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Donuts

Doughnuts are a fried dessert food. The dough is commonly shaped like a ring, but some doughnuts are filled with fruits or sweet creams.

735 Questions

Where can you buy squishy donut keychains?

you can buy them from melovewholesale.com sarahandashley.com strapya.com or kawaii-land.com

How much sugar in a maple bar donut?

it has a little over 12 grams off sugar

What does An optimist sees the donut A pessimist sees the hole. mean?

it means like the person who sees the don't can see the whole thing

What does the idiom dead as a donut mean?

To be 'as dead as a donut' is to be utterly dead, devoid of life (when applied to people, plants or animals) or finished with, unusable (when applied to inanimate objects).

How much US dollars to open a Mister Donut franchise?

Howmany dollar does it cost to open a Mister Donut franchise in the US?

Is there a patent for donuts?

No, there is not and cannot be such a patent.

Why do they call doughnuts the word doughnuts?

It is made out of dough, and in it's earlier stages, had ground nuts in it.

Where are the corporate headquarters for Winchell's donuts?

18830 E. San Jose Ave.
City of Industry, CA 91748-1325

Where do donuts come from?

Donuts are yeast raised dough, that is deep-fried sometimes filled, and sometimes have an exterior coating. History: The doughnut supposedly came to us from the eighteenth century Dutch of New Amsterdam and were referred to as olykoeks, meaning oily cakes. In the nineteenth century, Elizabeth Gregory fried flavored dough with walnuts for her son Hanson Gregory, hence the name doughnut. By the late nineteenth century, the doughnut had a hole. Doughnuts were a great favorite at lumbering camps of the Midwest and Northwest as they were easy to make and full of calories needed to provide quick energy for arduous logging jobs. "Doughboys" of World War I ate thousands of doughnuts served up by the Salvation Army on the French front. Soldiers reminisced that the doughnut was far more than a hot snack. The doughnut represented all the men were fighting for—the safety and comfort of mother, hearth, and home. Soon after the doughboys returned, dough-nut shops flourished. A Russian immigrant named Levitt invented a doughnut machine in 1920 that automatically pushed dough into shaped rings. By 1925, the invention earned him $25 million a year and it was a fixture in bakeries across the country. The machine-made doughnut was a hit of the 1934 World's Fair. Other machinery quickly developed for everything from mixing to frying. Franchises soon followed. By 1937, Krispy Kreme was founded on a "secret recipe" for yeast-raised doughnuts and Dunkin' Donuts (currently the franchise that sells the most doughnuts worldwide) was founded in Massachusetts. Presently, Krispy Kreme totals 147 stores in 26 states, while Dunkin' Donuts has 5,000 franchises in the United States and is present in 37 countries.

Which agency during World War 2 charged soldiers for their donuts and coffee Red Cross or Salvation Army?

During WWII the Red Cross charged US soldiers for cigarettes that they supplied and most veterans say that the Salvation Army did the most to help them

The Red Cross was ORDERED to by the then Sec. of War Henry L. Stimson. British Red Cross routinely charged their servicemen, presumably Americans are more generous, so there was trouble in the ranks. So Sec. Stimson sent a letter to the American Red Cross telling them it was best for morale if they charged US servicemen as well. The Salvation Army being a religion could (and presumably still can) not be ordered by the government to do the same. The Red Cross, who has worked with service members and still does everyday in the field, has lived with the bad press ever since.

PS. Some Red Cross WORKERS were found to be charging on their own (as in money in their pockets) elsewhere, strictly against Red Cross policy then and today. All Red Cross disaster assistance is free, a gift from the American People.

When you eat a donut how does it travel through the digestive system?

You put it in your mouth, and you then chew. The salivary glands are working on breaking down the carbs. It then reaches the stomach where it churns more. Then it goes to the small intestine where the nutrients and the wastes are separated. The nutrients are sent to your body, and the wastes are going to be "stored" in the anus to leave the body.

How much does a bat donut weigh?

yes it makes the swing on the bat harder but it slows down your swing so you cant hit it or cant get contact.