When you have to deal with unpleasant people on the phone it gives a sour taste to the day. |
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Small in size, each portion provided six fish whose taste was nicely balanced with a lemon twist. |
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I'm coming to dislike the taste of what they have done with margarine and these 'healthy spreads'. Bleah! |
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It's not the bridal suite, I thought that would be in poor taste, but I'm told it's very nice. |
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He had a taste for poetry and song, and he generally lived up to the chivalric code. |
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Two contrasting modes and metaphorisations of taste occur in a Songhay village, and in eighteenth century England. |
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Considering her taste in men she'll probably run off with another backwater vagabond, who's been partially tamed by the military. |
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I suggest a tablespoon of icing sugar, but taste it for sweetness as you go. |
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Sugar or honey should be added to taste, and fruit peel can impart bitterness. |
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I wouldn't like the magnums of champers to be squandered on people lacking all taste and refinement. |
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The lamb chops were another highlight, with a strong taste accented by the flavour of oregano. |
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Apparently it's really good, heavy with a caramel taste, and has a heavy body to it! |
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Catawba, a centuries old grape variety, bursts with a bold grape taste and pink color making it an award winning grape. |
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The aim of the event is to give young people a taste of career opportunities available in the Armed Forces. |
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The danger lies in alcopops, which are flavoured with things like cranberry or orange to disguise the taste of vodka. |
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I'm the biggest fan of orange roughy because it's the only fish that doesn't taste fishy. |
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At a cultural level, there are signs that the bourgeois hegemony is being challenged by our taste for the tasteless. |
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Every year I visit apple orchards in one or the other region and taste as many heirloom varieties as I can. |
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The drink is brewed at St James's Gate in Dublin but is designed to match the taste and strength of the beer Nigerians drink at home. |
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It is always a good sign when there is so much you want to taste that you have great trouble deciding what to order. |
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Some foods have been so destroyed by corporate farming that organics are really the only option when it comes to taste. |
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Alkaline substances did not have a sour taste but were caustic and felt slippery. |
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This is served with a helping of mashed potatoes, infused with onion for that unique cuisine taste. |
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I don't know how good they taste, but cavemen hunted mammoth, so I'm guessing much of an elephant is edible. |
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He proves that he holds a strong command over his desires, exercises sound self-control, and enjoys the taste of disciplinary life. |
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Marmot meat is an acquired taste though, being reputedly strong, stringy and tough. |
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It has a strong earthy taste, which can work well with other strong flavours such as pigeon. |
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Less subtle is the goat's cheese, which provides a strong taste on which to balance the creaminess of the mash. |
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She liked it because it didn't have a strong coffee taste like the other drinks. |
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Unfortunately both strong drinks brought the worst out of the taste testers. |
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And if people are coming to McDonald's for a particular taste, they are not going to go to Wendy's or Burger King to save a few cents. |
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The only food hereabouts is off the Chinese cart at the corner, and that taste is not for everybody. |
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To get that acrid taste out of our brains, herewith, our woman's edition of honoring National Poetry Month by actually reading some poetry. |
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Hear about heritage varieties of apples and then taste the different types. |
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Chocolate candy might not taste as good if you have a cold and a stuffy nose. |
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I am not certain about this particular rendition will taste, only time will tell. |
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A joint venture to give disabled people in York and North Yorkshire a taste of the outdoors has kicked off in fine style. |
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Consumption is more than just French style and taste, it represents the positioning of the self in a larger world. |
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As local real estate prices have soared, so has the region's reputation for style and taste. |
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This kind of fridge has become a symbol of taste, elegance, style and wealth. |
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Since then, I have had no sense of taste or smell, which, as I am a food stylist and writer, has serious implications. |
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This dual-purpose apple has a sweet, mildly subacid taste, and typically stores up to six months. |
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Popular taste is a good guide to the temper of the times, much more so than highbrow high culture. |
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However, Pinot Noir grown outside of Burgundy often tastes delicious, but it just doesn't taste much like Volnay or Chambertin. |
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Now, being of the champagne socialist disposition in many matters of taste and lifestyle I enjoy my foods gentrified and organic. |
