with a frangipane cream, and topped with ...
St. Honoré cake: France: A dessert consisting of a puff pastry base, a ring of pâte à choux, sugared profiteroles, and crème chiboust filling. Stack cake: United States: A stack of cakes made with molasses and layered with some form of apple filling. Strawberry cake: United States Canada France: A cake that uses strawberry as a primary ...
Hostess Cake, mostly known simply as Hostess, is a brand under which snack cakes are sold by Hostess Brands. The brand originated in 1919 when the first Hostess CupCake was sold. However, it is better-known as the brand under which Twinkies are sold, after that product appeared in 1930.
This is a lovely photograph of small cakes but, whatever they are called, whether outside of France they are called magdalenas or even madeleines (which they are not), fairy cakes as in the United Kingdom, or cupcakes as in the United States, they are not the classic smaller, thinner, shell-shaped cakes documented in the Madeleines article.