The cooks, however, were also immersed in the details of the proceedings, and lunch took an hour to be served. |
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Here, cooks will prepare a light meal of mixed salad, tinned cold fish or meat, bread and cheese and fruit. |
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Kenny cooks badly, that's why I often cook for him, anyway, next question please. |
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Sometimes the cooks got confused and served it two weeks in a row, which was a sharp disappointment. |
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This is a classic soup from the repertoire of cooks from the Atlantic regions. |
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Every woman boss depends on au pairs, nannies, cleaners, cooks and women who do the ironing. |
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A 12-ounce whole fish, gutted and steamed in two tablespoons of liquid, cooks in two minutes. |
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He devised a television show that would allow talented home cooks to compete for a prize. |
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Gardeners, cooks and veggies mix in a celebration of education, spectacle, fun and food samples. |
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For decades I've sought sanctuary in the Grill Room at the Dorchester when the catastrophes of the art cooks all became too much. |
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When single women began to settle in the United States, they went into domestic work as maids, cooks, and housekeepers. |
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We are looking for telephoners, people with teaching skills, cooks, and above all, those who like to be welcoming. |
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Use a good, cheap cut like shoulder which becomes really tender the longer it cooks and has bags of flavour. |
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Just when you are thinking too many cooks spoil the broth, suddenly someone will remind you that many hands make light work. |
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Tea terminology is a matter of concern to tea drinkers and also to cooks who are using tea as a flavouring. |
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Was it possible she had her cooks rustle up some Scotch broth which, in turn, influenced the French chefs who came up with pot-au-feu? |
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If you ask some cooks today why they marinade, they will tell you that it's to add flavor. |
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Our new members volunteered in droves to join us on expeditions as cooks, divers, doctors, etc. |
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The chef cooks whatever vegetables, meat, and fish are in season and often there are themed nights. |
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Your guide cooks up evening meals on the barbecue or gas-powered range, while you can contemplate the sun setting somewhere out east of Timor. |
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It's one of those places where they seat you with other people and the chef cooks in front of everybody. |
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I see someone funny and sweet who cooks a mean steak and does a lousy John Wayne impression. |
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We opt for number two, and discover the dipso cooks a mean cheese omelette. |
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You should not remove all fat from a roasting joint, as it helps to flavour and baste the meat as it cooks. |
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She tirelessly dusts, polishes, cooks and cleans and then still has the patience to tuck you into bed and read you a story. |
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The cooks could serve a similar dish to the spaghetti but with short pasta, which is less likely to make a mess. |
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Aside from the inappropriateness of such instigation, too many cooks spoil the broth in monetary policies. |
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There is no such thing as too many cooks spoil the broth when it comes to making soup for the homeless, and the Salvation Army know this. |
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Remember, too many cooks spoil the broth, but think of the concept that two heads are better than one! |
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These are simple enough to prepare in 25 minutes tops, giving busy cooks a welcome break from the kitchen. |
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She cooks the family meal, cleans the house from top to bottom and completes her homework the day she receives it. |
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Nor do I begrudge the jobs that Everesting has created for Sherpas, guides, cooks, porters, and writers like me. |
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It would be very sad if all French cooks could manage was pizzas, steaks and burgers. |
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I just smiled, and copied his number down, then Ryan served us a early dinner, apparently he cooks, so we had fish mornay. |
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Following the salad course, Moroccan cooks typically serve main dishes that include meat and vegetables, followed by couscous. |
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I think it's no accident that the best cooks on Earth are the Basque and the Vietnamese. |
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The noise in the kitchen was almost deafening, filled with the shouts of cooks, the clatter of pans, the hissing sizzle of some food deep-frying. |
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The rest of the white men present were skinners, cooks, bartenders, blacksmiths, clerks, and wagon drivers. |
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More mundanely, they're cooks, cleaners, drivers, a pair of willing hands and the biggest fan their child will ever have. |
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This charming little Costa Rican kitchen cooks up homey fare in an unrushed atmosphere, with friendly service and a karaoke machine to boot. |
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Many cooks assume that even a bottle of wine with the bouquet of paint-stripper will transform your lamb casserole into nectar. |
