Let there be wine, food, music, and ravishing summer landscapes from alpine meadows to Riviera beaches. |
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In addition, he had made prudent investments and, except for his wine cellar, did not live lavishly. |
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Beer and ale, for example, in Great Britain, and wine, even in the wine countries, I call luxuries. |
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The bottles were uncorked and the wine was decanted an hour before the meal. |
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In 2006, Russia imposed an embargo on Georgian agricultural products, including wine. |
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I was hoping that they would serve us something more substantial than wine and cheese. |
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Those who appreciate fine wine will enjoy reading the restaurant's wine list. |
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The Alcyone dessert wine based on Tannat is an incredible wine for these types of chocolate. |
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Back then acker Merrall was one of the few wine stores that carried all the great domains. |
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The delicate taste of the wine was overpowered by the spiciness of the food. |
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No doubt he then can feed us, wine us, beer us, And cook us something that can warm and cheer us. |
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I visited a bottle shop recently to buy some wine and beer for a dinner party. |
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Although there were more reasonably priced bottles of wine, they chose an expensive Malbec not for its flavor, but for its bourgie appeal. |
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Mr. Horrocks served myself and my pupils with three little glasses of wine, and a bumper was poured out for my lady. |
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If it be true that good wine needs no bush, 'tis true that a good play needs no epilogue. |
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The result is a creamy, fruit-driven wine that is by no means a butter-bomb. |
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He poured himself a full glass of wine, and passed the bottle along the candlelit table. |
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Mrs. Dingley and Mrs. Johnson say, truly they don't care for your wife's company, though they like your wine. |
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In this context, bottled wine is a premium product and not generally drunk in the same way or for the same reasons as cask wine. |
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Many of the 25 the wine panel tasted also exhibited vegetal, cedary, herbaceous, roasted and crushed-fruit flavors. |
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My eye-whites still woke up bright and clear despite the night before's two bottles of cheap cleanskin wine. |
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Snobs feel it's hard to call it wine with a straight face when the cork is made of plastic. |
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Once someone discovered a bottle of wine in the sand that was still corked. |
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Phoenician merchant traders imported and exported wood, textiles, glass and produce such as wine, oil, dried fruit and nuts. |
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Indeed beer, by a mixture of wine, hath lost both name and nature, and is called balderdash. |
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He drinks beer and wine, but he doesn't drink any hard liquor. |
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Since it seemed like getting a glass of wine was going to require an act of Congress, I quickly agreed. |
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Used by a wholesaler or retailer as a wine cabinet, the ambry cupboard suited the needs of a neighborhood inn or small-scale private kitchen. |
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This is a beautiful world of enlightened aristos, the kind of people who know not only wine but Italian art and, to a great extent, themselves. |
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To complement an artisanal cheese or a fresh loaf of rosemary bread, nothing compares to a glass of fine wine. |
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The wine merchants of Nice brew and balderdash, and even mix it with pigeon's dung and quicklime. |
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As the sanctuary was bandited at least once, it may be that the silver wine cups I have are from the treasure. |
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The cellar was a bareish room containing a long shelf and a few wine barrels. |
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In addition to its wine tradition, France is also a major producer of beer. |
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Hispania served as a granary for the Roman market, and its harbors exported gold, wool, olive oil, and wine. |
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Today, the country is known by wine lovers and its wines have won several international prizes. |
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Dutch traders shipped wine from France and Portugal to the Baltic lands and returned with grain for countries around the Mediterranean Sea. |
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Further from the coast, furniture danced on the floors and wine casks rolled off their stands. |
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The European coastal ports supplied domestic goods, dyes, linen, metal products, salt and wine. |
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A common sight on the Leidseplein during summer is a square full of terraces packed with people drinking beer or wine. |
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Scavenged goods include several BMW R1200RT motorcycles, empty wine casks, nappies, perfume, and car parts. |
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Economically, it makes sense for people to buy their supplies of wine, beer, spirits, and tobacco in bulk in France instead of Britain. |
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Other areas of interest for the Greeks in Egypt were foods, wine, soap, wood crafts, printing. |
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Tobacco importing and cigarette manufacturing have ceased, but the importation of wine and spirits continues. |
