Check the root cellar and pantry for spoilage in onions, apples and squash. |
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Pleasers from Scott Staples's menu include grilled romaine salad with apples, bacon, and Roquefort and house-smoked hanger steak. |
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Pour in half the batter, arrange half the apples on top, sprinkle with half the walnuts and drizzle on 2 tabs honey. |
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For example, methyl butyrate, a derivative of butyric acid, smells like apples. |
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There are pyramids of sweet-smelling guavas, papayas, watermelons, pineapples, custard apples, lemons, limes and avocados. |
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Some organic acids, however, are quite strong, such as citric acid in citrus fruit, malic acid in apples, and acetic acid in vinegar. |
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Adding cooking apples or damsons will ensure a perfect set in jam or jelly because of these fruits' high pectin levels. |
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Fruits such as apples, apricots, quinces, figs, pears, cherries, berries, and grapes grew in orchards or the river valleys. |
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There were medlars, and apples, and quinces, and cherries, and I think many more that I could not name by their bark or tiny fruit. |
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The company is introducing meal-size salads, a side salad, fresh apples and a burger made from the meat substitute Quorn. |
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Imported apples are packed and graded using the latest technology including waxing, which gives them an extra shine. |
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I stand outside the vegetable shop as Rose buys some apples, carrots and a cauliflower. |
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Last week the kids had made apple crisp with the apples they picked on my second day. |
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It is inside the green cells of spinach leaves and the damp flesh of apples. |
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Eighteen lumps of different cheeses littered the table amongst baskets of green and red apples and ripe pears. |
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The apple cider, made exclusively with crisp, sweet winesap apples, is spicy and just winey enough. |
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What do plastic garbage bags, human flesh, and the skins of apples all have in common? |
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Cate picked a few apples from a fruit tree in the grove, wondering if they had any food to eat. |
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Autumn is ideal for crisp British apples to accompany a ploughman's lunch of local farmhouse cheese. |
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After a while I found that I liked to eat some custard apples better than others. |
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Montego Bay offered us some custard apples, mangoes, guineps, and naseberries. |
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Fruit trees, apples, pears and plums for the most part, are weighed down with a good year's crop. |
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The result is an incongruous lush patchwork of fields containing tomatoes, cherries, apples and corn, all surrounded by desert. |
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The young fruit of apples and grapes can also develop rough skin due to powdery mildew. |
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I have three plums and three pears, and a bunch of apples from my apple tree. |
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I landed in some flowers beneath an apple tree, and two apples fell on my head. |
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Fruit trees such as apples, currants and gooseberries should do well and, to be more exotic, you could try nectarines and cherries. |
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Grapes hang from a pergola, apples are espaliered and ripe berries tempt the visitor. |
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From 1905 to 1918, he brought back samples of plants from apples to zoysia grass. |
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Fruit trees such as apples, pears, and cherries are also important household assets. |
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Some would say this is apples and oranges, that recreational golf is different to tournament golf. |
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I mean, we are really talking apples and oranges when we compare these religions. |
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If you would care to accompany me up the apples and pears I think I have what you are looking for. |
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Thus the trouble and strife would walk down the apples and pears and along the frog and toad to use the public dog and bone. |
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Does the Greater London Assembly issue directives on disabled access and suggest fitting elevators to replace apples and pears? |
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This setup should provide as close to apples to apples in terms of hardware configuration. |
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Simply put, comparing our operations to commercial operations is not an apples to apples proposition. |
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You're going to accept their recommendation, especially if, price-wise, we're talking roughly apples to apples. |
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Unfortunately, you can't get 8 and 16 MB cache versions in the same capacities, which makes it impossible to compare apples to apples. |
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This virtualization stuff is so new, so tricky and so varied that apples to apples measurements are almost impossible. |
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Still, aggressive masculine behaviour isn't the problem of a few bad apples. |
