CANDY FLOSS, memories of the days we went to the fair with mum and dad. Running around wanting to go on the rides, smelling the oil in the fair ,seeing the fish hanging on the stalls to win. If you did win one then you realised that you had to buy food bowel and the rest of it. Yes you could buy it all there at a price, so you did but the poor fish never lasted the week, bless. So cruel.
The bumper cars, and not to forget the weather, rain rain and most probably rain again. The thing was who cared i did not as a child, i could happily wait all year for that great big bag of candy floss, the sweet smell and the fizz when it hit your tongue. WOW, i used to savour it so much i would save it as much as i could. The only thing was after a few days it would be rock solid and i did not like that,my brother would get it because he did.
So to get to the point , it would be candy floss time and time again.
Candy floss, memories and a visit to the fair as a little girl.
Thanks for that i enjoyed the memories by your question.
Popcorn was integral to early 16th century Aztec Indian ceremonies. Bernardino de Sahagun writes: "And also a number of young women danced, having so vowed, a popcorn dance. As thick as tassels of maize were their popcorn garlands. And these they placed upon (the girls') heads."
Candy Floss or Cotton candy is a soft confection that look like a fluffy mass of cotton (but there is no cotton in cotton candy). Cotton candy is made from finely-granulated sugar that is heated and spun into slim threads.
Cotton candy was invented in 1897 by William Morrison and John C. Wharton, candymakers from Nashville, Tennessee, USA. They invented a device that heated sugar in a spinning bowl that had tiny holes in it. It formed a treat that they originally called "Fairy Floss." As the bowl spun around, the caramelized sugar was forced through the tiny holes, making feathery candy that melts in the mouth.
Morrison and Wharton introduced cotton candy to the world at the St. Louis World's Fair (1904) and sold huge amounts of it for 25 cents a box (that was a substantial amount of money back then). They sold about 68,655 boxes at that fair. The term "cotton candy" began to be used in the USA around 1920. In the United Kingdom, this treat is called "candy floss."
That's a tough one. I love cotton candy, but now there's kettle corn, which is just sooo good. And there's also caramel corn. So I guess popcorn, just because of the variety.
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pop corn
CANDY FLOSS, memories of the days we went to the fair with mum and dad. Running around wanting to go on the rides, smelling the oil in the fair ,seeing the fish hanging on the stalls to win. If you did win one then you realised that you had to buy food bowel and the rest of it. Yes you could buy it all there at a price, so you did but the poor fish never lasted the week, bless. So cruel.
The bumper cars, and not to forget the weather, rain rain and most probably rain again. The thing was who cared i did not as a child, i could happily wait all year for that great big bag of candy floss, the sweet smell and the fizz when it hit your tongue. WOW, i used to savour it so much i would save it as much as i could. The only thing was after a few days it would be rock solid and i did not like that,my brother would get it because he did.
So to get to the point , it would be candy floss time and time again.
Candy floss, memories and a visit to the fair as a little girl.
Thanks for that i enjoyed the memories by your question.
Popcorn was integral to early 16th century Aztec Indian ceremonies. Bernardino de Sahagun writes: "And also a number of young women danced, having so vowed, a popcorn dance. As thick as tassels of maize were their popcorn garlands. And these they placed upon (the girls') heads."
Candy Floss or Cotton candy is a soft confection that look like a fluffy mass of cotton (but there is no cotton in cotton candy). Cotton candy is made from finely-granulated sugar that is heated and spun into slim threads.
Cotton candy was invented in 1897 by William Morrison and John C. Wharton, candymakers from Nashville, Tennessee, USA. They invented a device that heated sugar in a spinning bowl that had tiny holes in it. It formed a treat that they originally called "Fairy Floss." As the bowl spun around, the caramelized sugar was forced through the tiny holes, making feathery candy that melts in the mouth.
Morrison and Wharton introduced cotton candy to the world at the St. Louis World's Fair (1904) and sold huge amounts of it for 25 cents a box (that was a substantial amount of money back then). They sold about 68,655 boxes at that fair. The term "cotton candy" began to be used in the USA around 1920. In the United Kingdom, this treat is called "candy floss."
IT'S POPCORN FOR ME!!!!!!!!!!! I LOVE IT YUMO!
Pop corn
Depends where I am. In the cinema - pop corn, at the fairground, candy floss.
Definitely candy floss
Pop-corn all da way. Cany Floss is jus sugar and sticky as well, so I guess popcorn is hands up!
That's a tough one. I love cotton candy, but now there's kettle corn, which is just sooo good. And there's also caramel corn. So I guess popcorn, just because of the variety.
Pop corn.
Pop corn except when you get a hard corn when in the cinema and about break your teeth, LOL!!