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In the United Kingdom, they are sometimes used to make a jelly or homemade wine. |
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After paying homage to the departed, the ritual is concluded by a libation of rice wine poured on to an additional stack of burning paper money. |
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The leaves can also be used for tea, and the young flowers can be made into primrose wine. |
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Once making their intentions known to the boarded crew, they ended up taking thirty casks of brandy and five hogshead of wine, among other goods. |
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Pottery kilns at Tyre in South Lebanon and Sarepta produced the large terracotta jars used for transporting wine. |
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They contain a strong call to a life of personal piety and asceticism, including celibacy and abstinence from meat and wine. |
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Australian wine is produced mainly in the southern, cooler parts of the country. |
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The Champagne region of France is mostly underlain by chalk deposits, which contain artificial caves used for wine storage. |
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The lord of Chale raised some men and demanded the 53 barrels of wine the ship was carrying. |
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In medieval Europe the Church was a staunch supporter of wine, which was necessary for the celebration of the Mass. |
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Such techniques have made possible the development of wine industries in New World countries such as Canada. |
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Screw caps' use as an alternative to cork for sealing wine bottles is gaining increasing support. |
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Viticulture is a part of the economy, with wineries producing mainly sparkling wine of varied quality. |
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This drink is now enjoyed without the blood as a wine and whiskey drink known as Caribou. |
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Grain, wine, cheese, meat, fish and oil began to arrive at Rome in large quantities, where it was given away for nothing as alms. |
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People living in the area grow sugar beet, sunflowers, wheat, maize, tobacco, wine grapes and fruit. |
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Mainz is one of the centers of the German wine economy as a center for wine trade and the seat of the state's wine minister. |
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Mainz had been a wine growing region since Roman times and the image of the wine town Mainz is fostered by the tourist center. |
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Today, the city is an industrial centre and is famed as the origin of Liebfraumilch wine. |
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The higher areas, up to the Prealps and Alps sectors of the north, produce fruit and wine. |
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On their return trip they would carry silk fabrics, spices, wine, and fruit. |
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Notable festivals, beyond the religious fests, include Patras Carnival, Athens Festival and various local wine festivals. |
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The old woman ate greedily, and drank still more plenteously of the sweet wine. |
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The white of an egg with spirit of wine, doth bake the egg into clots, as if it began to poach. |
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Thus if Portugal specialized in wine and England in cloth, both states would end up better off if they traded. |
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Drinking wine and alcoholic beverages was heavily ingrained into Chinese culture, as people drank for nearly every social event. |
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Locally produced beverages include fruit juices, coffee, herbal teas and teas, and alcoholic drinks such as rum, wine, and beer. |
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He was specifically looking for spices to put in wine, and was not alone among European monarchs at the time to have such a desire for spice. |
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This is also how fruits are fermented into wine and cabbage into Kimchi or sauerkraut. |
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For example, Walter Raleigh had been granted a trade monopoly by Queen Elizabeth, for the export of broadcloth and wine. |
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It is a sweet, lightly fermented palm wine, and is found in bars in towns and villages across the country. |
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Here they produce no wine or oil, and the people are strong, robust and of great stature. |
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A number of wine tours of Cape Verde's various microclimates began to be offered in spring 2010 and can be arranged through the tourism office. |
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They tried to give the natives things to eat such as bread, fish, cakes, honey and even wine. |
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Nutmeg is a traditional ingredient in mulled cider, mulled wine, and eggnog. |
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It pairs well with cinnamon, allspice, vanilla, red wine and basil, as well as onion, citrus peel, star anise, or peppercorns. |
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He identified the matzah and cup of wine as his body soon to be sacrificed and his blood soon to be shed. |
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Fontainebleau, for instance, had a gushing fountain in its courtyard where quantities of wine were mixed with the water. |
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It is in this area where a few valleys can be found, such as the Valle de Guadalupe, the major wine producing area in Mexico. |
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For dessert we will have the prinzregententorte with the ground coffee. Also a bottle of white house wine to go with the meal. |
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At last the soporiferous fumes of the wine lulled him into a gentle repose. |