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Unthawed turkey cooks faster on the outside, often leaving harmful bacteria inside. |
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But we've developed the diet and overcome that, so the raw fillet looks very attractive and cooks to a snowy white. |
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He cooks up a theory that implies that record collectors collect while neglecting other areas of their lives that require attention. |
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It's all very well to liken a restaurant to the army, but mess cooks seldom win medals for bravery. |
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Phoenix sat back and watched as they gorged themselves on all manner of foods the cooks had so nicely prepared for her. |
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For home cooks like me, the main disadvantages of sous vide seem to be time and cost. |
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Greek cooks sometimes add rice or broken vermicelli noodles to the stock to make it more substantial. |
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These meals are made possible by the generosity of a squad of volunteer cooks. |
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They walked down to the basement level, and found a wing for all of the cooks, servants, maids, and butlers. |
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Each camp had chaplains, cooks, camp followers, singers, and verse writers. |
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We shall see in the making the band of handicraftswomen who will be the future housewives, cooks, nurses, the dressmakers, and milliners. |
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Peel the potatoes and lay them on top of the casserole, so they will steam while the stew cooks. |
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It is a cultural opportunity to approach the world of quality food, oenological rarities, cooks from every part of the globe. |
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The man is extremely capable and cooks, cleans and does all his own washing and ironing. |
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They return at dusk with an arctic fox and a large capercaillie that Gallina cooks for dinner. |
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Sugar also caramelizes as it cooks, so it gives baked goods a lovely golden brown hue, as well as a delicate aroma and flavor. |
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By using cooked or canned beans and chicken breast, it all cooks very quickly into a lovely winter dish that makes eating your greens a pleasure. |
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He cooks up a mixture of beeswax, carnauba wax, resin and oil paint, ladles some onto a flat surface and waits a few seconds for it to cool. |
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Does the hands-on father who cooks for three vegetarians and three carnivores feel his upbringing is paying off? |
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Thai and Vietnamese cooks use lemon grass in marinades, stir-fries, curries, and soups. |
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I can't afford to hire one of those chefs who cooks in your home, and I think a Chinese carry-out might be a dead giveaway. |
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All junior workers, including cooks, laundry hands, storekeepers, clerks and other non-medical junior staff are involved in the strike. |
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One of the beautiful things about this open-plan restaurant is that you can watch the cooks prepare your food as you enjoy the surroundings. |
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There are cooks, office staff, engineers, equipment operators, mechanics, welders, bosses, planners and many more jobs available at a mine. |
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All over America on this day, short order cooks and chefs were making eggs over easy with great success. |
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I thought I was writing the book for cooks and chefs and restaurant people in the New York area. |
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Twenty-three per cent of chefs and cooks said that they were satisfied in their jobs. |
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Each sous chef has four assistant chefs under him who, in turn, have trainee cooks under them. |
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The restaurant employs five chefs and spends tens of thousands of pounds in training its cooks. |
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Nestled among her descriptions of food at posh New York restaurants is a handful of recipes for the simple, homely food that she cooks at home. |
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In Bulgaria the cooks go crazy with this homely vegetable, shoving it on everything from salads and sandwiches to slices of pizza. |
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He got friendly with the cooks at the dorm eatery and told them if they made him a pound of bacon every morning, he'd choke it down every day. |
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During the fall and winter, cooks, housekeepers, and other attendants saw to the owners' needs. |
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You'll meet authors and artists, mothers and fathers, cops and lawyers, gamers and hackers, cooks and waitresses, humorists and essayists. |
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He stood outside as a few cooks hustled and bustled around to finish the orders. |
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Many supermarkets have been out of lard for the past two weeks and traditional pastry cooks have had to scour corner shops for a pack. |
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To produce this number there are 200 pastry cooks and 500 main kitchen cooks. |
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Tessa cooks the evening meal, but the nearest town is close if clients wish to eat out occasionally. |
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Sometimes women worked as cooks or as itinerant peddlers of small goods on the street. |
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In reality, farro requires no soaking and cooks to tenderness as quickly as rice. |
