Judging from the number of blogs and articles, below-the-line comments and phone-ins, the tastes of fans have changed. |
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You're not just singing, you're crooning and your voice is all mellow and smooth and tastes like honey. |
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Bladderworts, pitcher plants, and sundews all indulge their carnivorous tastes. |
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The kulfi in The Wee Curry Shop looks and tastes like bad industrial ice cream with phoney laboratory flavours. |
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The extra virgin olive oil is a deep green and tastes almost good enough to consume on its own. |
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He is an epistemological realist, an ethical intuitionist, and a political libertarian, too extreme for my tastes but always provocative. |
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I soon found out that such simple countrified musical tastes were laughed at here. |
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Sometimes when inspiration hits, you create something that just tastes like ambrosia. |
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They're generally very fruity, and can have the subtle tastes of apples, peaches, apricots and melons. |
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There will be comedy routines, monologues and young people playing music of all descriptions and tastes. |
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Although we live in an age of aesthetic plenitude, we sometimes forget that our tastes may not be universal. |
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Some buckaroos will protest that the list is unfair to Westerns because it reflects only present-day movie tastes. |
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Retsina, or resinated wine, has a distinctive flavor and tastes better when chilled. |
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With its understated elegant designs and fluid lines, the collection should appeal to both traditional and contemporary tastes. |
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They can be customised to varying degrees of technical specifications to suit more complex or environmentally friendly tastes. |
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The soup is a vegetable broth that tastes eerily of chicken, with overcooked tomatoes, carrots, zucchini and celery. |
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But perhaps his mellifluous melancholy was always just a tad too left-field, a bit too intense, for mainstream tastes. |
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Suck on hard candy, such as lemon drops or peppermint to decrease bitter or bad tastes in your mouth. |
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It has lost that magic touch which once made it the most accurate anticipator and satisfier of consumer needs and tastes. |
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No matter where your tastes take you, serve the tostada with pinto beans and Mexican rice for a satisfying weeknight fiesta. |
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I let it sit there for a second or two and then ask myself if the wine tastes sweet, bitter, salty, etc. |
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They all exhibit sour, salty, sweet, and bitter tastes or can be any combination of the four. |
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It's best to eat less of the astringent, bitter, and pungent tastes in winter, although all six tastes should be included in your diet. |
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To them, it tastes as good as medium rare steak and they hoe into it with just as much glee. |
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For these critics, public indifference was a mark of distinction, a sign of the artist's refusal to pander to the degraded tastes of the crowd. |
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My tastes are definitely different from what I would have liked, if I had lived five centuries ago. |
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Bitter tastes like the tastes of black coffee and beer are composed of air and ether. |
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Like Lawson, she responds with semi-delirium to certain tastes, and makes breathless lowing noises between nibbles. |
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Depending on your tastes, it was a golden moment in the history of British music or a cringe-making aural atrocity. |
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Too much of one of the compounds may result in unwanted bitter, rancid, or sulfuric tastes. |
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Apples have various tastes, insipid, sweet, very sour and accordingly used in cooking. |
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You and I have our own tastes in music, and we tune in to whatever radio station suits us. |
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It can make sweet things sweeter, it can disguise unpleasant tastes and smells and it is the most versatile food ingredient known to man. |
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The two storey, 16,000 sq ft showroom caters for all ages and tastes, with separate sections for road bikes, children's bikes and mountain bikes. |
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However, the beef became tasty after absorbing the sweet and sour tastes of the preserved tangerine peel wrapped outside. |
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Believe me, the work of a line cook in a restaurant catering to the tastes of arriviste Texans is even more boring than it is cracked up to be. |
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All were new to us, especially the eggs, which came out brown and wrinkled, but all had nice if crazy tastes. |
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However, there is still controversy as to whether combination of these four primary tastes adequately describes all gustatory experiences. |
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My housemate was never more right than when it comes to my tastes in pop culture. |
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One thing I learned though, especially when it comes to the multicoloured desserts, is that nothing looks like it tastes. |
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As our tastes grew more sophisticated, I remember chopping them into bulgur wheat to make tabbouleh. |
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Wedding, bridesmaid and flower girl dresses are becoming more individual now, reflecting different tastes and lifestyles. |
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Other groups with their own traditions and culinary tastes include the Gurkhas and the Sherpas. |