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Leading sectors included mechanical engineering, fashion, pharmaceutics, food and wine. |
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It is also a major producer of rum, pulque and mezcal and even produces red wine. |
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At the conclusion of the Anaphora the bread and wine are held to be the Body and Blood of Christ. |
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The wine is poured from a single container into one or several vessels, and these are again shared around. |
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Of those who attend the Memorial a small minority worldwide partake of the wine and unleavened bread. |
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The water that in the Latin Church is prescribed to be mixed with the wine must be only a relatively small quantity. |
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The practice of the Coptic Church is that the mixture should be two parts wine to one part water. |
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Many Protestant churches allow clergy and communicants to take mustum instead of wine. |
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In influenza epidemics, some churches suspend the giving of communion under the form of wine, for fear of spreading the disease. |
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Previously it had not been clear when and how bread and wine got onto the altar. |
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Lutherans believe that the actual body and blood of Jesus Christ are present in, with and under the bread and the wine. |
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Goa is also notable for its low priced beer, wine and spirits prices due to its very low excise duty on alcohol. |
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It were good to keepe some of the juyce of raspis-berries in some wooden vessel, and to make it, as it were, raspis wine. |
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To consecrate the bread and wine, the priest speaks the Words of Institution. |
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The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae have been used for thousands of years to ferment beer and wine, and to leaven bread. |
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He produced a wine key from his jacket pocket and effortlessly removed the cork from the bottle of red. |
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The air was wine and seltzer, perfumed, as they absorbed it, with the delicate redolence of prairie flowers. |
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Flanders received imports from other areas of Europe, but itself purchased little abroad except wine from Spain and France. |
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In Napa Valley and Sonoma Valley, California, areas made out of tuff are routinely excavated for storage of wine barrels. |
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While at Bowdoin, Hawthorne wagered a bottle of Madeira wine with his friend Jonathan Cilley that Cilley would get married before Hawthorne did. |
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His family were wine merchants, but from an early age he decided to become a writer. |
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Such effects are claimed also by some South Australian wineries as increasing the quality of the wine production. |
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At dinnertime we were given a piece of meat on a wooden trivet, bread and wine. |
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The altar boys were sacked after they were caught sampling the sacramental wine instead of just passing it to the priest before communion. |
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That loaf of bread, that jug of wine, and thou have left me in a state of utter satiety. |
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Settlerist principles meant the Australian colonies believed Britain had an obligation to buy colonial wine. |
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The sextary seems to have contained 6 gallons, and is also used for cider and wine. |
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Grillo, a minor white grape, is familiar to fans of Marsala, a sherrylike Sicilian wine that has lost favor over the years. |
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The winery recently shipped out the first orders of wine under the Falcon Crest label. |
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The vines that they use for wine are so often cut, that their sap spendeth into the grapes. |
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Baked fish lay cooling on the table, and there was a great spilth of wine on the floor. |
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The rest of the Tates are wine people, every one with a favorite vintage. I'm not much on the spoiled grape juice myself. |
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The outfit there, led by a man named Angelino who insisted on drinking wine while training, is superauthentic and super-romantic. |
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When we were watching Massena, off Genoa, we got a matter of seventy schooners, brigs, and tartans, with wine, food, and powder. |
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One wine aficionado had given up on finding an ale she actually liked. |
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Tiepolo ordered two vast toasted cheeses and a jug of wine, and we alternately seared and cooled our lips until we were satisfied and tipsy. |
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He sipped his wine, flashed a toe-curling smile at the waitress as she picked up his uneaten plate, then gave me a somewhat darker look. |
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She drank a glass of wine mixed with water, took off her felt toque and her shoes, and slid beneath the red eiderdown. |
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Their desire to serve beer and wine led to an unintended townwide beer ban. |
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The content of these stores, as well as wine, would mosdy be preserved foodstuffs and tracklements. |
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Between 1691 and 1724 cultivators were subject to the Tricesimation, a tax of one-thirtieth of grain and wine produced. |
