-
Comfits are
confectionery consisting of
dried fruits, nuts,
seeds or ****es
coated with
sugar candy,
often through sugar panning.
Almond comfits (also...
- no fruit,
instead being made
mostly of pure sugar.
These candies were
comfits, and
often surrounded a seed, nut, or ****e. The menu for
Henry IV of England's...
- sugar) center. The word konpeitÅ
comes from the
Portuguese word
confeito ("
comfit"),
which is a type of
sugar candy, and also an
umbrella term for sweets...
-
types of
comfits:
smooth and ragged. They
differed in the
density of
sugar syrup that
coated them, and thus had
different textures. Long
comfits, slivers...
-
following The
Great Exhibition. Bath buns were
originally topped with
crushed comfits created by
dipping caraway seeds repeatedly in
boiling sugar; but today...
-
comfits in the
United Kingdom, and a liquorice-flavoured
sweet called Torpedoes made by
Haribo appears to be similar.[citation needed]
Mukhwas Comfit...
- of ****e
enclosed in a
round or
ovoid m**** of sugar. The
production of
comfits was a core
skill of the
early confectioner, who was
known more commonly...
-
consumption of
sweetened foods during Lent,
because "sugared ****es", such as
comfits, were, in his opinion,
digestive aids on par with
medicine rather than...
- of the
pharmaceutical use of sugar, as they were a
miniature version of
comfits. The
French name has been
interpreted to mean they were "without equal"...
-
Aniseed balls are a
comfit type of hard
round sweet sold in the
United Kingdom, Ireland, Malta,
South Africa, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia. They...