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Most citizens are docile in their submission to authority, and neither Congress nor the public has any taste for rebellion at present. |
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Food will stay fresh for longer without losing its taste, thanks to high-pressure sterilisation. |
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A village sub-postmaster is hoping to enjoy the sweet taste of success by branching out with a new venture designed to drum up extra trade. |
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He got a taste of being the victim when hijackers stole a shipment of whiskey intended for him. |
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Over the past 10 years, the taste for buying and displaying large and overdecorated Victorian tea services is gone. |
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Get a final taste of Coeur d' Alene Lake's winter wonders by hiking the Mineral Ridge Trail. |
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I regularly taste Chardonnays ten times the price of this wine that aren't anyway near as good. |
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I see him most often in the company of boys between 18-25, and frankly, he's usually a bit overdressed for my taste. |
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Chicken liver pate is a world-beating taste sensation in my over-effusive book. |
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I would describe the flavor of the Picosito itself as a sweet and salty taste with a hint of spice. |
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When cooked, quince mellows to an amazing pineapple-like taste with a hint of tartness. |
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This is the reason why wines made from Chasselas vines take on the taste of the local soil and do not display a same dominating flavour. |
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I had hoped I might develop a taste for it, but clearly I've been over-optimistic. |
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A fine sentiment, but the doom-laden rock histrionics leave a bad taste in the mouth. |
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The more you chew, the more the taste intensifies, eventually overpowering the other ingredients. |
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These are preferable to energy bars that taste like candy, which are usually little more than sugar-coated vitamins, minerals and protein. |
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Alternatively you could try the sugar-coated pop or corny club classics spilled out at Club Q, all in the best possible taste. |
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A taste of La Dolce Vita and the cheapness of the local property could have you planning an early retirement. |
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The sweet natural taste of honey halvah ice cream complemented the flowery taste of the rose water for a unique blend of earthiness. |
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Some people taking the drug simply complain that food has lost its taste, but others report a strongly metallic bitter or sweet taste. |
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It had a bitterly sweet taste, that left her mouth dry, yet the taste was unforgettable. |
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The smell is pleasant, the taste is slightly sweet and slightly bitter as is typical of ginseng. |
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She raised a finger to her lips and traced them, strangely she could taste the sour but sweet taste still there. |
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Or is this repertoire of sweets a taste of things to come for the Indian team? |
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Baxandall's term is adapted from the style terminology for late Gothic, relating the sculpture to broader traditions of taste and craft. |
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Hydrogen sulphide, often called sulphuretted hydrogen, is a colourless gas, having a sweetish taste, and an odour like that of bad eggs. |
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As for taste and texture, soy cheese and soy yogurt are virtually indistinguishable from cow's milk varieties. |
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It will also help keep hands-on skills at the heart of cheesemaking, a big factor in preserving our cheese's renowned taste. |
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With a generous shaking of deep red, citrusy sumac spice, it had a warm and rich taste. |
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The chewy grains of rice are covered in a milky pudding to create a smooth taste. |
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The taste is of stale water with a texture somewhere between used chewing gum and window putty. |
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Getting a taste of watching Robby, rather than competing myself, was quite a change of pace. |
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No week was complete without a range of samples of local home brew being brought in for Dad to taste. |
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Some interesting selections that I hope to taste during my next visit are the Russian blini starter and the chicken Kiev. |
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But she's enjoying the taste of the big wide world even though she still gets homesick for Alice. |
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While we can certainly question her taste, we can't call her a homewrecker. |
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Add onion, garlic, chilies, cumin, and salt and pepper to taste, and continue cooking until onion is softened. |
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Sam and Sam Clark, the couple behind Moro, Britain's most inventive Spanish restaurant, taste chorizo, paella and, of course, Serrano ham. |
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The advice from United Utilities is to chill tap water before drinking, to give a better taste. |
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More products are becoming homogeneous commodities for which uniformity of size, quality and taste is absolutely essential. |
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She and her students discovered that some individuals, known as supertasters, are born with an unusually large number of taste buds. |
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The wine within the goblet was surprisingly full and mellow, with a sweet honeyed taste. |
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My ginger-mint lamb chops had a melting, honeyed quality that you could taste in the back of your nose. |
