Presentation
A gift handed to a recipient in a paper bag is still an acceptable gift, but how much pleasanter it is to receive it nicely packaged.
Eyes feast on expectation. The tin above is an example of attractive presentation. I came across it while looking for ginger biscuits. It appealed to me instantly. Sometimes the contents of striking containers do not live up to the expectation, but these biscuits did. Heart-shaped and pleasantly gingery, they were a delight.In the 15th century, German monks imported ginger biscuits to Sweden. Ginger biscuits had been known in England and Germany for many years before this.In 1929, sisters Anna and Emma Karlsson established a bakery in Östermalm, Stockholm, to produce thin ginger biscuits. The legend is that a wish will come true if a biscuit held in the palm of one’s hand breaks into three when gently tapped. Don’t tap too hard or there will be a handful of crumbs!Nyåkers Pepparkakor are also attractively packaged. They were introduced in the 1940s by two brothers, Bengt and John Åström, in the village of Nyåker. This area became known as the ‘Promised Land of ginger biscuits.’
I could make my own biscuits, of course, but I’m pretty sure they would not stand comparison with either of the above products, neither of which are always readily available.

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