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Bring me these twain cups of wine and water, and let us drink from the one we feel more befitting of this day. |
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A very yellow or gold young white wine has probably oxidised and will be flat, ruined and unalcoholic. |
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Now I'm hungry as a Rocky Mountain lion so come, let's go and get this poor, daffy, tealess widow and wine and dine with her and make it all up. |
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At parting, they bestowed a cup on him of a miraculous make, for it was ever full of wine, let the drinker be ever so drouthy. |
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Uncle of Exeter, enlarge the man committed yesterday, that rail'd against our person. We consider it was excess of wine that set him on. |
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Bruel prescribes an epitheme for the heart, of bugloss, borage, water-lily, violet waters, sweet wine, balm leaves, nutmegs, cloves, etc. |
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And the floors shall be full of wheat, and the fats shall overflow with wine and oil. |
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Run grapes, either frozen, chilled, or room temperature, through your juicer for an incredible grape faux wine. |
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Another initially foursquare wine that develops lovely fruit in the glass, with a toasty-biscuity finish beginning to build. |
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He had glugged that glass of wine before she got a chance to introduce herself. |
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Many oenophiles rely on the ratings and recommendations of wine guru Robert Parker when selecting the perfect bottle. |
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A comparison more properly bestowed on those that came to guzzle in his wine cellar. |
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We had a fine dinner, punctuated with Heidi's loud ha-has and lots of wine. |
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It is not for Kings to drink wine, nor for Princes strong drink. It becomes not them who are highborn to be intemperate. |
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Spiced wine, sweetened with sugar or honey, perhaps the original of the modern liqueur, was employed occasionally under the name of hippocras. |
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Hispania supplied the Roman Empire with silver, food, olive oil, wine, and metal. |
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Hengistbury Head in Dorset was the most important trading site and large quantities of Italian wine amphorae have been found there. |
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Aqueducts brought water to urban centers and wine and cooking oil were imported from abroad. |
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Cato the Elder once advised cutting his rations in half to conserve wine for the workforce. |
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During a time of peace, the Roman Army would have had a typical diet consisting of bacon, cheese, vegetables, and sour wine to drink. |
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There were buffoons, there were improvisatori, there were ballet-dancers, there were musicians, there was Beauty, there was wine. |
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He drowned his stomach and senses with a large draught and ingurgitation of wine. |
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In exchange, the principality imported salt, wine, wheat, and other luxuries from London and Paris. |
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France's sea power led to economic disruptions for England, shrinking the wool trade to Flanders and the wine trade from Gascony. |
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The woman on the other hand is in her cups swigging from one wine glass while another stands at her elbow. |
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In wine there is truth. People who love wine and have a lot of it still like to get a great wine as a present. |
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Nelson was made comfortable, fanned and brought lemonade and watered wine to drink after he complained of feeling hot and thirsty. |
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Add wine and a ladleful of hot stock and cook, stirring often, until liquid is absorbed. |
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These querns, or stones used for grinding cereals into flour, were traded for continental exports such as pottery and wine. |
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Late at e'en, drinking the wine, And ere they paid the lawing, They set a combat them between, To fight it in the dawing. |
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Its relief scene includes 11 cupids harvesting and stomping on grapes to make wine in a lenos, a long trough similar to the sarcophagus itself. |
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Men and women drank wine with their meals, a tradition that has been carried through to the present day. |
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The church teaches that through consecration by a priest the sacrificial bread and wine become the body and blood of Christ. |
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Utraquists maintained that both the bread and the wine should be administered to the people during the Eucharist. |
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Wesley practised a vegetarian diet and in later life abstained from wine for health reasons. |
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There are also general interest and sporting clubs such as football, wine and cheese and the salsa club. |
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Allowing a wine to undergo malo also protects it from bacterial contamination later. |
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During this time, a high demand for wine and steady volume of alcohol consumption inspired a viticulture revolution of progress. |
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White sausages do not contain paprika and can be fried, boiled in wine, or, more rarely, in water. |
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Traditionally, a barleywine or port are paired with Blue Stilton, but it also goes well with sweet sherry or Madeira wine. |
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Continental and British versions use mainly traditional recipes with the addition of red wine, milk, cream, vanilla or butter instead of ghee. |