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I guess shelter should be my first priority, and then about a fifth of some liquor that tastes about as nasty as it smells. |
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Because sea trout tastes like salmon, it is often called salmon trout. It is a fresh water, brown trout that has gone to sea. |
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If I drink ground water from the well in my house, it tastes brackish and salty, while the tap water is always unclean and unhealthy. |
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Pop culture trends are notoriously fickle, of course, and tastes can change overnight. |
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Madame tried both the chicken and fish gumbos and remarked on the totally different tastes that the Cajun cuisine could produce in them. |
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Master chefs have their hands full preparing a variety of delectable dishes with zany flavours and tangy tastes. |
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These Fairtrade Mini Flapjack Bites are a touch too chewy for my tastes, but they're moreish all the same. |
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We change our tastes and opinions with the same blinding speed that TV can make you famous or the press turn on idols they once loved. |
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He was a quiet unassuming man with simple tastes and was dedicated to his greyhounds and track. |
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This is a world where lives, character, tastes, moral capacity, sexual preferences, etc., are more often than not dictated by genetic makeup. |
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You can take either video version or either audio version and tailor your viewing experience to your own tastes. |
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Press releases might have been compiled, to some extent, in anticipation of popular tastes. |
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And if that's not sweet enough for your tastes, come dessert time the chef will even pour Tia Maria on your gulab jamun. |
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Here again, he fears, his preferences are hopelessly at odds with popular tastes. |
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Also, if you share the space that you're decorating, you should try to be considerate of your room-mates' tastes. |
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I said as much and befriended Guy, whose musical tastes encompass a diverse medley of almost unlistenable music. |
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Since it's eating natural herbage and is well exercised, it just tastes better. |
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Some music fans with extremely eclectic tastes may find this band's music appealing. |
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As for the dirt, I was always under the impression that all flesh tastes the same to demons. |
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As a response to a recent trend back to more traditional Japanese tastes, teriyaki burgers often appear on the menu alongside the Big Mac. |
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The candy in my mouth reminded me faintly of maraschino cherries and mint, two unlikely tastes to be found together in one candy. |
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However basic the food, it always tastes better outdoors and even better after a long day rafting. |
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So gourmets, keep your belly free to fill up with different tastes of India and abroad, during this weekend. |
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The two of them have very similar tastes and sense of style so coming together was obvious. |
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How sweet the coffee tastes, more delicious than a thousand kisses, mellower than muscatel wine. |
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Having grown up in North America, modern Western culture has become the source of most of my guideposts, tastes, and habitual perspectives. |
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Flattering as it may be to our egos, the Japanese don't always slavishly ape our tastes in entertainment. |
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There's a scrappiness to the place that refined tastes might find disagreeable. |
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Her tastes are Brazilian-style barbecues and Japanese food but she does succumb to certain temptations. |
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The system finds people with musical tastes similar to yours, and starts playing music from their collection. |
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The yoghurt dip tastes fine, not too nose-botheringly hot, but I'm not wild about its pairing with tofu. |
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Broaden your children's musical tastes by exposing them to different kinds of music through recordings and live concerts. |
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His music tastes were known to run to pre-Beatles British pop, high-camp glam rock and implausibly obscure indie bands. |
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The beccafico, however, is not as a rule artificially fattened, and on this account was preferred by some sensitive tastes to the ortolan. |
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He has inexpensive tastes, even if he likes highbrow culture, and has the common touch. |
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It tastes about a bazillion times better than the beer, and that's ok by me. |
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The boneset tastes like autumn pork, roasting in a pan with mint leaves, raspberry tea, and lemon peels. |
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Consumers are increasingly choosing premium foods and exotic flavours as their tastes change. |
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In fact, I proudly imagined myself to be the only twelve year old in the UK with such advanced, mature tastes for my age. |
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My tastes run to the unconventional, so if yours don't, this may not be the place for you. |
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My tastes are fairly similar to yours but I have an unhealthy unironic love of Karen Carpenter. |
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While his work, in its seductiveness, might appeal to unsophisticated tastes, there is nothing unsophisticated about the paintings themselves. |
