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It comes in three sizes: a carton containing two pieces of ice cream, with a plastic pick for eating it; [3] a "mini yukimi daifuku" box with nine smaller ice creams that contain 9 spoons; and "yukimi daifuku petit three colour box" (雪見だいふくプチ3色 Yukimi Daifuku Puchi San-shoku) containing three kinds, a green tea ice cream, a chocolate ice cream, and a vanilla ice cream.
Yan Yan (ヤンヤンつけボー, Yan Yan Tsukebō) is a Japanese snack food made by Meiji Seika since 1979. It comes in a package with two compartments. One side has biscuit sticks (which can be sometimes called cracker sticks), the other side has chocolate, strawberry, vanilla, or yogurt flavored frosting used for dipping.
Yakult's ingredients are water, skimmed milk, glucose-fructose syrup, sucrose, natural flavors , and live Lacticaseibacillus casei Shirota bacteria. [1] [2] The strain was originally classified as being Lactobacillus casei. [1] Yakult is prepared by adding glucose to skimmed milk and heating the mixture at 90 to 95 °C for about 30 minutes ...
The Japanese had been making desserts for centuries before sugar was widely available in Japan. Many desserts commonly available in Japan can be traced back hundreds of years. [1] In Japanese cuisine, traditional sweets are known as wagashi, and are made using ingredients such as red bean paste and mochi.
Some flavored milk products. Flavored milk is a sweetened dairy drink made with milk, sugar, flavorings, and sometimes food colorings. It may be sold as a pasteurized, refrigerated product, or as an ultra-high-temperature (UHT) treated product not requiring refrigeration. It may also be made in restaurants or homes by mixing flavorings into milk.
Pactiv Evergreen closed the Canton paper plant, citing lack of demand, now there's a U.S. school milk carton shortage, which the plant helped make.
Whoppers were first sold unwrapped, two pieces for one cent. But after the creation of cellophane wrapping machines, smaller Whoppers were packaged and sold five for one cent, also known as Fivesomes. Leaf soon introduced the first confectionery milk carton package which would become a hallmark of the candy. [1]
In 1953, Seok-kyun Shin introduced the gable-topped milk carton to Korea. [26] In the 1960s, Mario Lepore, a Detroit engineer designed a machine to fold and seal a gable top paper carton. [citation needed] In 1957 paper milk carton company Kieckhefer Container Co. merged with the Weyerhauser Timber Company of Tacoma, Washington. [citation needed]