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A custard cream is a type of sandwich biscuit popular in the British Isles, and parts of the Commonwealth, filled with a creamy, custard-flavoured centre. Traditionally, the filling was buttercream (which is still used in most homemade recipes) but nowadays cheaper fats have replaced butter in mass-produced biscuits.
Biscuit created in 1848 in Castellammare di Stabia, Campania Biscotto Salute Rusk made with butter, eggs, flour and sugar Bocconotto: Abruzzese Christmas pastry filled with almonds and chocolate Bombolone: Italian doughnut, filled with typically custard, chocolate, cream, or jam Bonèt: Piedmontese custard dessert with amaretti and cocoa
Lincoln biscuit: United Kingdom Short dough biscuit and a kind of shortcake biscuits. It has a pattern of dots on the top in concentric circles and was brought to America by British expats. Linga: Philippines: Flat cookies with sesame seeds from the Davao del Sur in the Philippines. Linzer cookie: Austria
The milk-cream strudel is an oven-baked pastry dough stuffed with a sweet bread, raisin and cream filling and served in the pan with hot vanilla sauce. [67] Mille-feuille: France: The mille-feuille ("thousand sheets"), vanilla slice, cream slice, custard slice, also known as the Napoleon or kremschnitt, is a pastry originating in France.
Bourbon biscuit, hard chocolate cookie sandwiched with chocolate creme; Custard cream, creamy, custard-flavoured centre between hard biscuits; the biscuits often feature elaborate relief designs; Ice cream sandwich, frozen dessert typically composed of ice cream between two biscuits; Macaron, sweet meringue-based confection
Crawford's Biscuits - Press for Ice Cream Wafers A Crawford's custard cream biscuit. In 1923, the company advertised several biscuit varieties which commemorated royalty and its marriages: [1] York – the marriage of the Duke of York to Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon; Wedding Bells – the marriage of Princess Mary to Viscount Lascelles
The expression "cookie cutter", in addition to referring literally to a culinary device used to cut rolled cookie dough into shapes, is also used metaphorically to refer to items or things "having the same configuration or look as many others" (e.g., a "cookie cutter tract house") or to label something as "stereotyped or formulaic" (e.g., an ...
A biscuit is "any of various hard or crisp dry baked product" similar to the American English terms cracker or cookie, [10] or "a small quick bread made from dough that has been rolled out and cut or dropped from a spoon". [10]