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Lyons branded cakes included treacle tarts, Lyons Bakewell tart, Lyons Battenberg, and Lyons trifle sponges. [6] To the public, J. Lyons & Co. were best known for their chain of teashops which opened from 1894 and finally closed in 1981, and for the Lyons Corner Houses in the West End of London. [7]
Trifle is a layered dessert of English origin. The usual ingredients are a thin layer of sponge fingers or sponge cake soaked in sherry or another fortified wine, a fruit element (fresh or jelly), custard and whipped cream layered in that ascending order in a glass dish. [1]
They contain more flour than the typical sponge cake. The mixture is piped through a pastry bag in short lines onto sheets, [3] giving the biscuits their notable shape. Before baking, powdered sugar is usually sifted over the top [3] to give a soft crust. The finished ladyfingers are usually layered into a dessert such as tiramisu or trifle.
The $35 package (which ships free!) also comes with a Friends-themed apron and the special two-part trifle dish, along with recipe cards for shepherd’s pie and English trifle.
An icebox cake (also known as a chocolate ripple cake or log in Australia) is a dairy-based dessert made with cream, fruits, nuts, and wafers and set in the refrigerator. The recipe for one particularly well-known version used to be printed on the back of boxes of thin and dark Nabisco Famous Chocolate Wafers.
The game consists of cooking mini-games, similar to Cooking Mama, and restaurant management. The player oversees the staff of Planktons as they work to fill the orders of the day. Occasionally, the player will be asked to help a Plankton complete a task by playing a mini-game representing a cooking activity.
Sir Joseph Nathaniel Lyons DL (29 December 1847 – 22 June 1917) was an English entrepreneur and pioneer of mass catering. He was the chairman and co-founder of J. Lyons and Co. , a restaurant chain , food manufacturing and hotel conglomerate created in 1884 that dominated British mass-catering in the first half of the twentieth century.
The name trifle was also originally applied to the dish, with the two names being used, for a time, interchangeably. [4] In the late 16th century, a trifle was 'a dish composed of cream boiled with various ingredients'. Davidson suggests that this is 'also the description one could give of a fool'.