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An oven cooks glass at an infernal heat, and once every second, spits a 420 gram drop of melted glass onto a mold. |
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But while the most appealing of clowns is Pierrot, pale, lean and dreamy, with cooks, at least until recently, the popular one was the fat guy. |
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When she cooks, she does not make a fiddly Korean banquet or a tri-coloured roulade with a difficult sauce. |
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The Rat had hired three cooks, five waitresses and fifteen chorus girls for the occasion. |
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It's that instantaneous direction change, the wheel-shredding asphalt grind that cooks up this sure winner on the attention-o-meter. |
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They can watch as the cooks season, poke, sear, taste, and plate their food. |
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The cooks outdid themselves with all manner of sandwiches, cold cut platters, salads and other goodies shipped and stowed just for the occasion. |
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But she travels, writes, cooks and cultivates her friendships over long, convivial lunches at her beloved kitchen table. |
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Then it is sealed and steamed so that the raw meat cooks in the same time as the rice. |
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Many whole-grain pastas cook more quickly than semolina pasta, so check label directions and taste the pasta often as it cooks. |
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The U.S. Department of Agriculture outlines food handling tips to help cooks prepare turkeys that won't cause sickness. |
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Many have open kitchens where you can see firsthand that there are no health-code violations, plus you can watch the cooks preparing your food. |
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But stakeholders in government don't see a correspondingly immediate and painful financial consequence when their government cooks the books. |
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Even his enemies find it hard not to admire the skill with which he cooks the books. |
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Budding cooks at a Bolton primary school have compiled a cookery book of their favourite recipes. |
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It seems to me that her only qualification for writing a cookery book is that she employs a lot of cooks. |
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Co-owner Alevras oversees the dining room while her husband cooks downstairs. |
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The recipes probably come from many different sources, some no doubt inserted by cooks and copyists who worked with earlier versions of the text. |
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But they are far more versatile than many cooks imagine, as they can be converted into jams and jellies, brandy and cordials. |
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The cornstarch and the sugar will thicken it into a luscious sauce as it cooks. |
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Turn everything gently as it cooks, letting the potatoes and onions colour slightly. |
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The royal kitchens have been a forcing house for the talents of Thai cooks. |
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Their reputation does a disservice to home cooks who want to bring a little Francophilia into their lives. |
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The catchy name was coined when cooks quieted begging dogs by throwing them scraps of fried dough while dinner was prepared. |
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These laborers included samurai, cooks, sake brewers, potters, printers, tailors, wood workers, and one hairdresser. |
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I am so an eat-to-live kinda gal, unless Matthew cooks or takes me out, when I transform into a live-to-eat kinda gal. |
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As meat cooks, put carrots and praties in a saucepan and add cold water to cover. |
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They knew, the cooks of those days, that venison was a rich and gamey meat which needed tempering. |
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Clever cooks know that it's best to keep onions, spuds and such out of the confines of a dark and dank closet. |
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Positions such as party workers, temporary dayworkers, waitresses and bartenders and party cooks fall into this category. |
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The main issue in the dispute is pay equity with deckhands and cooks working on tugboats. |
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Completely defrost meat and poultry before grilling so it cooks more evenly. |
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Lack of availability of imported produce, coupled with prohibitive prices, dictate that cooks use what is available locally. |
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Boxes on most pages give generous gobbets of fact about food words, food history and myths and misunderstandings of cooks gone by. |
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She has also been inspired by Yamuna devi and Kurma das, who Lexi says are great cooks in the tradition of spiritually based food preparation. |
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Home cooks like using thick Greek yoghurt as a lower-fat substitute for sour cream and mayonnaise. |
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Vanessa covertly observes him as he sets their dinnerware at the table, while she cooks their dinner. |
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As you pass across the buffet, point to four foods that you want and the cooks will dish it out and put it on your plate. |
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The strike at 12 hotels includes cleaners, cooks, doormen, bartenders and dishwashers who are fighting for improvements in wages and benefits. |
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One man's ennui is another man's earner, which is why we have accountants, cleaners and cooks. |
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They commonly take entry-level jobs as taxi drivers, cooks, nursing assistants and other service workers. |