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He slowly began to crunch on the rolls, knowing he would want them to last, enjoying their delicious honey-sweet taste. |
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Here, you can get a taste of Memphis nightlife, where the blues continues to play in classic clubs and honky-tonks. |
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Soft and chewy with an intense filling of baby bok choy and shiitake, these little pillows taste overwhelmingly of the colour green. |
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While Henry may have failed to taste true European glory with Leeds, he at least had a whiff of it, he tells pals. |
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The Parnassians contributed to the cultivation of this taste for chinoiserie. |
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In such images, Chinese workshops played on European taste so well that one could almost describe them as Chinese-executed chinoiseries. |
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Add sour cream flavored to taste with more of the canned chipotle chili, minced or mashed. |
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Although the tempura-battered shellfish involved are popcorn-size chunks, they taste important in their spicy chipotle sauce. |
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If he had taste buds, the chipotles would have been left out of the sweet potatoes. |
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Now, though, he has discovered a taste for musicals, and wonders whether a career as a hoofer might beckon. |
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Commercial garam masala uses cheaper spices and can taste like a pale imitation of the real thing. |
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By now the taste for Rococo decoration in Britain had been brushed aside in the face of the new-found fashion for Palladian architecture. |
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Sure chocolate crackles taste good, but did you really think about what goes into them? |
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And any sweet or spicy taste puts you in a relaxed, pampered state of mind, ready for further indulgence. |
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The book is an interesting read too, though the author is a bit too Chomskyan for my taste. |
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It does, however, taste so horrible that nobody could eat enough to cause death. |
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The Government should not be pandering to public taste in the arts, but rather driving it. |
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It therefore made good economic sense to pander to popular taste and reaffirm the unique selling points of mainstream Indian cinema. |
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So are cable news executives just pandering to the popular taste in order to get a bigger rating? |
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In choreographing the dance sequences, Chelsom shows too much restraint and good taste. |
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He urged the hospitality industry to serve more traditional foods to visitors and tourists for them to have a real taste of Zambia. |
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Because you have bitter taste receptors at the back of your mouth and the top of your throat, you should swallow the beer. |
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Four of them had never been in Thailand before, but they all like the place and they even dared to taste the hot Thai food. |
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The flavour of garlic is well known for its hot, dry pungent taste, savoured in the cuisine of many cultures. |
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When we do see him eat out it is often at a Mexican take-out, where quantities of hot sauce disguise the taste. |
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It has a slightly peppery taste which accounts for its being named after the hot cayenne pepper. |
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According to the Mainichi Daily News this hot new taste sensation is set to take Japan by storm next month. |
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Sometimes it's better to work with just hot sauce instead of hot peppers as it's easier to adjust the heat to taste. |
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I had a good taste of the hotpot and agreed with Ann it was rather glutinous and bland. |
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In a country where women swore by their gold, a shift in taste and preference is seen. |
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Does a drink cadged from a stranger taste far superior to one earned by the sweat of your brow? |
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This was proper ham hough, with a fabulous gamey taste and not at all salty. |
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The prime cut of shell steak has a similarly delicious sweet-and-sour taste. |
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When you substitute artificial sweetener for real sugar, however, the body learns it can no longer use its sense of taste to gauge calories. |
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He who turned the water into wine, who is the destroyer of the bitter taste, who is sweetness and altogether desire. |
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When the pods ripen they become full of a sweet gum with a distinctive taste and smell. |
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Settling down to taste some sweet-smelling sap, the unsuspecting prey has made a fatal mistake. |
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The blind taste test showed that she preferred swilling the budget brand, too. |
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All they are guilty of trying to do is make wine taste a little better than the eye-watering, gout-inducing swill that it usually is. |
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If they were produced using just plain tobacco and cigarette papers they would taste harsh and people would smoke fewer of them. |
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I don't know if my taste as a filmmaker is the same as my taste as a cinema-goer. |
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Don't take someone to this film if you're trying to impress them with your cinematic taste. |
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I took a long sip of coffee, swishing the warm liquid around my mouth, the taste of coffee beans lingering on my taste buds. |