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But you can't weed out the bad apples by merely having a national I.D. card. |
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That's all I'm saying, is we have to start blaming the barrel and not simply saying there are a few bad apples who corrupted the barrel. |
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It is far more realistic to turn your complaining inward, and pressure the bad apples in your group to stop pulling down the average. |
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I've now configured my MTA to add a message ID if it's missing and she's apples. |
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Brakes will need adjusting if the bike shop hasn't put the washers in for the adjusters, all you need is some lock tight and she's apples. |
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Just give the cooler a light rough up with a wire brush or green scotch pad and then wipe with prepsol, paint with heatproof and she's apples. |
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He had been given a basket of apples and a revolver to sit weightily in his deep overcoat pocket. |
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Sweet muscadine grapes, blackberries, apples, jujubes and a host of other fruits will be available at these upcoming sales. |
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He admonished them for stealing and told them it was a great sin to steal apples from his orchard. |
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I was the one who had the brains so I kept cave and I used to charge 'em all two apples so I never went to get the apples myself. |
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We'll also be wholesaling apples and pumpkins soon to local CSA's, processors, and produce auctions. |
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It has caramel apples and kettle corn and hot apple cider and thick stadium blankets. |
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Like wind-blown apples, the first crop of Asian agencies coming to market are the weaker fruit. |
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Yorks, Rome Beauties and Winesaps are also good cooking apples, if a red apple is preferred. |
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Sure, kids should eat lots of fruits and veggies, but 10 years after Alar, apples are still loaded with pesticides. |
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Quarter the apples, then peel and cut away the core with a small paring knife. |
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The kitchen garden includes fruits such as strawberries as well as plum and apples trees plus a variety of vegetables. |
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Others, such as cooking apples, raspberries, blackcurrants, redcurrants and gooseberries, have more pectin and set without any help. |
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It's like selling wormy apples and telling customers that they're just going to have to become more sophisticated eaters of apples. |
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In early spring, the park is blanketed with wildflowers, including violets, may apples, spring beauties, and lady's slipper orchids. |
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Smoky nuts, ripe apples and yeasty notes wrap themselves around a core of bubbles and refreshing acidity. |
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When I make these for the real event I'm going to make bowls or nests for the apples to sit in so no one has to tear away spiky sugar. |
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While you harvested a ton of apples, you still ended up with lots rotting on the ground, attracting yellow jackets and making a mess. |
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Here, turn left on to SH 60, which passes through orchards of apples, hops and grapes. |
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Almonds, plums, apples, cherries, and lemons are enjoyed in many households fresh off the trees in family gardens. |
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Both see a system that doesn't reward quality, whether it's apples grown with Integrated Pest Management or tender lean beef. |
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A year later he was awarded prizes for his peas, grapes, rhubarb and apples. |
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The branches greened, leaves sprouted, and blossoms sprung and turned into ripe apples. |
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The dome-shaped shade displays apples and grapes arranged in a progression of color as the fruits appear to ripen with the seasons. |
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For example, some apples are best for drying, storing, or making apple butter. |
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It was that time of year when the apples were ripe and everyone was making their apple butter. |
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Use a small knife and spoon to scoop out the apple cores, leaving the base of the apples intact. |
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I also cooked down some apples into apple mush so that we can use that in a smoothie today. |
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They come in for a jug of cider and also buy apples, apple pies, jellies, and vegetables. |
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The pages for January show children sledding with homemade wooden sleds, roasting apples over an open fire and pulling taffy. |
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They're generally very fruity, and can have the subtle tastes of apples, peaches, apricots and melons. |
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You put a box in here, the apples run up a roller and this machine only sorts, it doesn't wash. |
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She must keep a cool root cellar somewhere to have apples this late in Spring. |
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One of my colleagues was even given long underwear with apples printed on them! |