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Ms. Torres, who was formerly executive chef at Rocking Horse, cooks in a similarly dramatic style. |
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As part of this programme, hostel cooks were taught the dos and don'ts of purchasing vegetables, serving food, preserving food and raw material. |
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Are you one of those cooks who can turn out fancy dishes by the dozen, but are at a loss when it comes to preparing traditional delights? |
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As the meat cooks, the fat melts and adds its flavor to both the meat and the pan drippings. |
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Jamaican cooks have rediscovered their native tangy fruits, including ackee, carambola, and ortanique. |
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This show is featured mainly to break the myth that film stars can never be good cooks. |
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While everything cooks, wash and chop the parsley, dice the ham, toast the hazelnuts in a dry skillet and chop them roughly. |
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But the lady who washes and cooks for us was also happy the party had won the local Assembly seat. |
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Some of these women were employed as washerwomen or cooks, but most were not listed with an occupation. |
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Sarah makes us a spinach quiche, and Craig cooks us spaghetti and meatballs. |
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A rough ride awaits any driver who cooks his brakes, charging and jinking through the corner combinations. |
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The rotation slowly cooks the meat in its own juices and allows easy access for continuous basting. |
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Kashmiri cooks added spices like saffron to kababs, and the Rajputs, with their hunting tradition, used game meat for kababs. |
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She cooks, keeps house, dispenses food and kindness and runs the Lodge single-handed. |
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Just make sure to include some aquavit for a post-dinner toast to the cooks, past and present, who keep tradition alive. |
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On the basis that there are few better guides to a restaurant's quality than how it cooks its steaks, the Howgate passed with flying colours. |
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The interior is one big room and the open kitchen allows you to watch the cooks do their thing while you sip your drinks. |
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He needed men for his army, smiths for his forges, cooks, hunters, healers, servants, woodcutters, stonemasons and more. |
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The original has more than 30 characters plus assorted lackeys, pastry cooks and cadets to help create a vision of life in 17 th-century Paris. |
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He cooks by heating pans over a coal fire, while dozens of candles and a paraffin lamp provide him with light. |
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Records do show that free Black women served during the Civil War as nurses, laundresses and cooks. |
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Many of them provided indispensable services as laundresses, cooks and nurses. |
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Nowadays there's the gastropub, an establishment driven as much by food as booze, frequently run by cooks without the equity to set up a restaurant proper. |
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Most cooks these days do not, alas, truss their own roasts or carefully make cheesecloth bags to hold their soup herbs. |
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Not that he ever cooks for journalists, the miserable old codger. |
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Apart from cooks and numerous assistants there were tailors, washermen, attendants to fan their masters, others to keep away fires, and entire hierarchies of housemaids. |
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The next morning, she cooks a gourmet meal with all the trimmings. |
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As we tuck into a colourful platter of fresh pineapple, watermelon, kiwi fruit, pears and bananas on the veranda, she cooks up sausages, bacon and pancakes. |
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I became aware of the cooks preparing food for us, and the servers serving us, and I began to feel grateful that they were all working so that I could sit! |
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Many black Africans and West Indians found employment on British vessels as personal servants or more often in the formal role of cooks or stewards. |
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He will take your daughters to be perfumers and cooks and bakers. |
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If they stick to their guns, to my mind great home cooks have the whip hand, delivering the most memorable, satisfying and delicious food you are ever likely to eat. |
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He sang the praises of all the crew, but particularly the cooks, who worked tirelessly to prepare 31,443 individual meals during the four months at sea. |
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The cafe held several days of trial runs, in which specially invited customers made their choice of free goodies while the staff and cooks ironed out the kinks. |
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She loves Indian food, enjoys Swiss fare and cooks pasta at home. |
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Thai cooks also beat an egg into curried fish mousse, which is then steamed in banana leaves to the consistency of custard and called hor mok pla. |
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It would be their job, in shifts of two hours each so that they could enjoy the fair as well, to bring wood to Maria and the other cooks from a central woodpile. |
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Plus, these days people routinely become famous for appearing in advertising, designing things, being good cooks, yammering away on the internet, etc. etc. |
