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Florentine biscuit

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Florentine biscuit
Florentine biscuits
Alternative namesFlorentine, biscotto fiorentino (in Italian)
TypeBiscuit
Region or stateNamed after Florence, Italy
Main ingredientsNuts, candied cherries, sugar, butter, honey, dark chocolate

A Florentine biscuit (or simply, a Florentine), known in Italian as biscotto fiorentino, is a sweet biscuit of nuts and fruit.

Florentines are made of nuts (typically hazelnuts and almonds) and candied cherries mixed with sugar melted together with butter and honey, cooked in an oven. They are often coated on the bottom with chocolate, which is traditionally scored in a wave pattern with the tines of a fork for decoration. Other types of candied fruit are used as well. They typically contain neither flour nor eggs.[1]

See also

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Media related to Florentine (biscuit) at Wikimedia Commons

References

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  1. ^ Davies, Emiko. "The Truth About Florentines".