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Fruits like Granny Smith apples and grapefruit act as astringents and help cut down on excessive cravings. |
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I took also a handful of dried apples, most of which I gave to Shagg, for I was still athirst despite the cold, and could not swallow them. |
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Cate walked over to the saddle and placed several of the apples in the saddlebag. |
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Hop Sing served roast beef, new potatoes in gravy, fresh baked bread, and apples in a glazed cinnamon sauce. |
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While apples are baking, place remaining sugar and spices into the sauce pan, ensuring it's well mixed. |
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He ate holes in the macrocarpa hedge so that the kids could supply him with sweets and apples. |
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Nevertheless this is a lovely wine, with a fabulously precise nose of mineral-laced pears and apples, with a firm, talcy, white pepper quality. |
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The custom of decorating with apples, pumpkins, cornstalks, and autumn leaves has its origin in an ancient Druid autumn festival called Samhain. |
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Hints of Alice In Wonderland crept in with talking rabbits, trees and apples. |
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Everyone in the village did, or taught them, or tanned their hides for stealing apples. |
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Cherries, peaches, figs, apples, tangerines, lemons, and limes are among the many types of fruit trees that thrive in containers. |
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For his family's Christmas dinner he likes to roast potatoes and cut-up apples with his magret. |
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There were also single-crusted tarts with similar fillings and tarts of apples and other fruits. |
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And it was crisp and sweet without being cloying, although I like slightly tart apples as well. |
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And the tangy apple flavour found in most Chardonnays comes primarily from malic acid, the tart acid found in apples. |
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Quinces, various types of apples, apricots, peaches, cherries, pears, plums, currants, blackberries, melons, and azaroles were grown. |
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Selina's face brightened as she exchanged one of her apples for one of the already peeled satsumas. |
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Mr Gray has previously called for supermarkets to stock more British fruit and he even branded French apples tasteless and unappetising. |
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Insect pests still require spraying in most areas, but apples are mainly sprayed to prevent disease, primarily scab. |
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Itinerant merchants traveled the backcountry buying or trading dried apples. |
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My most feeble Harvest Festival gift was a few apples harvested from our manky back garden tree and a nearly unopened jar of raspberry jam. |
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And the few complaints always turned out to be about the same couple of baddish apples, like the dragon lady. |
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This can happen when apples drop to the ground in an orchard and land in deer droppings or livestock manure. |
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To serve, set two scoops of pumpkin seed cream in the center of a plate and arrange alternating layers of strudel tuiles and apples on top. |
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Family owned and operated, Beckwith Orchards offers a variety of apples, cider, delicious homemade bakery and gift baskets. |
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I clutched the market basket in my hands, full of flour and apples and other foods. |
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The procedure should make artificial chemical ripening less necessary for apples, bananas and most stone fruits now treated with ethylene. |
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He said when students are finished eating apples or bananas in the school they bring the cores and skins to the composter. |
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We are apples and oranges who need to knock the top banana off of his pedestal. |
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On the other hand, Bananaland now has 20 tonnes of apples and 20 tonnes of oranges to consume. |
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My most impressive dish is an advanced form of bangers and mash, using the best sausages cooked in cider with apples and bacon. |
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I would welcome back the past, where scrumping apples would earn you a clout around the ear. |
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If kids were bad before it was for scrumping apples or knocking on doors and running away. |
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They eat the pasta noodles with scrumptious apples, oranges, and chopped carrots. |
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The caramelised apples and vanilla bean mascarpone with pecan and maple syrup pudding was a real sticky winter treat. |
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The only items his wife has been allowed to give him on her visits have been a bar of soap, toothpaste, petroleum jelly and six apples. |
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Yet, and extensive internet search only reveals that there are over 2000 varieties of English apples. |
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These include apples and slightly under-ripe pears, such as the russet-hued Seckel pears that march in parade with this roast. |