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The cooks in these big restaurants are often inattentive to customers. |
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Many of the vegetable-related illnesses come from norovirus, which is often spread by cooks and food handlers. |
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My mother is French, and comes from a family of excellent cooks. |
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Black women were signed on as nurses instead of laundresses or cooks only when they were to serve in all-black hospitals or relegated to nurse infectious white patients. |
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The Navy's leading seamen cooks, leading seamen naval police coxswains and leading seamen photographers join the list of employment categories eligible for the benefit. |
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From stocking stuffers to the world's fanciest food processor, gifts for cooks of every age and experience level. |
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A one-inch boneless steak, about six ounces, cooks in three minutes. |
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Similar databases monitoring the investment policies and current rates of cab drivers, short-order cooks, and bootblacks are rapidly gaining in popularity. |
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The phyllo cooks until golden, crisp, and flaky, and the cheesy spinach filling is addictive, to say the least. |
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That cooks for four minutes and then we add 2 cups of Arborio rice. |
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Because it cooks with steam, food can't burn, although it can overcook. |
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She loves us a lot and cooks lovely dinners and bakes nice buns and tarts. |
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When a company cooks the books, its best bet is to come clean itself. |
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The union represents electricians, plumbers, cooks and maintenance staff and says the planned strike is the latest step in a long-running pay row. |
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People were forever writing letters to each other, says Fellowes, asking where they could find decent cooks and competent maids or reliable footmen. |
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Although they worked as maids or cooks or domestics in the secular world, these women could put on an usher's uniform or badge and be quite visible. |
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Every Wednesday morning, a large crowd of hopeful ayahs, cooks and drivers would sit outside the American embassy, praying that an expat would call them for an interview. |
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Louie picks up his daughters from school, cooks them dinner, helps with their homework, and puts them to bed. |
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This caught the imagination of the pastry cooks of the day, who created various pastry creams involving eggs, butter, flour and almonds which became known as frangipane. |
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They had served in the field as nurses and ambulance drivers and performed military support roles as cooks and orderlies, clerical workers, telephonists, and signallers. |
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Why, they're two of the finest cooks who ever blancoed a burnt piecrust. |
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Long before the modern refrigerator was invented, adventurous cooks were using mixtures of crushed ice and salt to chill syrups into sorbets, and custards into ice creams. |
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The restaurant never cooks frozen or marinated meat on its two large crescent-shaped teppanyaki hot plates, which can sit a total of 28 persons at one time. |
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It was great because we got to stay next door to my in-laws, and my mom, probably one of the best cooks ever to grace this planet, lived around the corner. |
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Yet suspicion of other people's culinary rectitude, along with the practicality of an earth sign, helps make well-adjusted Virgoans splendid cooks. |
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The lady is a St Vincent de Paul volunteer, or Vincentian, and each Christmas she cooks dinner for the children and brings them Santa presents at 9pm. |
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The stoppage was observed by 140 union members, according to the Daily Telegraph including gardeners, waiters, cooks and valets. |
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Assaud is a rock star master chef who cooks with two apprentices and has just six tables at his restaurant in Provence. |
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So if you've ever wondered what, exactly, cooks do with fiddlehead ferns or what that thing that looks like a rough-skinned lemon is, you'll find the answers here. |
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You've gotta love a chef who cooks vegetables that are in season. |
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He also cooks special dishes for catered events, but misses the challenge of intricate cooking since here the tandoori and Punjabi cuisine seems to be served everywhere. |
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On one end is the breezy restaurant, where Italian chef Benedetto La Fiura cooks up Carib-Continental dishes like callaloo soup and mushroom risotto. |
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You won't need to baste the meat as it cooks, but it is a good idea to toss the potatoes around half way through cooking, so that they turn golden and sticky on both sides. |
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The striking workers include part-time housekeepers, cooks, ticket takers, ushers, bartenders, concession workers, servers, and conversion and ice crews. |
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Foreign-born women staffed canneries, textile mills, and garment factories and worked as cooks and child-care providers for middle-class Americans. |
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Who does the shopping, writes the cards, buys the presents, puts up the decorations, prepares a crib, cooks the food and creates a festive family atmosphere? |
