smorz., All Acronyms, viewed March 31, 2023, MLA All Acronyms. Retrieved March 31, 2023, from Chicago All Acronyms. Retrieved Aug– via Twitter Linkedin Quote Copy APA All Acronyms. "The Perfect S'more Is Practically Burned and a Little Salty". "How To Make Melt-In-Your-Mouth S'mores Over A Campfire". ^ "Smores Recipe - How To Make Smores".Intramural and Recreational Sports for Men and Women. Intramural and recreational sports for high school and college. Betty Crocker's Cook Book for Boys and Girls. 1925 mention of "Some-mores" being introduced as a new dish at Camp Andree ^ Tramping and Trailing with the Girl Scouts.A Book of 150 Recipes Prepared with Campfire Marshmallows. Contemporary recipes can substitute other foods, such as potato chips, Nutella and Peeps, for the classic ingredients. Chocolate digestives has a major advantage when lacking a piece of chocolate. In the UK, the lack of graham crackers is easily improvised with digestive biscuits with a slab of Cadbury's chocolate. Kellogg's Pop-Tarts also feature a s'mores variety. The Hershey's S'mores bar is one example. Various confections containing graham cracker, chocolate, and marshmallow are often sold as some derivative of a s'more, but they are not necessarily heated or served in the same shape as the traditional s'mores. An additional step may follow, wherein the entire sandwich is wrapped in foil and heated so that the chocolate partially melts. The roasted marshmallow is then sandwiched between two halves of a graham cracker and a piece of chocolate (or with chocolate on both top and bottom), between the graham crackers. Traditionally, the marshmallow is gooey but not burnt, but, depending on individual preference and cooking time, marshmallows can range from barely warm to charred. A marshmallow, usually held by a metal or wooden skewer, is heated over the fire until it is golden brown. S'mores are traditionally cooked over a campfire, although they can also be made at home over the flame of a wood-burning fireplace, in an oven, over a stove's flame, in a microwave, with a s'mores-making kit, or in a panini press. The 1958 publication Intramural and Recreational Sports for High School and College makes reference to "marshmallow toasts" and "s'mores hikes" as does its related predecessor, Intramural and Recreational Sports for Men and Women, published in 1949. A 1957 Betty Crocker cookbook contains a similar recipe under the name "s'mores". A 1956 recipe uses the name "S'Mores", and lists the ingredients as "a sandwich of two graham crackers, toasted marshmallow and ½ chocolate bar". The contracted term "s'mores" appears in conjunction with the recipe in a 1938 publication aimed at summer camps. Newspaper recipes began appearing as early as 1925. In 1927, a recipe for "Some More" was published in Tramping and Trailing with the Girl Scouts. The text indicates that the treat was already popular with both Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts. S'more appeared in a cookbook in the early 1920s, where it was called a "Graham Cracker Sandwich". S'more is a contraction of the phrase "some more". S'mores are popular in the United States and Canada, and traditionally cooked over a campfire. A s'more is a confection consisting of toasted marshmallow and chocolate sandwiched between two pieces of graham cracker.
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