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He considers a bowl of grapes, apples, and small Seckel pears to be an ideal dessert. |
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Apart from the Barm Brack, we don't really have any special foods but apples and nuts are always on the table. |
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Cut apples into halves, quarters or eighths to explain fractions or use nickels, dimes and quarters to teach children percentages. |
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As the apples begin to ripen, orders go out that all the windfall apples and the main crop later on are to be reserved for the sole use of the pigs. |
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It could be something specific, Victoria plum skins or green apples. |
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Fruits markets are depending on fruits like pineapple and mangoes supplied locally and there has been a complete shortage of grapes, oranges and apples. |
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Stir in the apples and apple cider and cook until the apples start to soften, about three to four minutes. |
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For vibrant colour outdoors in January few trees can compete with diospyros kaki, the persimmon tree, laden with fruit resembling bright orange apples. |
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There was still some cheese, dry biscuits, and dried apples in my pack from lunch a few days ago, as food rarely spoils in the cold Antarctic climate. |
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Using a sharp knife, peel, core and slice the apples into thin wedges. |
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From a crackhead to Sam Kinison to even Jon Stewart, Marlow Stern on the best bad apples in the bunch of silver-screen teachers. |
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Powdery mildew is common to many kinds of plants besides apples. |
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But publishers argue that the report mixed apples and oranges. |
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I wasn't so sure about my tenderloin of pork with Calvados apples. |
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Usda inspectors sample apples to gauge taste and other quality factors. |
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Just when he'd fancy some pork scratchings or a sausage roll, he'd discover that all there was to eat were bananas, apples and those annoying little boxes of raisins. |
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By now the scent of rotting windfalls were heavy on the air, and the apples were taken from the trees, turned into jam, or stored among layers of straw for use later on. |
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I learned to love early fall apples, their crisp taste tart on my tongue, and the feel of spring earth between my toes as I tamped down pea seeds behind my dad. |
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During the Alar scare of 1989, for example, consumer concern about pesticide use in the apple industry sparked a demand for organic apples and apple juice. |
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Acadian farms, dependent on dikes and the development of marshland, were self-contained and achieved high levels of production of cereals and apples, and then of livestock. |
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She stayed nearly three weeks until, come a Saturday afternoon, Arie returned from taking a wagonload of the last of the season's apples to the market. |
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I also like a bird's beak knife, for fiddly decorative things like making radish flowers and skinning apples in one long peel. |
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Mildew destroys new shoots on apples and gradually saps the tree's vigor. |
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Junior's fruit platter came with grapes, apples, bananas and kiwi fruit. |
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These include exotic ylang ylang, jasmine, turmeric, ginger, allspice, cinnamon, curry leaf, water lilies, mahogany trees, avocados, wax apples, and five varieties of mango. |
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She stopped by a fruit stand and got two apples for three copper pieces. |
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In the refrigerator all she finds are some dried apples and celery and assorted condiments that could have been there since her last visit for all Sandra knows. |
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Henry's father was a baker by trade but lost his job during the depression and he was forced to sell apples on the street corner to save the family from starvation. |
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I employed Lydia's help to cut and stew some apples for dessert. |
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A dish of linguine with lobster and Granny Smith apples, on the other hand, sounded so wildly wrong that I ordered it for laughs, and found it very good indeed. |
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Important orchard fruits besides olives are oranges and lemons, quinces, figs, cherries, peaches, apricots, plums, pears, apples, almonds, and walnuts. |
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I mean, do you think that green apples are only grown on a certain farm? |
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The second point is that in comparing the average house of today with the average house of twenty, forty or a hundred years ago, we are mixing apples and oranges. |
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In Asturias, the cider apples are more bitter and tannic than in other regions. |
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But such spots can be used to advantage in mild climates, where the extra chill encourages lilacs to bloom and apples, apricots, cherries, peaches, and pears to set fruit. |
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The favorite fresh fruits of Canadians are bananas and apples. |