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And so it looks as though it was a case of too many cooks spoil the broth. |
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A photograph of a wedding taken in the 1950s shows the occupations of those pictured as gamekeepers, hydro-electric workers, laundry maids, cooks and gardeners. |
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The expedition lasted 15 days, with a crew of porters, cooks, and guides. |
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In the Battle of the Bulge in 1944, cooks, clerks and mechanics from different units joined together to fight well and stave off the German counteroffensive. |
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I like it mainly because it cooks up al dente like pasta should if you are paying attention, and then retains its toothsomeness instead of turning to mush. |
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The competition, held annually as part of the wine festival, brings together fine pastry chefs and cooks from the region's restaurants and hotels to compete. |
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An obsessively tidy man, he clears up after Elizabeth cooks. |
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The trip will be led by a multi-lingual guide, local cooks and mules. |
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A staff of over 200 full-time cooks, maids, gardeners, builders, drivers, translators and security staff cater for the film student's every possible need. |
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The biggest change in food television over the last five years has been the move away from showing cooks prepare food to revealing how they manage their careers and lives. |
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Throughout the course of thirty recipes, Martha presents fast and easy dinners that require only a few ingredients and are able to be attempted by even minor-league cooks. |
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Franklin had noticed that the wake of one ship he saw was particularly smooth, and was told that the cooks had probably just discharged greasy water through the scuppers. |
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Our unit was made up of cooks, mechanics, and quartermasters with many of the same military occupational specialties found in traditional CSS units. |
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On my own now, developing recipes for home cooks, I reach for the sweet cherries, adding lemon juice and lemon rind to tart up their flavor. |
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Meanwhile, not so Simple Simon is determined to get Carla out of his dad's life, so cooks up a story about Carla hitting him. |
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By heating L-aspartic acid into long-chain molecules, then adding water and sodium hydroxide, Donlar now cooks up biodegradable polyaspartate. |
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Dion Jones is one of 18 young cooks vying for e Roux Scholarship and will compete in one of two nals being held next week. |
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Eggplant was one of the easily obtainable, unrationed foods, so cooks improvised to vary their scarce diet. |
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The radiant fryer cooks food in a way that simulates fried fast foods, but with fewer calories and fat. |
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Shared by six different Las Vegas restaurant chefs, these terrific-tasting recipes are bound to hit the jackpot with cooks and guests alike. |
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Veggie burgers and dogs have long been the go-to options for backyard grillers and kitchen cooks looking for a meatless alternative. |
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The prospect of making a souffle strikes fear into the hearts of many home cooks. |
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In essence, the system takes domestic or industrial wastewater, cooks it, pressurizes it, and exposes it to liquid oxygen. |
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We have an understanding that whoever cooks doesn't have to do the dishes. |
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Craze shops, cooks and chats in front of a concrete landscape and his food refects the multi-culturalism of his upbringing in West London. |
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Though most of us don't scrounge for cooking fuel these days, one-pot cooking still holds some advantages for modern cooks. |
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Steven says the tiger prawn dish below is one he often cooks when entertaining. |
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But even I-san cooks food that shows a certain restraint in its pepperiness. |
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Repp cooks for two daughters and her husband, Ted Roy, a salesman at Ronny's Stereo. |
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Bernard cooks kebabs on the wood-fired grillade while his wife explains the menu and dishes of the day in perfect English. |
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Place over the bain-marie and whisk gently so the egg gradually cooks but doesn't scramble. |
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The exothermic heat of reaction was measured for both softwood and hardwood cooks in a laboratory digester. |
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This is a book for those cooks who have been using standard supermarket barbecue sauces. |
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Nor yet can you lay down the gentleman's service when stimulated by prolonged incompatibility on the part of cooks, and take up Waitering. |
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As Top Banana cooks and the banana pieces caramelise, the rich flavours combine to turn this into a breakfast that is barmily good. |
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Bernard cooks kebabs on his wood-fired grillade while his wife explains the menu and dishes of the day in perfect English. |
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The kitchen is beautifully designed with a large marble worksurface at the window so Linz can look out over the pretty view while she cooks. |
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The jukebox belted out tunes from the fifties, and waiters shouted food orders to the cooks behind the enormous steel counter. |
