![](../I/WaterBiscuit-Trio.jpg.webp)
Water biscuits are baked using only flour and water, without shortening or other fats usually used in biscuit production. They are thin, hard and brittle, and usually served with cheese or wine.
This is a list of crackers. A cracker is a baked good typically made from a grain-and-flour dough and usually manufactured in large quantities. Crackers (roughly equivalent to savory biscuits in the United Kingdom and the Isle of Man) are usually flat, crisp, small in size (usually 75 millimetres (3.0 in) or less in diameter) and made in various shapes, commonly round or square.
Crackers
- Animal cracker
- Bath Oliver[1]
- Cream cracker[2]
- Crispbread
- Cheese cracker
- Graham cracker
- Hardtack[3]
- Maltose crackers
- Matzo
- Mein gon
- Nantong Xiting Cracker
- Oatcake
- Olive no Hana
- Oyster cracker
- Pletzel
- Rice cracker
- Saltine cracker[4]
- Taralli
- Water biscuit
Brand-name crackers
![](../I/Triscuit-Crackers.jpg.webp)
Triscuit crackers are baked whole wheat wafers.
- Airly
- Arnott's Shapes
- Better Cheddars
- Bremner Wafer
- Captain's Wafers
- Carr's
- Cheddars
- Cheese Nips
- Cheez-Itz
- Club Crackers
- Crown Pilot Crackers
- Goldfish
- In a Biskit
- Pepperidge Farm
- Premium Plus
- Rebisco
- Rice Thins
- Ritz Crackers
- Ry-Krisp
- Ryvita
- SAO
- Triscuit
- TUC
- Vegetable Thins
- Wasabröd
- Westminster Cracker Company
- Wheat Thins
Rice crackers
![](../I/Arare.jpg.webp)
Arare is a type of bite-sized Japanese rice cracker made from glutinous rice and flavored with soy sauce.
Beika
See also
References
- ↑ Osler, W.; Library, Osler (1969). Bibliotheca Osleriana: A Catalogue of Books Illustrating the History of Medicine and Science. Microfiche project - Hannah Institute of Medical Studies. MQUP. p. 314. ISBN 978-0-7735-9050-2. Retrieved October 10, 2017.
- ↑ Walter, E. (2008). Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Cambridge University Press. p. 328. ISBN 978-3-12-517988-2. Retrieved October 6, 2017.
- ↑ Schroeder-Lein, G.R. (2015). The Encyclopedia of Civil War Medicine. Taylor & Francis. p. 228. ISBN 978-1-317-45709-1. Retrieved October 6, 2017.
- ↑ Caballero, B.; Finglas, P.; Toldra, F. (2015). Encyclopedia of Food and Health. Elsevier Science. p. 448. ISBN 978-0-12-384953-3. Retrieved October 10, 2017.
External links
Media related to Crackers (food) at Wikimedia Commons
Media related to Rice crackers at Wikimedia Commons
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