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It could be the beautiful autumn sunshine glistening off mountains of green and red apples which has brought about this unusual state of contemplation. |
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Such a mini-orchard looks beautiful and provides between 200 and 300 apples to eat fresh or to use in apple pies and apple sauce from mid-August through October. |
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But deep down I would love to see kids mooching round on bikes in groups, scrumping apples and being clipped round the ear'ole by paternalistic cops. |
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After a rain or when they're crushed, the leaves smell like green apples. |
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While we try to maintain an apples to apples test environment, we feel the different brands of comparable products should have minimal impact on the final scores. |
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Wedding season is upon us, and it is time to start polishing those golden apples, beloveds. |
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Next to appear are his pretty, teenage daughters, whom he calls the apples of his eye. |
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In areas where apples were grown, it evolved into a ritual in which chants and dances were used to ward off evil spirits which it was believed would harm the trees. |
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Crab apples were used, as were sloes, rose hips and rowan berries. |
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The 13 kinds of fruit are sugar apples, pineapples, papayas, star fruits, mangoes, guavas, bell fruits, grapefruits, coconuts, loquats, plums, peaches and persimmons. |
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What he did in his speech last week was take the bad apple approach and say OK, what we're going to do is we're going to stiffen the penalties on the bad apples. |
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If one restaurant is doing badly it doesn't have access to the bank accounts of the other restaurants and thus there is no way for the bad apples to drag down the barrel. |
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For fresh fruit, bananas, apples and pears will be high on the list of priorities, but consider chopping up fresh mango, papaya or peaches into a small pot. |
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A few more bad apples will be identified, they'll be suspended with pay and the allegations against them will be disposed of in some way or another. |
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We're human and out of any group of people there are bad apples. |
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Oranges, apples, and bananas comprise half the fruit consumed. |
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In reply he got the by now standard answer that there are crooks in all professions and the few bad apples must not be allowed to contaminate the image of the entire barrel. |
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Fold in the raisins, apples and lemon juice. Then cover the mix with a damp tea towel and leave it to stand and rise in a warm place for at least 45 minutes. |
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Arrange the apples so that rounded sides are on the bottom of the pan. |
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There is a distinct smell of apples, which are handed out by volunteer workers. |
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Once hot, add the shallots, apples, cranberries, and remaining cranberry juice to the pan. |
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Make a Waldorf salad using apples, celery, chopped walnuts and lettuce with a dressing combining 1 part whipped heavy cream to 4 parts mayonnaise. |
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Virginia Jonathan apples are the first red apples available in the fall. |
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Scoop out the cores and cut the apples across into thin half-moon slices. |
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Brought in as the Moosa Chocolate Fondue, the stand also sells candy apples at the rate of AED7 per piece. |
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The candy apple product maybe plain caramel apples, those containing nuts, sprinkles, chocolate, or other toppings. |
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Enjoy fun, eat-on-a-stick caramel apples that have protein, very little total fat and only 160 calories or less in a three-ounce serving. |
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Cranberry sauce made with local apples and mandarin oranges from the California foothills. |
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Owner of Embleton Hall, Trevor Thorne, visited Embleton Hall as a child to deliver milk and scrump apples. |
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We scrumped apples, found hens' nests that had laid away from Dockers Farm and we skated on thick ice in the spinney. |
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I like to chug in a splosh of rum or brandy for good measure and a few scrumped apples. |
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Fat Bob, Soapy, Wee Eck and Wullie were Scotland's usual suspects when apples were scrumped and greenhouse windows broken. |
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He was born and bred there, fished in the river and scrumped apples and collected birds' eggs and went to school there. |
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All participants will receive prizes such as caramel apples, apple juice or Halloween stickers and pencils. |
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When the sugar has dissolved and started to caramelise, toss the apples well to coat. |
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As for The Duo of Apple Ganache, it brilliantly mingles the tangy sweetness of the caramelised apples with the honeyed darkness of the ganache. |
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Roast pork with rosemary caramelised apples will delight the senses with its flurry of flavours. |
