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Petits Fours

Sesame, churro (?), and dark chocolate.

 

Mansion on Turtle Creek

Dallas, Texas

(October 31, 2014)

 

the ulterior epicure | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Bonjwing Photography

A tower of vanilla wafers.

Argonne biochemical engineer Seth Snyder is pictured with the laboratory's resin wafer technology.

 

Argonne and Nalco Company, with headquarters in Naperville, Ill., have reached a licensing agreement for an electrodeionization technology that will help significantly reduce the cost of producing clean energy and of the chemicals and water used in industry. The separations technology can process biomass-based feedstocks into biofuels and chemicals.

 

Specifically, Argonne's patented technology allows for the deionizing or the continuous removal of charged products like organic acids from aqueous streams and eliminates the requirement to continuously add neutralizing agents. Conventional bioprocessing technologies require significant capital expenditures on energy-intensive steps to recover these products and generate large waste streams.

 

Photo courtesy of: Argonne National Laboratory

 

Single exposure, colors as-shot.

Original: 4276x2845

 

Etsy: www.etsy.com/listing/250589036/

The Original Necco Wafers (right) vs. the new Necco Wafers by Spangler (left)! Side by side, flavor by flavor, no difference, they taste the same. Same texture, same crunch. They're even stamped Necco!

 

I have eaten NECCO wafers since I was a kid, my parents ate them, and my grandfather ate them and bought them for me. When I was in my early 20's I often repaid my grandfather, I bought NECCO wafers for him.

Lindt

 

(Milk chocolate with a wafer and hazelnut cream center)

From Five Below.

Union Square.

New York, NY.

These edible stand cupcake mattress toppers are made from 0.7 mm density wafer paper and also are entirely edible. The style is published into one side of the edible card, utilizing ONE HUNDRED% edible inks. Our wafer paper cupcake stand will certainly constantly have a minimum of 8 months 'finest prior to' from the day we

 

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Display cake with various wafer paper techniques, roses, fantasy flower and border

A little dust perhaps, but still quite pretty.

 

FA FM/TIB

Not perfect. Top of one and bottom of another tin since neither individually were totally unblemished. Tins in my collection.

The brown wafers in front are called 排叉 (pai cha).

 

In the background you see Jian Bing (煎餅), also a delicious type of street food.

A very thin kind of crêpe (often made from mung beans) is spread on a flat iron, heated from underneath by coal. Chopped green onions, cilantro, salt, brown soybean paste, chilli sauce and an egg are spread on top, and a crispy square of fried dough put into the centre. Quickly, the crepe is folded over the dough square, chopped into neat thirds and folded in on itself. The bing is usually served in a piece of rough, absorbent brown paper and eaten immediately.

A wafer is a thin slice of semiconductor material , such as a silicon crystal , used in the fabrication of integrated circuits and other microdevices. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wafer_(electronics).

 

Dmension of a square: 0,5cm

Edible image wafer papers for sale in my Etsy shop here: www.queenoftartswafers.etsy.com

chocolate cookies package

66587 PINK WAFER , Named AS ONE WE CAN Approaches its destination Doncaster in charge of the 4E63 05:38 FELIXSTOWE NORTH - DONCASTER RAILPORT Liner , Friday 14th June 2019

Nikon D3200

Super-Takumar 50/1.4

Silicon Wafer

Leitz Orthoplan, EPI Ploemopak, Autofluorescence (2.5 - 16x objectives)

This wafer was manufactured at the IBM chip fabrication (fab) facility located at East Fishkill, NY.

 

When opened in 2003, the $2.5 billion fab was the first to mass produce 90nm integrated circuits, fabricated on a 300mm wafer of pure crystalline silicon. For comparison, the semiconductor industry is now developing 28 nanometer circuits.

 

Gift of IBM, 2003.

    

This is a silicon wafer with RAM microchips lithographically printed on them. They're mass produced in this wafer form, and then later cut down, and packaged into dies. These particular wafers contain mostly RAM. They were manufactured for Ford Aerospace back in the mid 1980s.

 

In the closeup you can zoom all the way in, and resolve the details of individual transistors. Just a year or two later, that would no longer have been possible without much more powerful microscopes. The transistors etched onto these wafers are positively huge by modern standards...hundreds, or thousands of times larger.

Here are the Cheese wafers from the Pyrex cookbook. They're like Cheesy Crackers... so good!

Inside the Solar World manufacturing facility.

2/24/2009

Venus Optics Laowa 25mm f2.8 2.5-5x Ultra Macro of a Timeout wafer @ 5x

Part of my Ultra Macro Sweets series

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