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Cooking surfaces could be raised and lowered, elevatorlike, to adjust to the heights of tall and short cooks. |
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Some cooks add nuts as well, and I like the way their flavor complements that of the kasha and the browned onions. |
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I sent down dhobies, sweepers, cooks, and mallees, last to dig trenches for burying the dead, when burning was not possible. |
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As meat cooks, the structure and especially the collagen breaks down, allowing juice to come out of the meat. |
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In Northern Europe, cooks created the pastry using fats like lard and butter to make stiff dough to hold an upright pie. |
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Fourteen naval cooks were among the dead, the largest number from any one branch in the Royal Navy. |
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Naval cooks also came, many of them from the Sylhet Division of what is now Bangladesh. |
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During the 19th century, many Odia cooks were employed in Bengal and they took several dishes with them. |
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Italian cooks rely chiefly on the quality of the ingredients rather than on elaborate preparation. |
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Slave owners would buy Mina and Angolan women and girls to work as cooks, household servants and street vendors Quitamdeiras. |
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They arrived in Kozhikode as dependants of chieftains, working as cooks, cloth merchants and moneylenders. |
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The whole shebang cooks in the slow cooker, which will keep it warm until you are ready to serve it. |
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He cooks with the trouser press, iron, electric towel rail, hairdryer, wastebin and kettle. |
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A chain of small diners with red stools where you can watch the cooks make your burger, chili dog or hot fudge sundae. |
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They travelled in large groups, with bell tents, blowup beds, tables, cooks and kitchens, carried by trains of mules up the steep, winding, dusty tracks. |
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The top of the pile then is insulated with more leaves, creating a pressure of heat and steam inside which cooks all food within the pile after several hours. |
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Formerly the domain of cooks, undercooks, and scullery maids, it wasn't even a room a householder would lay claim to, much less single out with items of personal interest. |
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Motorbike riding, beardie TV cooks Si King and Dave Myers arrived in Cardiff with a show part slapstick, part stand up and with a little bit of cooking thrown in. |
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All chief cooks who sail internationally are similarly documented by their respective countries because of international conventions and agreements. |
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Nature apparently cooks up stars like batches of cookies, with a consistent distribution from massive blue supergiant stars to small red dwarf stars. |
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While mixture cooks, lay saltines flat in single layer on prepared pan. |
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It has declared today the national day to begin defrosting turkeys, reminding cooks that a typical large turkey weighing 11kg will take two days to thaw. |
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American cooks and chefs have substantially altered these dishes over the years, to the degree that the dishes now enjoyed around the world are considered to be American. |
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Overall camp supervision is typically done by older camp directors, who lead a team that includes cooks, sports instructors, a nurse, maintenance personnel and counselors. |
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Wood-ear Auricularia polytricha Oriental cooks prize its crunchy texture. |
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Not but that the Grand Hotel is equal to any other Grand Hotel with its regiment of waiters, bootses, chambermaids, porters, lifts, housemaids, cooks, and so forth. |
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The society, called APEGA, gathered chefs, nutritionists, institutes for gastronomical training, restaurant owners, chefs and cooks, researchers and journalists. |
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An important feature of the room is the electric range which has the required special wiring. It is of the pattern which cooks firelessly as well. |
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Cooks at York old peoples' homes are facing the axe under a proposal to buy meals-on-wheels from York District Hospital for residents. |
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He set world records for the 800 metres and 880 yards in the same race at Christchurch and the mile at Cooks Garden, Wanganui. |
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Cooks have been wielding spices for centuries, from preserving foods with them to masking smells and flavors in meats that were less than fresh. |
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Cooks used it to make sauces and its wood was the fuel for illicit whisky stills because it gave off no smoke. |
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Cooks in southwestern France still dispute which meats make the best cassoulet, but various combinations of pork, sausage, mutton, partridge, duck, and goose may be used. |
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Cooks who handled food with dirty hands and washing areas sited upstream of watering areas were common practices that contributed to long sick lists. |
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Former Cooks Coaches were taken over by Stagecoach forming Stagecoach South West. |
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Penney promoted its Cooks brand flip waffle iron and six-quart slow cooker or griddle as part of its Doorbuster specials on Black Friday, while the gift guide on Macys. |
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