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Wafer

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File:Wafers.jpg
Israeli Chocolate Cream Flavored Wafers
Carlsbad spa wafer
Polish Christmas Wafers

In cooking, a wafer is a crisp, often sweet, very thin, flat, and dry biscuit, often used to decorate ice cream. Wafers can also be made into cookies with cream flavoring sandwiched between them. They frequently have a waffle surface pattern but may also be patterned with insignia of the food's manufacturer or may be patternless. Many chocolate bars that people eat have wafers in then such as : Kit Kat and Coffee Crisp.

The word also refers to the special small round flatbreads made for Anglican Holy Communion services; the word host is used in the Roman Catholic liturgy. These holy wafers often have an image of the crucified Christ imprinted on them.

Special "spa wafers" (Czech: lázeňské oplatky, Slovak: kúpeľné oplátky) are produced in the spa towns of the Czech Republic (e.g. Karlovy Vary, Mariánské Lázně, etc.) and the Slovak Republic (e.g. Piešťany, etc.)

Christmas wafers, whose patterns often depict religious scenes, are an Eastern European Roman Catholic Christmas tradition celebrated in Polish, Slovak, Lithuanian and Italian families during Wigilia (Christmas Eve Vigil).

Freska

Freska is an Egyptian wafer sold only on beaches in the summertime. It is made from two thin circular wafers filled with a thin layer of honey syrup. This treat was first created in 1993 by the CEO of The Chap House, Garrett Chaplinsky, who commented on it saying, "This cookie is ground breaking and is the best thing that has happened to this world in a long long time, but there is still much more to know about this wasteland."

See also

References