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I am all for American regional cookery and the trappings of taste, custom, and parlance that go with each. |
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He sets the fashions and opinion of taste, dictates the limitations of speech and circumscribes conduct. |
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Stir in the rest of the butter, the grated Parmesan, chopped parsley, chanterelles and salt and pepper to taste. |
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Add the mushrooms, Parmesan and remaining butter, stir till you have a creamy consistency, then season to taste with salt and pepper. |
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I can now taste the difference between a pineapple and a pasty, but the parosmia remains. |
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A bitter taste and squeaking under a rotating knife-point indicate that some of the red layers contain sylvite. |
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The flesh has a light, delicate taste that goes well with fresh herbs such as lemon thyme and parsley. |
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It certainly got better the following day though, with the taste of citrons and the herb being more pronounced. |
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He was so fond of a little taste every day that in the winter he smuggled in frozen hunks of it, dropping them on the hearth to thaw. |
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It was a turning point for cinema taste in Paraguay in synchronicity with a change in Latin American film production. |
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Some intuitive people see clairvoyantly, others hear, feel, sense or even smell or taste. |
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Jessica is beautiful and wild, a party animal with a taste for fast cars and expensive clothes. |
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Five hurlers recalled recently their first and only taste of all-star action. |
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There he got his first taste of applying the tools of molecular biology to systematics and phylogenetic research. |
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Smash it into a pulp so that all the realism, taste or class evaporates and you are just left with the skeleton of the story. |
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Cassava is generally categorised as bitter or sweet depending on the level of hydrocyanic acid, which causes the bitter taste. |
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Fluxxion is testing it on milk to see if it can filter out bacteria and thus avoid pasteurisation, which can impair the taste. |
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Stripping in the new burlesque goes only as far as pasties and G-strings, not so much in the interests of taste as in the interests of irony. |
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The tamilok, its fans swear, has a fresh clean taste that sends shivers of pleasure down one's alimentary canal. |
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A good lemon tart should be gently set and lightly golden with a fresh, clean, lemony taste, rather than anything overly sour and overly sweet. |
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The stew was spiked with still-crisp bits of green pepper and onion, and had a clean taste of fresh vegetables. |
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This simple natural Thai soup offers fresh clean flavours that fuse the taste that is Thai cuisine. |
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Visitors can taste from the barrels of more than 40 wines, including current releases and previously unreleased cleanskins. |
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Parents should give children food suitable to their temperament, prepared hygienically, pleasant to the taste and yet simple. |
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They and their patrons reinvented the art of promotion and hype in part by attacking good taste and the stuffy elitism of the art world. |
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I wondered what was more depressing, the paucity of his vocabulary or the absence of musical taste. |
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They are generally larger than clingstones with a firmer, less juicy texture but still with a sweet taste. |
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This causes hypochondriac pain, bitter taste in the mouth and a wiry pulse. |
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The children in Asperger's study displayed a range of hyposensitivities and hypersensitivities to taste, tactile, and auditory stimuli. |
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The cash call smacks of poor taste, taking advantage of people's fears and anxieties by making promises of peace. |
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It does taste sort of peachy, with a good dose of sugar and some fizziness. |
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She first hit screens at age 21 in 1986 as a bleach-blonde punkette with close-cropped hair and a taste for unruly eye makeup. |
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Their sweet, candied taste adds elegance to tropical fruits, poached pears, and chocolate. |
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For a change from the basic iceberg lettuce salad, why not combine two or three greens for variety in taste and texture. |
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That green bottle with gold-foil seals brought in an ice bucket symbolised wealth and good taste. |
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Even middle-aged and old people relish the taste and take homemade or branded ice creams as dessert. |
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It's got a wonderfully creamy smooth taste, slightly cheddary, and is very white. |
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I often encourage them to club together to buy a particular wine if they want to taste it. |
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At the same time this coarseness of taste did not blunt his intellectual sagacity. |
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Add some Maldon salt and freshly ground pepper to taste and a small bowl of freshly grated Parmesan to dip into. |
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The monarch butterfly can discern tastes 12,0000 times more subtle than those perceivable by human taste buds. |
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Many dishes add coconut milk or peanut flour to make the food taste richer. |
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This was a delicious dish, not blackened so much as to give it a charred taste, but cooked to perfection. |
