Group: | Artistic Profile Deco Group ;-) |
Swap Coordinator: | yvonne401 (contact) |
Swap categories: | Food Themed |
Number of people in swap: | 4 |
Location: | International |
Type: | Type 1: Electronic |
Last day to signup/drop: | April 15, 2024 |
Date items must be sent by: | April 26, 2024 |
Number of swap partners: | 3 |
Description: | |
Did you know that April 26th is National Pretzel Day. Well yes it is. It's a great day to enjoy a yummy pretzel, either hard or soft. Which do you like better? I prefer soft but I actually eat more hard. National Pretzel Day is a holiday that is celebrated every year on April 26th. It’s a day when people celebrate the pretzel—a snack that has been enjoyed since the Middle Ages. On this day, people enjoy pretzels in all their forms and discuss which variety is better: hard or soft pretzels. To fully appreciate National Pretzel Day, you first have to delve into the origins of the pretzel. According to myth, the origins can be traced back to 7th-century Italy. Supposedly, monks baked little pieces of dough to give out as rewards to children who memorized their prayers. However, this version of the pretzel origin is currently unconfirmed, and there really is no evidence to support it. To find the first recorded evidence of the pretzel, you have to travel to 12th-century Germany. During this time, the pretzel was incorporated into the crests of German bakers’ guilds in 1111. Eventually, pretzels became known as a symbol of good luck. So much so, in fact, that German children often hung pretzels around their necks to celebrate New Year’s, and pretzels were used to decorate Christmas trees. They were such a prominent symbol of good luck, probably because they were associated with Christianity. By the 1500s, it became common for people to eat pretzels in Germany on Good Friday. Some people say that the pretzel was invented to be used as a food for Lent, and the peculiar shape of pretzels represents either people folding their hands in prayer or the three knots of the Holy Trinity.\ While no one really knows if this is true or not, one thing that is known is that pretzels became a popular food for Lent. During the 18th century, pretzels traveled with German immigrants as they immigrated to the United States. The German immigrants became known as the Pennsylvania Dutch, and many of them began to open bakeries all over Pennsylvania to sell bread products. Included in these bread products were pretzels, which became a popular American treat. Pennsylvania established itself as the main producer of pretzels in North America. Even today, more than three-fourths of all pretzels made in the United States are made in Pennsylvania. Until the 1930s, pretzels were handmade by American workers. These workers are reputed to have hand-twisted up to 40 pretzels every single minute. However, automation eventually hit the market when the first automated pretzel machine was introduced in 1935 by the Reading Pretzel Machinery Company. This machine enabled bakeries to make almost 250 pretzels a minute. Because of the popularity of pretzels in Pennsylvania, National Pretzel Day was established by a declaration by Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell in 2003. It has since been celebrated by pretzel enthusiasts all over the United States and even the world. $550 million dollars of pretzels are sold in the United States annually. The largest pretzel on record is 26.8 feet long and weighed over 840 pounds. The average American eats 2 pounds of pretzels each year. The average Pennsylvanian eats over 12 pounds each year. Pretzels without salt are called baldies. One of the best ways to celebrate this holiday is to head out to your favorite bakery or pretzel store and pick up your favorite type of pretzel. Many pretzel shops and bakeries offer free pretzels to people who show up at their shops on National Pretzel Day, so it’s worth checking out. This holiday is also a good day to expand your pretzel horizons. If you’ve always indulged in soft pretzels, then maybe it’s time to try out a hard pretzel. If you’ve always had salted pretzels, then maybe you should try some baldies, or perhaps a sweet pretzel. Next onto our swap:Post THREE (3) pictures or gifs to each of your THREE (3) partner's profiles with the theme "National Pretzel Day" or "pretzels". The pictures that you choose may be the SAME OR DIFFERENT between all of your partners. Please choose pictures that you think THEY will enjoy! If you get 3 pictures from your partner on "National Pretzel Day" or "pretzels" you have to rate them a 5. The heart on the rating is for if you like what they sent. To leave a photo on someone's profile use this code ! [ ] ( Copy image address here ) With NO spaces & paste the picture's link between the curved parenthesis. Practice on your own profile first to be sure it looks good because you can easily delete there. Pick images that are size 300 wide or smaller to be sure they fit. I go to Google images to get my pictures. Hover over images to see their size because there will be some larger sizes there too. If you really like something click on it and go to the words SEARCH BY IMAGE and click on that. THEN go to the word SMALL and see if there is one 300 size. There are other tricks in the group thread; AN EASY way to get a small PIC from a BIG one;-) You can find moving pictures at http://giphy.com/ You can also find gifs at google, just type in topic gif 300 x 300. Please write the TITLE OF THE SWAP ON YOUR PROFILE DECO MESSAGE too! This makes it easier for partners that are in a lot of these swaps to rate it. Any problems, feel free to contact me. I want to thank @anrtist for allowing me to borrow SOME of her wording. Requirements:
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