Cherry E-Liquid
If you like sweet-tasting cherries, you will love the flavor of Gravitational Cherry™ E-Liquid. Gravitational Cherry™ E-Liquid is made in the USA.
Gravitational Cherry™ E-Liquid works in all models of electronic cigarettes. As with all VapeSafe® E-Liquids, Gravitational Cherry™ E-Liquid is made in the USA using organic, hypoallergenic, USP and food grade vegetable glycerin.
E-Liquid Legal Disclaimers:
Always keep VapeSafe® E-Liquids away from children!
VapeSafe Gravitational Cherry™ E-Liquid is for Adults Only! You must be of legal age in your state to use our products! Absolutely no sales to minors!
Always be sure to allow the Gravitational Cherry™ E-Liquid time to fully soak into the cartridge or cartomizer (cartridge with built in atomizer) before use. To stretch your dollar further, please note that these flavors are more concentrated than normal and can be diluted with small amounts of distilled water without compromising the flavor.
Heavenly Cherry Recipes:
Exquisite Cherry Caramels, Penuche, and more:
The simplest icing is a glacé icing, containing icing sugar and water. This can be flavored and colored as desired, for example by using lemon juice in place of the water. More complicated icings can be made by beating fat into icing sugar (as in butter cream), by melting fat and sugar together, by using egg whites (as in royal icing), and by adding other ingredients such as glycerin (as in fondant). Some icings can be made from combinations of sugar and cream cheeses, or by using ground almonds (as in marzipan).
Mock Cherry Pie
Cover the bottom of pie-plate with rich crust; reserve enough for upper crust. For filling use two cups of cranberries, cut in halves; one cup of raisins, cut in pieces; two cups of sugar, butter the size of walnut. Dredge with flour, sprinkle with water. Bake thirty minutes in a moderate oven.
Fudge is the Original Old Time Family Favorite Chocolate Sweet Treat
Author: Anna Mcanthony
According to history (although uncertain) fudge was created by accident with a batch of failed candy; probably caramels, sometime around the year 1886. From this flawed batch of candy came the exclamation of or the phrase 'oh, fudge!' The initial documentation of fudge was in a letter from Poughkeepsie, New York. Emelyn Battersby Hartidge, a Vassar College student, wrote that a schoolmate's cousin made fudge. In Baltimore in 1886, the candy sold for 40 cents a pound. Two years later Ms. Hartidge obtained the recipe and made 30 pounds for a Senior Auction. Other colleges (Wellesley and Smith) then created their own recipes for this sweet treat.
Everybody loves to eat flavorful, rich fudge, but it is often considered a bit of a hassle to make. The earliest recipes were very difficult and a little unclear. Difficulty largely depended on which recipe was used, the ingredients, the quality of equipment and the patience taken in order to make it right. Also, being aware of the precise measurements, cooking time and continual stirring were important in order to get the perfect fudge. Stirring for the proper amount of time, and heating the ingredients to the right temperature are important as well in order to make the fudge smooth, creamy and not gritty. Moreover it could be really easy to under cook or over cook this sweet indulgence, which often results in the candy not setting up or scorching.
In contrast with other sweets going back a thousand years or more, fudge is fairly new. Earlier flavors of fudge included vanilla, chocolate and brown sugar penuche. The state of Michigan has become the fudge capital of the United States. Now days, the mixtures of fudge ingredients or flavors are nearly endless. Some of them are: maple walnut, chocolate cappuccino, vanilla cherry chocolate chip, raspberry coffee, lemon butter, vanilla caramel, dark chocolate, chocolate caramel pecan, peanut butter and chocolate cheesecake.
Although the actual word fudge can be defined differently, none of those meanings are equivalent to the family favorite, premium chocolate fudge. In America, the word fudge is nearly always associated with a wonderful, rich and creamy confectionery made with chocolate. At times you will see the word fudge is used on boxes of cakes or brownies, but this simply means they've added a little additional chocolate flavoring.
Fudge by definition is a rich and creamy candy. A semi-soft confection, that is smooth and made using fresh butter, sugar, sweet cream, corn syrup and often some mouth watering flavorings. Flavors could be chocolate, vanilla, butterscotch, white chocolate, Kahlua, buttermilk, peanut butter, flavored gelatin, kool aid, pumpkin, mint, maple or even bourbon. Fudge may have various nuts, including hazelnuts, pistachios, walnuts, pecans, roasted macadamia nuts, and almonds. Additional ingredients that are used in uncommon or decadent fudge could be: cheese, crushed candy canes, crackers, popcorn, coconut, pineapple chunks, candy bars, lime zest, espresso beans, chocolate chips, caramel, cookies, chocolate chunks, cherries and other dried or candied fruit, or marshmallows.
Author's Bio: Anna McAnthony is a staff and content writer at http://www.chocolategourmetcandy.com, and has been doing research and writing articles on chocolate and chocolate candy for many years. Visit http://www.chocolategourmetcandy.com for more information.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/home-and-family-articles/fudge-is-the-original-old-time-family-favorite-chocolate-sweet-treat-210789.html
About the Author
Anna McAnthony is a content writer at http://www.chocolategourmetcandy.com, and has been doing research on and writing about caramels and chocolate candy for several years.
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Tags: Cherry Cigarettes E-Cigarette, E-Cigarettes Association, The Cherry E-Cigarette, Cherry Flavorings, Cherry E-Liquid