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Other signs and symptoms include flushed facies, sore throat, cough, cutaneous hyperaesthesia, and taste aberrations. |
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Adding a touch of flavored coffee to your regular coffee beans adds a special taste that is uniquely yours. |
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Only an hour previously she'd been on the high seas, and now she sat before me a vision of taste and coiffed hair. |
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In her taste, her cultural and political awareness, even her personal appearance, she seems like a product of the Rive Gauche. |
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Earl Alexander was a military commander with little taste for panache but distinguished by imperturbable confidence. |
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In this way, viewers decide which works to buy only on the basis of taste rather than the artists' fame or their collectability. |
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Suddenly I was experiencing familiar taste sensations, so different from the interesting but unfamiliar flavours of the orient. |
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Raw concrete is a taste acquired by few outside a tight-knit commando of architectural connoisseurs. |
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Chemically, nitrous oxide is a colorless gas with a slightly sweet odor and no appreciable taste at normal ambient temperature and pressure. |
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For decades, taste researchers have used a chemical called phenylthiocarbamide to assay a person's capability to sense a bitter taste. |
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The ability to taste, tested using a compound phenylthiocarbamide, is one of the best studied inherited traits in humans. |
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Ultraviolet disinfection units may destroy bacteria, inactivate viruses, and leave no taste or odor in the water. |
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They were also meant to be seen by others, so as to reflect well on the taste and fashionableness of the lady presiding over tea. |
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Low-fat and fat-free food sales are trailing behind foods that simply taste good. |
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Today most of the films are having more of commercial value than quality and are packed with themes and scenes that can match the taste of youth. |
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The most basic function of food preference, or sense of taste, is the ability to detect the almost indiscernible subtleties of the foods we eat. |
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Silenced by infirmity, if not by simple good taste, the former leader has had to stand aside while her legacy is picked apart. |
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Linked closely to individual style, colour is perhaps the easiest and most personal expression of taste. |
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We started off the meal with Piedmontese Trugole cheese in a BBQ sauce and I was instantly transported into taste bud heaven. |
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First make up the dressing, simply by combining all the ingredients and seasoning to taste. |
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Probably the most widely known in America, Pilsner is a light low fermentation beer with a taste ranging from neutral to bitter. |
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But for American Scots pining for a taste of the old country, there's nothing like a haggis from Scotland and that's where the smugglers come in. |
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Rosemaries, on the other hand, can be strong and piney or have a sweet, gingery taste. |
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Here is a man so richly deserving of a pink slip that his dismissal on such minor grounds leaves a sour taste. |
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Both cheeses deliver a rich, piquant taste, and each is also offered in a variety of sizes and forms. |
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The film serves up a sugarcoated confection that will make anyone with a taste for Nabokov gag. |
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How about putting a taste of open and honest debate about everything on the menu instead? |
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The pastry was paper thin and crisp and the filling had that lovely burnt-toffee taste. |
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The latter contain higher concentrations of toxic fermentation by-products called congeners, which add taste but hang around longer in your body. |
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The connoisseurs came up with a surprising range of taste and bouquet descriptions. |
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It looks the same and only the connoisseur would tell the difference in taste. |
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Early catalogues served connoisseurs and noble visitors whilst also publicizing the taste and wealth of the owner. |
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Wine connoisseurs demonstrate how to savour the true taste of wine without depending on the nose. |
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He choked down the thick syrup and drank a cup of water to balance the taste. |
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It is the complex task of a master blender to combine both malt and grain whisky to create a whisky with a more sophisticated taste. |
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Like oyster mushrooms, morels taste better in a small amount of butter than in olive oil, but again, don't overdo it. |
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It looked like a pour-on morello sauce from a jar, gooey and without taste. |
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Let it come to a simmer and cook for one or two minutes, taste and add some seasoning. |
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These white wines, from here and abroad, sail blithely across your taste buds, wake them up, and then gracefully depart. |
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You can drop a blob of whipped cream to enhance the taste and add a small dash of the cognac to it. |
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Unfortunately, the thick udon noodles had a washed-out taste and there was not a trace of meat to be found, but I would give it another chance. |
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The study was a single-blind taste test of azithromycin, cefprozil, cefixime and amoxicillin-clavulanic acid. |