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They dipped parsley in salt water and made Hillel sandwiches out of matzah bread and a mixture of apples, cinnamon and nuts called charoset. |
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Sad Bramley apple with flop of a crop 6 I brought a Bramley apple tree two years ago with three apples on it. |
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Add all of the veg, Bramley apples and sage to the pan, and then top with the pork and add the cider and stock. |
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Tart, green apples, flat leaf parsley, dressed with tahini, cider vinegar and rapeseed oil. |
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In addition to this, you can sample the local spirit Feni, which is made from coconut or cashew apples. |
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Ty Gwyn Medium Sweet is made exclusively from Browns cider apples and is almost transparent in colour apart from a faint apple-green hue. |
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As well as supplying the most delicious apple juice, Eifion will also press your own apples and pears into juice for you. |
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At Bashi is famous of its potato, in Kochkor this is meat, dried apricots in Batken, Apport apples in Issyk-Kul. |
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Allen, of the New York growers, said the most affected varieties have been Red Delicious, Empire, Mcintosh and Cortland apples. |
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Cantaloupes and strawberries, peaches and apples Their specialness gone, despite your taste bud's grapples. |
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Thin apples, Asian pears, nectarines, and peaches to allow 4 to 6 inches between fruit. |
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A complicated foie gras sandwiched between mille-feuille with roasted apples followed. |
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The tour guides demanded more and more apples, and then decided that they should get exotic fruits like kumquats instead. |
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Speckled woods, a few small tortoiseshell and red admirals are coming in now, with the latter feeding off windfall apples. |
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Candy apples will be given out to families and children to add to the holiday festivities, a statement from a top official said. |
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Toffee apples have a Pro Points value of two so remember to make some in advance. |
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While my friends usually sought the thrills of the furious waltzer, I stuffed my face with candy floss and toffee apples. |
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This can be made not only with apples but other fruits or vegetables as well, for example, pears or tomatoes. |
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The Blackburn cake is named after the town of Blackburn, Lancashire, and is made with stewed apples in place of currants. |
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The juice of any variety of apple can be used to make cider, but cider apples are best. |
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Traditionally the method for squeezing the juice from the apples involves placing sweet straw or haircloths between the layers of pomace. |
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For this product, the apples are frozen either before or after being harvested. |
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The former are made using a much higher percentage of true cider apples and so are richer in tannins and sharper in flavour. |
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This type of cider is made from apples with a particularly high level of sugar caused by natural frost. |
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The sweet, firm apples turned out to be the perfect foil for the soft, minerally oyster. |
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And so you will find that his whole orchard is a quaint and nooky place where one may not only pick apples, but may saunter and rest. |
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Agrial group processes vegetables, cider apples, milk, poultry and meat with the help of its 12,000 employees and all its partners. |
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Commonly consumed fruits include blueberries, blackberries, raspberries, cherries, persimmons, mulberries, apples, plums, grapes, and acorns. |
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There are more than 7,500 known cultivars of apples, resulting in a range of desired characteristics. |
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Winter apples, picked in late autumn and stored just above freezing, have been an important food in Asia and Europe for millennia. |
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Until the 20th century, farmers stored apples in frostproof cellars during the winter for their own use or for sale. |
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Improved transportation of fresh apples by train and road replaced the necessity for storage. |
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Ellis Davidson links apples to religious practices in Germanic paganism, from which Norse paganism developed. |
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It took all three apples and all of his speed, but Hippomenes was finally successful, winning the race and Atalanta's hand. |
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Renaissance painters may also have been influenced by the story of the golden apples in the Garden of Hesperides. |
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Cider apples are typically too tart and astringent to eat fresh, but they give the beverage a rich flavor that dessert apples cannot. |
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Modern apples are generally sweeter than older cultivars, as popular tastes in apples have varied over time. |
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Most North Americans and Europeans favor sweet, subacid apples, but tart apples have a strong minority following. |
