Discoveries at the Jungle Cookie Month: Gamesa Arcoriris from Mexico and Walkers Shortbread Cookies from Scotland
Back to feed- Posted: 6/7/2017
- Categories: Discoveries at the Jungle
Cookie-like wafers have existed for as long as baking has been documented, because they are great for bringing along while traveling. But those wafers were not usually sweet and not really a “cookie” as we would classify it today. Once sugar become a little more common, around the 7th century, people started combining it with “travel cakes” we mentioned to make them sweeter and more desirable. Cookies as we know it – cream, butter and sugar cookies – didn’t really come into existence until around the 18th century.
Gamesa Arcoiris from Mexico
Where you can find these: Fairfield Location: Orange 11 // Eastgate Location: Pink 13
Did you know? China didn’t have fortune cookies until they were introduced to China in 1993 and even then they were sold as “genuine American fortune cookies”
Where you can find these: Fairfield Location: Orange 18 // Eastgate Location: Yellow 7
Did you know? Shortbread was classified as a bread by bakers to avoid paying the tax placed on biscuits.
Hans Freitag Biscuits and Wafers From Germany and Jules Destrooper Assorted Thins and Crisps from Belgium
Britannia Cookies from India and St. Michael Biscuits from France
Gamesa Arcoriris from Mexico and Walkers Shortbread Cookies from Scotland
Lotte Koala’s March Cookies from Japan and Loacker Quadratini Wafer Cookies from Austria
Garden Wafers from Hong Kong and Kras Napolitanke Wafers from Croatia
Arnott’s Tim Tams Original from Australia and Daelmans Stroopwafels from Holland