Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
1. In a very large, lightly oiled bowl, toss the popped corn with the corn cereal and peanuts. 2. In a large saucepan, combine the sugar with the corn syrup, butter, water, vanilla bean and seeds.
The Brown Bobby manual included 10 recipes for doughnuts, 4 icing recipes and a number of prepared doughnut mixes were also available. Recipes included Plain, Wholewheat, Bran, Spice, Nut, Tutti-Frutti, Chocolate and Oatmeal. The doughnuts were touted as “greaseless” because they were not deep-fried, but as the included recipe indicates ...
In a mixing bowl, add flour and make a well in the center. In the well, add crumbled yeast, 1/2 tbsp of sugar, and half of the warm milk. Cover with a little bit of flour and start mixing it in ...
2. KFC Chicken. The "original recipe" of 11 herbs and spices used to make Colonel Sanders' world-famous fried chicken is still closely guarded, but home cooks have found ways of duplicating the ...
Put popcorn in a large aluminum roasting pan and place in the oven to warm. Butter sides of a heavy saucepan with 1 tablespoon butter. Then add sugar, water, corn syrup, vinegar and salt.
The concept of forming donuts with a hole in the center is commonly attributed to Captain Hanson Gregory, [1] [2] who claimed to have invented the first ring donut after cutting the center of his mother's donut out in 1847. [3] Many early recipes called for the donut to be formed in the shape of a jumble, a circular cookie with a hole in the ...
It was one of the first cookbooks printed using the Gutenberg press and contains the first known recipe for a jelly doughnut, called Gefüllte Krapfen made with jam-filled yeasted bread dough deep-fried in lard. It's unknown whether this innovation was the author's [2] own or simply a record of an existing practice. [3]
The Rueckheim brothers produced a new recipe, including popcorn, peanuts, and molasses, and first presented it to the public at the World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago's first World's Fair) in 1893. The molasses of this early version was too sticky. [9] 1918 Cracker Jack ad, asking readers to enlist in the Navy.