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Extremely sweet apples with barely any acid flavor are popular in Asia and especially Indian Subcontinent. |
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However, like most perennial fruits, apples are ordinarily propagated asexually by grafting. |
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Because apples do not breed true when planted as seeds, grafting is generally used to produce new apple trees. |
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Sliced apples turn brown with exposure to air due to the conversion of natural phenolic substances into melanin upon exposure to oxygen. |
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Sliced apple consumption tripled in the US from 2004 to 2014 to 500 million apples annually due to its convenience. |
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Phenolic compounds, such as polyphenol oxidase, are the main driving force behind browning in apples. |
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In other areas, such as the Mediterranean, some individuals have adverse reactions to apples because of their similarity to peaches. |
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Cooking does not break down the protein causing this particular reaction, so affected individuals can eat neither raw nor cooked apples. |
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The seeds of apples contain small amounts of amygdalin, a sugar and cyanide compound known as a cyanogenic glycoside. |
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Heracles went to Atlas and offered to hold up the heavens while Atlas got the apples from his daughters. |
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When Atlas set down the apples and took the heavens upon his shoulders again, Heracles took the apples and ran away. |
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The rudiments of particulate inheritance were dimly understood already by the breeders of cattle and apples, but nobody was being systematic. |
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Due to its gentle local climate and fertile soil, it is the state's largest area of fruit farming, its chief produce being apples. |
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The climate, soil and seasonal conditions of the region are believed to be particularly beneficial to the growth of apples. |
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Juicy apples, pears, lemonade, orangeade, pomegranateade, ripe peaches, etc., are pleasanter than medicines. |
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Maine's agricultural outputs include poultry, eggs, dairy products, cattle, wild blueberries, apples, maple syrup, and maple sugar. |
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In the alluvial areas of southeastern Tasmania, rich alluvial soils permit apples to be grown. |
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The land is productive, especially for fruit orchards producing guavas, tejocote, apples, limes, quince and more. |
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The farm also has a young orchard which will grow a variety of fruit including apples, damsons and pears. |
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They could neither of them speak their rage, and so fell a sputtering at one another, like two roasting apples. |
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Nor can we tell whether his rapt musing on unsucked teats and fair apples is prompted by the naked woman he is gazing at. |
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My favorite things to can are wax beans, pickled crab apples, beets and tomatoes, although I have canned many other fruits and vegetables. |
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Place apples on the parchment paper or buttered waxed paper and refrigerate until caramel is firm, about 5 minutes. |
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Exotic fruits include coconut, guavas, mangoes, papaya, pineapples, bananas, custard apples, passion fruit, tamarind and, of course, ackees. |
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In the fall we dried apples, pears and prunes in the afterheat after the bread was taken out. |
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Juicy apples like Winesaps and Sheep's Nose lend themselves well to cider making. |
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Even ants may outwit you on several green seed pods, including lilies, coleus and alocasia, as well as the fruit of apples, pears and berries. |
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Alpha-hydroxy acids, otherwise known as fruit acids, are made from natural ingredients such as grapes, apples and olives. |
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A display of Yodels or pesticide-sprayed apples will blow your credibility away. |
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A research team focused on one of the compounds, quercetin, which is found in tea, onions and apples, BBC health reported on Friday. |
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A new book, South Shields Through The Ages, however, is a welcome reminder that there is more to the town than ghost trains and toffee apples. |
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Stewed apples, dusted with cinnamon, are an ideal companion to spicy food. |
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Some of the trees bore sweet apples, others bore sour apples, while others bore bitter apples that were almost impossible to eat. |
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Those with the most antioxidants contained fruit with high phenolics levels, such as Yarlington Mill, Medaille D'Or and Ashton Bitter apples. |
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Early settlers attempted to forestall this deterioration by storing their home-grown apples in cool basements or root cellars. |
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So don't give every part of the community the same bad name because of a few rotten apples. |
