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Waffle :

Waffle

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Brussels waffle
Brussels waffle

A waffle is a light batter cake cooked in a waffle iron patterned to give a distinctive and characteristic shape.

Contents

Varieties of waffle

Belgian Waffles shown here served with fruit salad and cream
Belgian Waffles shown here served with fruit salad and cream
Liège waffles with berries.
Liège waffles with berries.
Two stroopwafels
Two stroopwafels
A waffle iron for Scandinavian waffles.
A waffle iron for Scandinavian waffles.

Medieval origins

The modern waffle has its origins in the wafers-very light thin crisp cakes, baked between wafer-irons-of the Middle Ages[7]. Wafer irons consisted of two metal plates connected by a hinge, with each plate connected to an arm with a wooden handle. Some plates had imprinted designs such as a coat-of-arms or landscape, while some had the now-familiar honeycomb/gridiron pattern (there is evidence that in the 14th century only wealthy kitchens would have irons[citation needed]). The iron was placed over a fire, and flipped to cook both sides of the wafer. These irons were used to produce a variety of different flat, unleavened cakes (usually from a mixture of barley and oats, not the white flour used today). Some were rolled into a cone or tube, others were left flat. In 14 C. England, wafers were sold by street vendors called waferers.[8] The modern waffle is a leavened form of wafer.

"Wafer" and "waffle" share common etymological roots. Wafre (wafer) occurs in Middle English by 1377, adopted from Middle Low German wâfel, with change of l into r. Modern Dutch wafel, French gaufre, and German Waffel, all meaning "waffle", share the same origin. The Dutch form, wafel, was adopted into modern American English as waffle, in the 18th century.[7][9]

Mass Produced Waffles

Waffles are mass produced and frozen, to be eaten quickly and with little effort in many flavors. Among the many companies that produced frozen waffles include, most notably, Eggo.

References

External links

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