yes
no
to the factory then to the store
it gets sent away to England to be stored
Roses, cards, and chocolate.
German Chocolate Cake is not from Germany. The recipe's name originated from a Englishman named Sam German. He invented a dark sweet baking chocolate for Baker's Chocolate Company in 1852. The new bar was named for him: "Baker's German's Sweet Chocolate."The original recipe was sent by a woman to a Dallas, Texas newspaper in 1957 and titled German's Chocolate Cake. The recipe became so popular that brand owners General Foods(now owned by Kraft Foods) sent the recipe to papers across the country. This led to the popularity it has today, that and it being fantastic. The apostrophe "s" eventually dropped off the recipes through the years.An Englishman was the namesake and a Texas house wife made it famous, it is most definitely not German. It is however delicious.Source: Kentonville.comi agreee
This depends on the weather where the chocolate is being shipped, how long the shipping takes, and how the chocolate is packaged. To prevent the chocolate from melting, it should be well insulated and preferably sent by overnight or another fast shipping method, especially in warm areas and during summer.
glaze it with sugar on top and then heat it
Postage for an ordinary first class letter sent internationally is $3.24. If you can do what you want to do with a postcard it's $1.20
Yes, it's just like you need a special cell phone to travel internationally. Many will come with this standard, though. You will need to also remember to dial the country code (such as 49 for Germany). Because faxes are sent through the phone lines, it's also important to make sure your phone service can dial internationally.
700 per sent
Sends is the third person singular form of the verb send send -- I send her flowers everyday sends -- She sends me chocolate sent -- I sent her flowers yesterday sending -- She is sending me chocolates tomorrow
The suffix of the word "internationally" is "-ly".