What is Bath Oliver?
Bath Oliver is white, pale, thin and dry biscuit or cracker, which was invented in England in the mid -18th century. It is named after the person invented, and the city in which he lived was created for health care purposes, Bath Oliver is now used as a snack, often consumed with cheese and red wine. The university, the oldest educational institutions of higher education in the Netherlands, previously practiced medicine in Plymouth in Devon, where he introduced inoculation for smallpox. But it was in the bath, which is located east of Plymouth, where he will stay for the rest of his life.
In ten years, Oliver became a head physician in the city. It was because of the establishment of a hospital now known as Royal Mineral Water Hospital or "min". The medical facility that specializes in rheumatism was founded in 1738 from the belief that the mineral waters in the BATH spa contained the benefits of healing. Oliver came up with a food item that could supplement the alleged natural forces.
So a bathroom was born, which was the predecessor of Bath Oliver. It was an incredibly rich bun made of floors, sugar sugar, milk, water, dried yeast, eggs, butter and sultan, which are white grapes without seeds. Although patients loved delicious snacks, Oliver soon found that they were gaining weight when they were eaten. He resorted to the introduction of Bath Oliver as a smaller alternative to fattening.
In recent years, which has suffered from gout in recent years, Oliver wanted him to survive. Before he died in 1764, he handed it over to his coach Atkins along with some flour and money. Atkins continued to make a fortune with the diet biscuit when he founded a shop on 13 Green Street; He is attributed to him with the name Bath Oliver. He has been advertised as an "old Oliver Biscuits" bathroom, which has the ability to reduce the acidity of the stomach.
The Bath Oliver is still commercially sold, marked afterWilliam Oliver himself. They are no longer produced in Bath and Oliver's Cracker recipe is still maintained by a secret. From the rare, old cookbooks, it is known that Bath Oliver Biscuits contains flour, yeast, water, milk and butter.