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Researchers from the University of Miami have isolated a receptor that binds glutamate and have proposed that it underlies the umami taste. |
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Every sip confirms that Bacardi Big Apple Rum is a singular taste sensation. |
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Packed in a special blue box, they are known for their singular and impressive taste experience that is the quintessence of coffee. |
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Partridgeberries, also known as mountain cranberries, are small tart berries that are best replaced with the smaller cranberries for taste. |
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Everybody seemed to know his job and needed no incentive to carry it out other than the hope of a taste of the real old mountain dew. |
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The choices of main courses were unappealing and didn't taste any better than they sounded. |
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What made the food taste fabulous was the unbelievable view from my window. |
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It smells of chemicals, doesn't taste that great, and seems to sit on the stomach. |
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Charcoal, Propane, Mesquite, whale blubber, whatever gives you the taste that you desire. |
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The smell of sausages sizzling, the taste of a chargrilled steak washed down with a cold beer, the sound of mozzies buzzing and cicadas singing. |
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Such a screenwriter runs the risk of being accused of much more than just poor taste. |
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Once the stakes were raised and he got a taste of stardom, his humor became unconsciously cruel. |
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The unconsecrated dead are recorded on his father's tombstone, and thus given a taste of immortality. |
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The green and white speckled ones are meant to be eaten raw, like radishes, though they taste like uncooked dough to me. |
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An Indian or Mughlai dish cannot give the noodles or fried rice the taste that is expected, so it is not made and served, Mr. John explains. |
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In other words, Miguel's ex struck a balance between teen fashion's obsession with skimpiness and some actual good taste. |
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It was Leslie's first taste of live action since undergoing surgery to repair a wrist problem. |
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They describe the teas in terms of light, medium, and full body as well as in terms of taste. |
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Certainly, the former, part caterwaul and part coy coo, will be an acquired taste. |
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It opted for quick-cooking, high-yielding grains, while the East bred its strains for taste and texture. |
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Further, if they are undetectable by their taste, smell, or colour their attractiveness as poisons is enhanced. |
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My wife has Italian roots and my first taste of a home-cooked Bolognese was a delight. |
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The taste and texture of the meat which has been rehydrated and then cooked is different from the taste and texture of fresh, undried meat. |
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Tempeh also boasts a wonderfully chewy texture and a robust, slightly mushroomy taste. |
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The accident raised his other senses to near-superhuman levels, allowing him to taste, touch, smell and hear with unerring accuracy. |
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I think there are certain items in a piano competition that are not matters of musical opinion or taste. |
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And I suppose he deserves it, even if his musical style is a taste I am still trying to acquire. |
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For all his undeniable artistic significance, the biography feels too close to the bone to be in good taste. |
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Add the vegetables, watercress and shelled mussels and clams to this, season to taste and serve. |
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The harsh mustardy flavor was gone and the taste was clean crisp, and mild! |
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He wiped the sleep from his eyes and swallowed, trying to clear the musty taste from his mouth. |
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Furthermore, discerning customers would notice the taste, which is known to be uniquely earthy, musty and almost syrupy. |
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Women were drawn to him, not just because of a taste for the powerful, but because he was a genuine romantic capable of deep affection. |
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Several people at this fine publication found the article upsetting, in poor taste, unfunny and absurd. |
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Her early taste in clothing, all Sloane set ruffles and tweeds, was conventional. |
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It's quite a mysterious, sloppy dish, you can't really see what you are eating, you just have to trust the taste combination. |
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Ok, so stuffed eggs are a bit naff and seventies, but they still taste good! |
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There is no shortage of similar triumphs of money over taste in the Slovak capital. |
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A clutch of innovative jewellers, many of them British, has been instrumental in unleashing a revolution in gem taste. |
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This is the woman who carried on drinking bootleg liquor after Prohibition was lifted because she preferred the taste. |
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Not your typical bachelor pad, it had taste but was conservative and looked a little unlived in. |
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A baby is not born with a sweet tooth and will only have a taste for sugar if it is given at an early age. |
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For those who find its bitter taste unpalatable, having it with half a spoon of honey should help. |
