O is for Oreo Cookies, it was bound to happen. With an iconic cookie starting with the letter O I simply had to make the O is for Oreo Cookies. See how it was made.
So we made it to the letter O and this time there never was any doubt on what food I would use. It had to be Oreo cookies. They look cool, are shaped like an O and taste great. It doesn’t hurt that they look cool either.
Choosing the Oreo and Font
Normally an O is a boring letter, no fun shapes to create something fun out of. But since I chose the Oreo cookie to use I decided to just use the shape of the Oreo and most other cookies, circular. That is super easy to do so drawing out the actual O took only a few minutes. I just used a plate and then a small bowl to make the center.
Set up for O is for Oreo Cookies
This time I did the photoshoot on a Sunday, that meant daylight, something we haven’t been spoiled with in Sweden the last few months. Things get dark here around the same time that you start considering doing something outside. But on Sunday I had great light so that meant I could go back to my original place for food photography, my kitchen counter. What is great about that is that it’s perfect in size and sits right by a window. So no artificial lighting.
I also decided I wanted to shoot the O on a white background but was not certain how I would shape the cookies. So I put the O that I had drawn out on paper and placed under a sheet of glass, usually that means problems with reflections but since the background was white it worked great.
Then it was time to shape the O on top of the glass. Turns out Oreo cookies crumble like crazy and are impossible to shape with smooth lines without going insane. So after cutting cookies for a while I decide to change tactics. So I took some sugar syrup and “drew” the O with a paintbrush on the glass. Now I had the perfect Oreo cookie glue.
Then I took some cookies, removed the filling (don’t worry, I ate it all afterwards) and mixed the cookies into a dark crumble that more or less looked exactly like ground coffee. I then sprinkled the Oreo crumble on top and carefully brushed of what had not glued to the glass.
Then I added a ring of whole cookies and broke some into smaller pieces to make the O look good. I think it worked out pretty good.
As a final attempt to make it even cooler I tried pouring milk in and around the O, thanks to the crumble that worked poorly as you can see, something to revisit in the future maybe.
Materials used
This is what I used for the O is for Oreo Cookies shoot.
4 packages of Oreo cookies
camera
white paper
pencil
sugar syrup
mixer
brush
sheet of glass
About A-Z Photography Project at Ateriet
A-Z Photography Project is a photo project here at Ateriet and at Instagram. The idea is to photograph each letter of the alphabet and let it represent one food or something edible. I am making the project for fun and to hopefully improve on my photography skills.
You can follow the project on Instagram under the tag #atozinfood where some of these photos will be published from our Instagram for Ateriet that you’ll find at @AterietFood.
Feel free to share and contribute and come with critique about this project, just send us an email, leave a comment or connect on social media.
A circle topped with a two-bar cross is a Nabisco logo that stands for a European symbol of quality. Experts believe the design for the Nabisco symbol arose from the Cross of Lorraine, which was carried by the Knights Templar during the First Crusade in the 11th century.
Each original Oreo cookie is 29 percent creme and 71 percent cookie. 4. It takes 59 minutes to make an Oreo. Each Oreo wafer is baked for exactly 290.6 seconds at a temperature of 400°F from above and 300°F from below.
OREO is a mnemonic. O stands for Opinion; tell how you feel about the topic. R stands for Reasons; tell your readers why you feel this way. E stands for Explanations; give your readers examples of why you feel this way.
The most common version asserts that Oreo derives from or, French for "gold" and supposedly the color of the original packaging. Others say it stands for "orexigenic," a medical term for substances that stimulate the appetite (including cannabis).
Oreos are most popular among males ages 16-18 years.
92% of males cookie snackers ages 16-18 include Oreo as one of their favorite brands. Oreo's popularity begins to diminish among older female Gen Z-ers, with 75% of 22-24-year-old female cookie snackers selecting it as a preferred brand.
The Mega Stuf Oreos, which have been around since 2013, offered up a whopping 11 grams of filling, nearly double that of a Double Stuf. The Most Stuf cookies certainly look like more ... a lot more!
That being said, using simple methods of deduction, we were able to gleam from the ingredient list that the filling is likely made of sugar, palm and/or canola oil, high fructose corn syrup, soy lecithin, and artificial flavor. The omission of one particular ingredient is glaringly obvious: cream.
Calories in One Oreo Cookie: The serving size listed on the standard Oreo package is 3 cookies, so these amounts are all tripled on the nutritional label. A single Oreo cookie has a little over 53 calories. The cookie also contains 8.3 grams of carbohydrates, 2.3 grams of fat and 0.67 grams of protein.
A regular Oreo cookie weighs 11.3 grams. A Double Stuf Oreo weighs 14.5 grams, and a Mega Stuf Oreo weighs 18 grams. Assuming that the chocolate-cookie part (the part that isn't Stuf) of all three versions is the same (and Mr.
According to student lab results, the average traditional Oreo has about 3.2 grams of the creamy center filling. The Double Stuf Oreos had a filling average of 6.5 or greater!
The circle topped with a two-bar cross in which the word “OREO” resides, reports the Atlantict, is a variant of the Nabisco logo, and is either “an early European symbol for quality” or a Cross of Lorraine, as carried by the Knights Templar into the Crusades.
In place of the wreaths, Turnier positioned an array of four-petal flowers.Surrounding the word “Oreo” was a colophon, or emblem, that was a circle with two crossed lines at the top. It was the same design Nabisco had been using to adorn its company logo. “That was his idea,” Turnier says.
OREO offers special-edition 'pronoun packs' at World Pride
The three pack designs underscored the importance of gender expression and highlighted the pronouns "he/his," "she/hers" and "they/theirs" in support of transgender and non-binary communities.
Introduction: My name is Terrell Hackett, I am a gleaming, brainy, courageous, helpful, healthy, cooperative, graceful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.
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