No. Waffle cones is a plural compound noun. Here, also, the word waffle (the foodstuff) seems like a noun adjunct rather than an adjective.
A ice cream vendor at the 1904 St. Louisworld fair the vendor ran out of cones. So he ask a waffle vendor to roll up waffles to make waffle cones.
One possibility is 7:3.
Make waffle batter and then put small amount in waffle iron. take out when crispy and roll into cone.
Bob made a transaction through his bank account, spent it all on waffle cones, and had to file bankruptcy because he bought an island as well as over four million waffle cones.
In 1904, the Waffle-Cone was invented at Missouri's World Fair (Missouri,USA). The Ice Cream Man ran out of Ice Cream cones so he improvised by wrapping a waffle into a cone figure and putting ice cream in it.
Norfolk, VA. But I read the same article yesterday, and I think it said the "waffle cone", not ice cream cones in general.
Ice cream cones are made using wheat flour, tapioca flour and sugar. The ingredients are used for the sweetness, baking quality and strength. The ingredients are mixed with other ingredients such as water, shortening and baking powder, creating a batter and poured into an automated machine to make the designs and shapes of the ice cream cones.
Would you like syrup on your waffle?We should go to the waffle house.He does like to waffle on about nonsense.
Waffle cones for desserts are mentioned from 1825. Vendors seem to have been using them for icecream since the late 1800s. in Europe and early 20th c. in USA
A sweet, creamy treat usually put on a cone.
no a waffle is not a plant
In Victorian times the ice cream cones were made of glass. They were reusable but with no running water in most ice cream stalls the glass cones were often not washed. This gave rise to the edible ice cream cone.