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Heirloom tomatoes are making a comeback in farmers' markets and natural food stores as people rediscover how good a real tomato tastes. |
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This was important for his original readers in a country slow to catch musical tastes from elsewhere. |
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The patient's tastes run to swingbeat, hip hop and dancehall but he has only a bare knowledge of their antecedents. |
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On the other hand, if your music tastes run to classical or pop, you want a speaker system which can reproduce the entire audio spectrum evenly. |
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If your drink has been moved, looks topped up or tastes funny then don't drink it! |
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People make choices among magazines based on their tastes and their points of view. |
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My habit with the coffee is I put a cinnamon stick in the filter with the grounds so my coffee tastes cinnamon-like. |
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Friends who live far apart geographically were brought together to good-naturedly discuss mutual interests or angrily denounce differing tastes. |
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The consumer needs, tastes, and spending habits of new immigrant groups are often somewhat different from native-born groups. |
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That done, she smeared the thick, rough honey on the fresh bread, grimacing as the tastes conflicted. |
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Where this turn of the story tastes unpalatable is the assumption that politicians win only by using muscle power. |
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It's amazing how much better freshly ground chilli tastes than the pre-ground stuff. |
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Tea in Scotland tastes better than it does anywhere else in the world because of the soft water. |
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Those tastes were wonderfully different, especially the seeds and grains of the outback. |
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People develop, their tastes change, their need for clear correct and up-to-date information increases. |
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Dessert was warm chocolate bread pudding with 12-year-old Glenfarclas, which tastes of sweet sherry. |
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And one area where tastes are met and diversity can be seen in some ways is in the increasing strength of commercial talkback radio. |
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Data miners and consumer profilers are able to produce detailed pictures of the tastes and habits of increasing numbers of consumers. |
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Keeping up with the fickle tastes of fashion is not always easy for the Dutch bulb industry. |
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Experience can contribute to connoisseurship, but only if the consumer tastes with attention and an open mind. |
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We still drive everyone else nuts, inconsiderately and flagrantly imposing our tastes and points of view across multiple generation gaps. |
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Dry wines can cause unpleasant sour or even bitter tastes if served with desserts. |
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It's not as though I don't make a comfortable living, because I do, but I have rather extravagant tastes. |
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Certainly, there was a host of different dishes hot and steamy to cater to the tastes of connoisseurs. |
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Industry circles have started making calculations but the tastes of audiences are truant and calculations may go awry. |
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Caribbean and South American tastes are different, and recognizing the differences is important when marketing to these various groups. |
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Now the winery is looking at different varietals and blends to keep up with the changing tastes of American consumers. |
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I also may add a bit of soy sauce if the accompanying wine tastes too aggressive. |
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There is even a scene in which Peter tastes the milk from the nipple of the bottle, and then pours it into his coffee. |
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Enzymes collected from around the world are being investigated to determine their specific tastes for certain PCB configurations, or congeners. |
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To the end, Mrs. Child maintained her image as the ultimate bon vivant, a California girl with easy French tastes. |
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In milder years, the herd of 12 does and fawns which migrates through my yard are much more selective in their tastes. |
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Next up is celeriac, a large bulbous root vegetable that tastes very much like celery. |
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One of our choices was an apple crumble, which brilliantly combined sweet and tart tastes, together with vanilla parfait and toffee sauce. |
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For those inclined towards the Western culinary tastes, Chennai is increasingly offering greater choices. |
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Colonial tastes survive in the form of sardines, corned beef and mutton, chocolate, and whiskey. |
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I started developing a bit of a swagger, a bullishness about my own tastes which had been dormant 'til then. |
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The way I find music is that I have a few friends whose musical tastes I trust. |
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The starter of wild mushroom salad was a delight of deep, earthy tastes with a tart balsamic dressing to sharpen up the wild fungus. |
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Changing tastes in grape variety have also conspired against the humble canned vino. |
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I ate smaller and smaller mouthfuls, not because I was losing my appetite, but to extend the sensation of remarkable tastes. |
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It must be some puritan streak in me, but I find the detailed discussion of tastes and sensations nauseating and very distressing to read. |