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They are as disgusted as the rest of us at the actions of a few rotten apples and superiors who have betrayed them. |
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We need to discount those few rotten apples, we must work with good people, as its our challenge to build our nation. |
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Thankfully, the vast majority are without blame and it is the few rotten apples in the basket that think they are above the law. |
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And for those of you who are used to him eating apples and looking all rumply as Jonathan, alongside Caroline Quentin, you're in for a shock. |
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But really the set with its image of entangled tree roots and sackfuls of windfall apples was more gripping than the dialogue. |
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The Lady Alice apple is a welcome addition for consumers who love apples and are looking for something new in the late winter and spring. |
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At least, that's what the French thought and were so convinced they called them pommes d'amour or love apples. |
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The factory in Hampton-in-Arden is said to produce 25 per cent of the country's toffee apples. |
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This antiripening agent that keeps apples hard long enough to survive long-distance travel was denounced for its alleged carcinogenic effects. |
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Used to be apple orchards, used to be the river and irrigation ditches that watered the apples, used to be mining towns. |
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Men have tasted of the apples of Sodom, and they have found bitter ashes under an inviting and luscious surface. |
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Comparing the grades of English students to those of engineering students is like trying to compare apples and oranges. |
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While most union leaders are people of integrity, there are still bad apples. |
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Walnuts, chestnuts, apples, Chinese grapefruits and oranges each added their stamp of approval to that celebration. |
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She wears a chiton and himation, using both hands to hold the edge of the latter, in which she has gathered apples. |
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For the British market, apples are classed as early, mid-season, or late, and subdivided into eaters or cookers. |
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The friar birds drove their beaks into the sweet white flesh of Bacchus Marsh apples. |
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For episode 8 we show you the Geek-a-cycle, cool free exercises you can get online and some funalicious ideas with apples and squashes. |
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Some that were introduced to America included wheat, barley, apples, cattle, sheep, pigs, horses, donkeys, and many others. |
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Some grew their own apricots, grapes, berries, apples, pears, plums, currants, and cherries. |
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The item traded may be a tangible product such as apples or a service such as repair services, legal counsel, or entertainment. |
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The agricultural produce of Herefordshire is represented by the bull's head, fleece, hops and apples. |
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Although candy apples and caramel apples may seem similar, they are made using distinctly different processes. |
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Sometimes grated apples or honey are added for additional sweetness and other vegetables are sometimes used instead. |
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There will be two big bouncers for kids, a Belgian horse hayride, live drama and a concession stand with popcorn, candy apples, chicken dinners and more for sale. |
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Mr Thorne, Northumberland County Councillor for the Shilbottle ward, grew up in the area and had visited as a child to deliver milk and scrump apples. |
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Andrew George AWHAT you are after is a variety preferably on a dwarfing rootstock that bears fruit on short shoots or spurs to ensure plenty of apples. |
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Certainly, the 9 bent iPhone 6s are the rotten apples that has the potential to damage the brand nurtured and grown by the late Steve Jobs and his friends. |
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Cider and calvados are produced from locally grown apples and pears. |
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The tidal water also provided a means of transporting commodities such as lumber, apples and gypsum and powered Tide mills at locations such as Canning, Hantsport and Walton. |
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Now we grow Newtown Pippins, Baldwins, Golden Russets, and Jonathans, all derived from the small, bitter, wild apples that originated in Kazakhstan. |
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Fruits include windfall apples, pears, plums, blackberries, bilberries, raspberries, strawberries, acorns, beechmast, pignuts and wild arum corms. |
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That, though, is a Dhs100 too far for 7DAYS' tech titan and self-confessed Apple aficionado Megha Merani, who said eau de iPhone 5 reeked as bad as rotten apples. |
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It is now to be hoped that those held responsible for what went on, were a few rotten apples and that they failed to infest the rest of the barrel. |
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The public is advised to dispose of packed caramel apples or tasty apples that have not been consumed to prevent the possibility of ingesting listeria contaminated food. |
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