Not exact matches
Even without the
royal icing they looked fancy
because of the cutouts.
I tend to use
Royal Icing when you need to make something that needs to be a) demensional (ie: stand up on top
of the cake and needs to harden for several days before hand) or b) made ahead
of time
because there's no way you could do it all the night before the party * wink *
(I add white gel to the
royal icing that will be white
because I think it helps to prevent bleeding
of just plain, untinted
icing and it looks less transparent, but that step is optional.)
In my own maternal ancestral village
of Akyem - Nkronso (I have never been to the place, by the way), for example, one
of my late uncles, a chief and the traditional
Royal Mausoleum Custodian
of Akyem - Abuakwa, had his mortal remains
iced for exactly the same number
of years as Capt. Zapata,
because the various legitimate claimant lineages
of the Nkronso
Royal Family could not decide on which household's turn it was to present a candidate to succeed the deceased chief.
The tent run by the
Royal Netherlands Academy
of Arts and Sciences was popular although that may be
because it offered free
ice cream.
We have another indicator
of how far south the
ice came
because in a letter to the Admiralty in 1817 the
Royal Society wrote,
After an intense week
of editing a paper on the need for national academies and
royal societies to undertake environmental health risk assessments for climate change AND MAKE RECOMMENDATIONS, especially to adopt the IPCC's best - case emissions scenario, RCP2.6 (
because the IPCC does not and will not make recommendations), followed by a look at the fires burning in Siberia and the sea
ice thinning in the Arctic, it struck me...