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The exterior crust is supposed to be crispy and golden brown, but this one tastes like cardboard. |
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I spit on the ground to get the tastes of acid and hate out of my mouth and my spit burned a hole in the sidewalk. |
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Because self-improvement tastes best with a piquant little sprinkle of something self-defeating on top. |
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Fans with vastly different tastes still get off on its piercing wail, distorted rumbles, or clean and warm sound. |
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It tastes similar to cream soda but has a sort of raspberry flavour as well. |
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The real show takes place in the Festhallen, wherein the beer runs like water and tastes like the nectar of the gods. |
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Heck, there are times when I have cringed at the musical tastes of musicians I admire. |
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You can also toss in some cashews when jeera is added and that tastes wonderful after the rice is cooked. |
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If people's musical tastes were a mirror of themselves, you'd be pretty spot on in feeling that everybody had gone just a little crazy. |
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Sour and acid tastes are liked, and are manifest in the use of lime juice, tamarind, etc. |
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This may enhance pleasant tastes and decrease salty, bitter, or acid tastes. |
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She was about my age, and it was quickly apparent that we shared similar interests, tastes, and philosophy on life. |
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Their vivid, jewel-like tones were well suited to the tastes of the Mughal court. |
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Margaret remains a person of fixed tastes and opinions which were formed very early. |
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Although it bears a different shape, Bel Paese actually acts and tastes quite similar to Mozzarella. |
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Eating out is easy with over 700 restaurants catering to a broad range of tastes. |
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I'm not trying to influence people's tastes or change people's perceptions of the world. |
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It may be slow-burning for modern tastes but it still makes soap opera look powder-puff. |
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This is a lovely soup that is based on Indian dhal, which tastes best when it is heavy on the ginger. |
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Wildflowers are gathered for decoration, fur is worn for its warmth and game is hunted because it tastes good. |
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Is this convergence of tastes proof that Canada's CEO is, after all, a real Everyman? |
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Later, however, changing tastes and pressure from temperance advocates dictated that absinthe be diluted with water, preferably sweetened. |
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He amassed important examples that hint at diverse tastes for classic genres. |
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Critical opinion of his work has undergone the vicissitudes of prevailing tastes in art. |
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Note that though it tastes sweet and rich and decadent, it's actually quite low calorie. |
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Many find it too soft for their tastes, unlike the distinctive T-bone steak which derives flavour from the dividing bone. |
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They whet the palate by forcing you to tune into subtleties in flavouring and the natural tastes of the very fresh ingredients. |
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What the ex-policeman takes for boredom, though, is the stillness of a serpent as its cloven tongue tastes the scent in the breeze. |
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Watch kalua pigs dug out of the imu, enjoy fire knife dancers and take in the tastes and music of all Polynesia. |
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If you do not like the Indian version then you get nasty white toast and bright red jam that tastes like bubble gum. |
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Focus on spicy, bitter and astringent tastes, and reduce sweet, salty and sour-tasting foods. |
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But the affogato, an interplay of tastes, textures and temperatures, was the best. |
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Some people make a big fuss about this stuff, which tastes like flat soda pop to me. |
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It's a soft-smelling, nutty, delicately aromatic beer that tastes similarly light and delicate. |
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It won't be to all tastes, but it does make you view what can become a cliched media story in a fresh way. |
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It has come to spread strange new tastes from an advanced enlightened civilization. |
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Now that's actually really good for your voice and it tastes absolutely delicious. |
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So, if art has to survive through the ages, it must be free, flexible and able to adapt itself to changing tastes. |
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As we think back to days gone by, we tend to focus on certain sounds, smells or tastes. |
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This Asian-style concoction melds multilayered tastes, unfurling hints of cardamom, cloves and anise on the tongue. |
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Women have varying tastes, some like the rugged look, but very popular is the clean-cut, clean-living man. |
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Sydney's top ten rate among the best in the world if your tastes are for fresh ingredients, unpretentious culinary achievement and clean tastes. |
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She tries to hold on to as much genuine stuff as she can while pandering to fancier tastes. |
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This is not the most sophisticated-looking dish but it's a cinch to prepare and tastes terrific. |
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This is one of the tastier winter squashes, with creamy pulp that tastes a bit like sweet potatoes. |