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It is unpalatable to livestock because of its bitter taste so ranchers consider it to be a noxious weed. |
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The walnut pave is more moist than many walnut breads and free from that bitter, slightly mouldy taste that can make walnuts unpalatable. |
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However, if you find the taste so unpalatable that you don't drink it, then you need to do something to make it more drinkable. |
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True to his words and to my amazement, he has selected some of the ones I thought were unpalatable to the taste of the Chinese authorities. |
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Furthermore, Johannesson seems to have blazed a trail for a string of other Icelandic raiders who are developing a taste for British companies. |
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Or if you'd prefer to be your own boss, all you need to do is get a few bucks and a taste for ice cream. |
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But when Yoplait introduced a lowfat yogurt that claimed to capture the taste of a Boston cream pie, I simply had to check it out. |
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We are often told that establishment taste is parochial, obtuse and unreceptive to novelty. |
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Bad taste, botched repairs and smelly dogs will all sabotage your house sale. |
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It is one of the best house beers made with bottom fermentation method which brings with a mild scent and delicate taste. |
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The modern taste for celebrity politics is now such that these things pass almost unremarked. |
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Though made from an odd array of ingredients including a smidgen of potato flour, they did taste vaguely like French fries. |
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We always felt underdressed and that the crowd in there just seemed a little too bougie for our taste. |
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Vegetables cooked on the grill develop an irresistible sweet and smoky taste. |
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This dip has a wonderful smoky taste and you may even like to dilute it with a little water to make a dressing for other salads if you like. |
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Tots at the nursery had their first taste of acting when they staged a nativity with a modern twist. |
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Polenta is best known as a hearty winter side dish, but its sunny yellow color and sweet corn taste make it a natural for spring too. |
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Also, while it won't be the end of the world if you don't add the bouquet garni or the parsley, it will make your dinner taste better. |
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Not all people enjoy the bitter taste of beer, so it is a good idea to have some delicious vodka or bourbon as a taste alternative. |
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Only viewers with a taste for nauseatingly violent B-grade comedy will appreciate its well-hidden genius. |
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I would perform a simple taste test on the unsoftened tap water and assess if it tastes good. |
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Previously, brandy snifters and Scotch nosing glasses were used to taste bourbon, as the optimal glass for this spirit had never been developed. |
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Even the taste of it, like air, is neutral, because initially the water is fresh, not salt. |
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I came from a small town, where the wind is fresh and cool, you could taste the air on your lips. |
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And please, do not just snitch a taste from my plate haphazardly, or you may very well have eaten my Last Bite. |
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In a taste test, untrained observers also rated the organic apples to be the sweetest of the bunch. |
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The 1998 vintage is particularly well balance and has a long nectareous after taste. |
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No question, Slurpees are the best car drink ever, and they never taste so good as on a roadtrip. |
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Any sailor who shot an albatross would soak it overnight to get rid of the fishy taste, and make pies from it the next morning. |
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The artwork and woodwork are must-haves and the local calypso and soca music featured on the CD's will give you a true taste of St Lucia. |
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The Australia goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer admitted that the defeat had left the Socceroos with a sour taste in their mouths. |
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The assortments were soaked in brandy, whisky and rum to give it the real taste. |
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Town-house interiors were fitted out to individual taste by upholsterers or, as time went on, specialist firms of decorators. |
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I love the excited roar of the teeming crowd, the taste of the braunschweiger sandwiches, and the scent of the wooden bleachers. |
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So if I'm going to taste soda water, I'd rather drink some that has some flavor to it. |
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By the 1940s, he was a Marxist, an anti-fascist and a pivotal figure in Italian neo-realism, all without ever losing his taste for caviar. |
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There are two women in Britain who make her look the soul of discretion, refinement and good taste. |
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But what you should try and find out about is what kind of agents have been added to harden or soften the tap water, as it affects the taste. |
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Among the nation's arbiters of taste, what you keep in your bread bin is far more fascinating than what's in your shoe rack. |
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Scattered taste buds are also found in the epithelium of the soft palate, pharynx, larynx and epiglottis. |
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In addition to the vallate and fungiform papillae of the tongue, taste buds are found in the soft palate, oropharynx, and epiglottis. |
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