-
indentations suited to
baking unleavened wafers, and
might better be
described as
wafer irons or
wafer presses.
Waffle irons gained deeper indentations as leavening...
-
hosties /
hostieijzers (communion
wafer irons) and
moule à
oublies (
wafer irons).
While the
communion wafer irons typically depicted imagery of Jesus...
- Detroit. No. 8
December 1988. p. 2.
Retrieved 15
January 2025. "Burgundian
wafer irons".
Musea Brugge.
Retrieved 15
January 2025. K. D. "Speaking of 'Lukken'"...
- (England) or poke (Ireland) is a brittle, cone-shaped pastry,
usually made of a
wafer similar in
texture to a waffle, made so ice
cream can be
carried and eaten...
-
power that make them history's most
infamous crime family. It
stars Jeremy Irons as Pope
Alexander VI with François
Arnaud as Cesare,
Holliday Grainger as...
- 1963, 242,000
electric motors, 70,000
small motors, 190,000
electric irons, 2,000
wafer makers and 6,700
radiators were
produced in Volta. 1994–1996, Volta...
-
baked over open
fires using decorative irons;
however modern cooks use
electric or
stovetop irons to bake
these wafer-thin biscuits.
Krumkaker owe
their name...
-
cream may be
served in dishes,
eaten with a spoon, or
licked from
edible wafer ice
cream cones held by the
hands as
finger food. Ice
cream may be served...
-
Abhilasha (16
February 2024). "'Ooru Peru Bhairavakona' film review: A
wafer-thin
comedy disguised as a mystery". The New
Indian Express.
Retrieved 3...
-
Roman Missal. The
first English version below,
translated by
William Josiah Irons in 1849,
albeit from a
slightly different Latin text,
replicates the rhyme...