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The clean, fresh tastes so lively and vibrant in the starters were nowhere to be had here. |
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You'll find classic designs for a wide range of tastes and styles, including necklaces, bracelets and hair charms. |
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Well, the experts in the trade tell us that your favourite soft drink tastes best when it's chilled right down to four degrees Celsius. |
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We Americans don't care how the cheese tastes so much as long as it gives us a good mouthfeel. |
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Even carrot juice tastes better when you sip it sitting on comfortable armchairs. |
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A good compromise seasoning is potassium chloride, which tastes the same as regular table salt but does not cause bloating. |
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Steamed broccoli tastes good with most sauce or dressings, such as mayonnaise, Thousand Island dressing, or horseradish sauce. |
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In the pastel, these emblems are displayed as attributes of Pompadour herself, or at least of her tastes. |
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This could lead not merely to low alcohol content but to acrid and pungent tastes and aromas as well. |
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Wine drunk on its own tastes different when taken with food, because the wine acts on food in a similar way to spices. |
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Less expected was the response of my cynical video-watching companions, who thought the film would be too tacky for their tastes. |
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We are, after all, introduced to him in the first stanza through his tastes, the touchstones he cannot lay aside and by which he judges all else. |
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Excessive gift-giving is now so entrenched in Hollywood culture that a company has been set up just to pander to the tastes of the A-listers. |
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The pigs' apprehension about being eaten results in tough meat, which is why pork no longer tastes good. |
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This strategy, admirable in its refusal to pander to European popular tastes, will of course never, ever, give Turkey a winning song. |
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People in Eastern Europe increasingly want to try Western tastes and variety in food. |
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And while the sweet sensation takes a hike, the tongue remains as sensitive as always to salty and sour tastes. |
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It's a trout which migrates to sea, is smaller but chunkier than salmon, has a squarer tail, pink flesh and tastes more delicate. |
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Saltiness in foods high in umami neutralizes the bitter or metallic tastes in the wine you drink with these foods. |
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But of course he was writing to satisfy his literary muse, not to pander to the base tastes of his public. |
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Does this betoken a sea change Irish political tastes since the birth of the tiger? |
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Stephen could place his own sardonic stamp on what were in some cases widely shared late Victorian literary tastes. |
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Most taramasalata sold commercially is artificially colored and tastes nothing like the homemade version. |
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He is certainly not above getting laughs out of the sheer awfulness of his characters' tastes and habits. |
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It also is the least atonal-sounding movement and will likely appeal even to those of fairly conservative tastes. |
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The real viewers are likely to be over 50, married and of broadly conservative tastes. |
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They have been replaced by a blackcurrant variety to pander to tastes beyond the county. |
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The traditional range is still being sold, particularly into America where tastes are more conservative. |
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In delicatessens, it is customary to offer sample tastes of foods as part of the exchange process. |
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I can't imagine it appealing much to women or to those of more discriminating tastes. |
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We blame them for violence in society, vulgar tastes and a host of other ills. |
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It does not have a list of tastes, temperatures and channels, but parts of the body affected and organoleptic qualities are included in the text. |
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He conveys these moral tastes to the reader less by means of argument than by ironic indirection or aesthetic intimation. |
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To drink, there's fresh papaya juice, lemonade and Malta Corona that tastes like Ovaltine soda. |
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Mammals can basically sense tastes of sweet, sour, bitterness, salt, and umami. |
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Our aim is to drive a step change in our business by involving our people and developing the meat category in line with changing consumer tastes. |
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And this is a weird nostalgic experience through my musical tastes since about 1988, when I first bought a CD player. |
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Occasionally, when I have the time, I enjoy making a scratch pizza crust, especially because it tastes so much better than a premade crust. |
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Obviously, it depends on having a decent-sized sample of your musical tastes before it can make sensible recommendations. |
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Customizing premade products to suit your individual tastes is where creative things happen. |
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They are perfectly entitled to their tastes and certainly their experiences. |
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The sharing aspect of it let you find others who had similar tastes and sample their collections, letting you find something new. |
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Since I began to take blood pressure tablets about two years ago, everything I eat or drink tastes as if it has been sprinkled with salt. |
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Lead tastes sweet, which is why children start and continue to put it in their mouths. |
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But each tastes too sweet and too much like chemicals, like something purchased cheaply at a bad supermarket. |
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The floor is hard, but cool and somehow the food tastes better and the conversation is lighter. |
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And while the restaurants may not win any stars in the Michelin Guide, their food sure tastes good after a morning on the slopes. |
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It is refreshing, therefore, to find in a city with many bad Indian restaurants, one where the food tastes unique. |
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Restaurants generally cook with fat because food tastes better, and people expect larger portions. |
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All the food tastes like rubber, like it was sitting up in the refrigerator for five years. |
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A good way to let customers experience the varied tastes of straight whiskey and learn more about them is to conduct tastings. |
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Looks a great colour in the pan, tastes of proper beef, lovely coarse mince. |
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The Sauvignon tastes like hay and the Chardonnay has a steely finish that's not very charming, but both are still better than what I had before. |
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I put a cinnamon stick in the filter with the grounds so my coffee tastes cinnamon-like. |
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A rack of Shetland lamb feels tight and tastes fatty, and stargazy pie offers only a fishy, oily cream and no real pie experience. |
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He was a man who lived for his own tastes and comforts, and his sexual perversions. |
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Maybach has a mind-boggling array of features and gadgets, and one that is built to suit their tastes and preferences. |
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It sounds kind of reductionist to sum people up by their musical tastes and how they differ from yours. |
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Bertie gave an expressive grunt, which conveyed his opinion that there was no accounting for tastes. |
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Others who had found that church too theologically liberal for their tastes espoused a more traditional theology. |
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Having been kept as a house slave by his planter-master, who had taught him to read and write, he had acquired refined, civilized tastes. |
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This is to say, unlike the products of the popular culture, social norms do not bend easily to transient tastes or the latest fads. |
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To be honest, he looked pretty hot, though a little more feminine than my tastes run to usually. |
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I will give them credit for their large portions, but that matters little when the food tastes like dookie. |
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Other tastes, not necessarily exogenous, often superceded the desire for financial gain. |
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Select a quality cookbook that complements your tastes and reflects your culinary goals and skills. |
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Of course, I've had to ignore the fact that I don't see the point in posh nosh when a mixed grill or fry-up tastes better and costs less. |
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The color I specified is a light green, maybe a bit yechy for your tastes, but I kinda like it! |
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The pecan tastes most strongly of the actual nut, and is a marvellously rich, buttery paste. |
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With a deep golden colour, this tastes rather like a dry sherry that has seen plenty of oak, or perhaps an aged Vouvray. |
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That means eliminating impure tastes in the brewing process so the flavour of the hops can emerge untainted. |
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They reflect popular music tastes of the time, most notably an interest in the seductive rhythms of the tango. |
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Unlike many inexpensive Cabernet Sauvignons, this one tastes like a straightforward Cab. |
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It is an amusement park that is offering a variety of rides for all tastes. |
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My tastes wandered in different directions, but Peel somehow kept up his enthusiasm for zillions of British rock bands until the end. |
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It's a shooter that consists of vodka and red grapefruit juice and tastes pretty good. |
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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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Or how he tastes like peppermints and sweet vodka at six-thirty on a Saturday morning. |
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Although most brands of grain alcohol are practically tasteless, vodkas, brandy and bourbon have differing tastes according to the distiller. |
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It is immensely clever, perhaps overly tricksy for some tastes and, most importantly, extraordinarily brilliant. |
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On the eve of her wedding journey, she has a swanky supper with her father, a bank manager ill at ease with his daughter's high-flying tastes. |
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He said the tour has given the band the chance to branch out and explore different directions and to satisfy their eclectic tastes. |
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A new intergovernmental conference could cut out the most controversial parts, making it more palatable to British tastes. |
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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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I think it has a lot more kick and tastes even better with hot cherry peppers instead. |
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Well-cooked fish tastes of life, whereas overcooked fish tastes of spiritless grey anti-matter. |
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If a customer has tried the Macallan, then he knows what heavily sherried malt tastes like. |
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Cecilia and Joe had similar tastes and almost everything in the apartment was mismatched and worn. |
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Most of the dishes hit us with a wallop of flavour right from the start, so the different tastes didn't really have a chance to unfold. |
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A palate is in the roof of the mouth and gives a person the ability to distinguish and appreciate different tastes and flavours. |
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It's all a testament to the spendy tastes and fiercely pro-urban character of the people who live in this part of town. |
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In this version of apple crumble, the topping tastes of crumbled Anzac biscuits. |
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It tastes great, whether you're making salad dressing or scrambling a few egg whites. |
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This bistro offers a relaxed Mediterranean ambience and an affordable globetrotter of a menu, ensuring there's something to suit all tastes. |
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It tastes like betel leaf, I suppose, but it goes down easily, like a glamorous form of baby porridge shipped in from the kitchens of old Ceylon. |
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The next few weeks in Kilcoo will be jammed packed with activities and events to suit all tastes. |
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The appetizer was a small plate of radish pieces served in a sauce that tastes similar to the creamy vegetable soup base. |
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Steamed broccoli tastes good with most sauce or dressings, such as mayonnaise, Thousand Island dressing or horseradish sauce. |
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And with other sports such as darts, bowls, table tennis, boccia and weightlifting, there was something to suit all tastes. |
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The audience had the usual haircuts, shaven or spiky, and the same tastes in branded designer gear. |
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But, in general the musical tastes of the kids in Wales was basic to say the least. |
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Some listeners will probably find his voice a bit adenoidal for their tastes. |
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His patient rise from humble origins to eminence, his simple tastes and homespun manner, inspired general affection. |
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In the past, conservative Irish tastes wanted contemporary works for their living rooms. |
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It's a little too jazzy for my tastes at first, but the last hour is great, sweaty, junglist action. |
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What plant may cure Alzheimer's disease, increase circulation, tastes like almonds and smells like rancid butter? |
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Fussy high-end clients might not think Ikea impressive or exclusive enough for their rarefied tastes. |
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Accepting the premise that red wine is smooth, has soft tannins and tastes of vanilla, this is a banker. |
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Traditionally, kedgeree is a little bit soupy, but tastes vary, and you might like it drier or wetter. |
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His complexion was dark, almost worldly, just hinting at his complex tastes, his exemplary internationalism. |
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Still, at least I know how to ask how many Pesos a man has, then give him the flick off if he doesn't have enough to satisfy my tastes. |
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The product tastes the same the week before the Super Bowl as it does the week after the Super Bowl. |
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The abundance of pawpaw trees, whose fruit tastes like banana custard, amplifies the tropical effect. |
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Isn't it wonderful that the fruit of the earth tastes good to us, nourishes us. |
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It tastes marvelously clean between forkfuls of spring greens in cherry tomato vinaigrette, which comes on the side. |
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His habits and tastes were profoundly bourgeois, and he was regular in his habits to the point of rigidity. |
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A large selection of push-ups, underwired bras, triangle styles and bandeaux varieties offer something for all tastes. |
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Moist and translucent, it tastes like a mellow orange with a hint of lemon. |
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To fully appreciate the smells and tastes, drink the tea from a tulip-shaped wine glass rather than from a china cup or mug. |
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My own tastes run toward dark colors, simple oak antiques, comfortable chairs, brass candlesticks, and interesting but quirky ornaments. |
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It is hard to believe that such an Aladdin's cave of tastes sits almost unnoticed on the shores of Clew Bay. |
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The craic was mighty and the eats plentiful, varied and delicious, scrumptiously washed down by copious draughts to suit all tastes. |
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Whatever your tastes and whatever your budget, there is an enormous choice of bracelets and bangles to suit everyone. |
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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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A dagwood dog is essentially a breaded sausage on a stick, and it tastes sooooo good, especially with tomato sauce. |
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Not surprisingly, fusion cuisine continued to be popular, melding tastes from different cultures into one melting pot. |
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After the show, guests enjoyed the buffet of Egyptian food which always tastes as good as it looks. |
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There's a lot of comedy in Mallboy, and Giarrusso is certainly not above getting laughs out of the sheer awfulness of his characters' tastes and habits. |
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