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I partied at Aksu until they began to tire of me and started asking whether I wouldn't prefer to pay for my mare's teat grape wine. |
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Aqueducts were built to bring water to urban centers and wine and oil were imported from Hispania, Gaul and Africa. |
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Critics have speculated on which late work triggered the royal wine allowance mentioned in the Life section. |
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For most of his life he was a vegetarian, and often lived for days on dry biscuits and white wine. |
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Each time they arrived somewhere, they'd be greeted with a glass of meaded wine. |
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I gave them tea and coffee, and about half an hour after nine had a salver brought in of chocolate, mulled white wine and biscuits. |
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Classic Rock magazine described the downer rock culture revolving around the use of Quaaludes and the drinking of wine. |
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The Wine Society was founded at the Hall on 4 August 1874, after large quantities of cask wine were forgotten about in the cellars. |
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A picture of the Victoria Tower features on the New Zealand wine Castle Hill. |
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The pair, who first met five years previously at a health resort, began dating months after bumping into each other at a wine bar near his home. |
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The use of oak in wine can add many different dimensions to wine based on the type and style of the oak. |
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The great dilemma for wine producers is to choose between French and American oakwoods. |
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American oak contributes greater texture and resistance to ageing, but produces more powerful wine bouquets. |
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You could call it the Microsofting of the wine industry. Of course, wine is unlikely to be dominated by one producer or one distributor. |
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Other production of alcohol drinks includes wine, and in 2013 the first commercial vodkas made from Jersey Royal potatoes were marketed. |
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We need in this kingdom only priests and schoolteachers, and no merchandise, unless it is wine and flour for Mass. |
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Although wine is becoming more popular in many parts of Germany, especially close to German wine regions, the national alcoholic drink is beer. |
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The port of Swansea initially traded in wine, hides, wool, cloth and later in coal. |
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Some Conservative authorities permit wine and grape juice made without rabbinic supervision. |
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The evening meal begins with the Kiddush, a blessing recited aloud over a cup of wine, and the Mohtzi, a blessing recited over the bread. |
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The church teaches that through consecration invoked by a priest the sacrificial bread and wine become the body and blood of Christ. |
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On those days wine and oil are permitted even if abstention from them would be otherwise called for. |
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The bread and wine are believed to become the genuine Body and Blood of the Christ Jesus through the operation of the Holy Spirit. |
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Defoe entered the world of business as a general merchant, dealing at different times in hosiery, general woollen goods, and wine. |
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The melodies are all as fresh as last year's wine, and as exhilarating as sparkling champagne. |
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These restrictions often apply to tobacco, wine, spirits, cosmetics, gifts and souvenirs. |
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Liechtenstein produces wheat, barley, corn, potatoes, dairy products, livestock, and wine. |
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A number of old fortifications have now been turned into wine cellars, a mushroom farm and even a disco. |
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Argentine wine, one of the world's finest, is an integral part of the local menu. |
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Aside from slivovitz, Czech beer and wine, the Czechs also produce two unique liquors, Fernet Stock and Becherovka. |
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Though most provinces were capable of producing wine, regional varietals were desirable and wine was a central item of trade. |
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By the late Republic, if not earlier, women dined, reclined, and drank wine along with men. |
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The main course was succulent cuts of kid, beans, greens, a chicken, and leftover ham, followed by a dessert of fresh fruit and vintage wine. |
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As well as general tasks, they often had specific tasks such as inspecting wine, or ale, or other products sold at market. |
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Toss in wine and nibbly things to munch and it adds up to a unique shopping experience. |
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The earliest records of the distillation of alcohol are in Italy in the 13th century, where alcohol was distilled from wine. |
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There are 20 Welsh vineyards producing 100,000 bottles of wine a year in total. |
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Wallonia also home to a Jenever called Peket, and a May wine called Maitrank. |
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In Belgium, mussels are sometimes served with fresh herbs and flavorful vegetables in a stock of butter and white wine. |
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Pentecostal denominations reject the use of wine as part of communion, using grape juice instead. |
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An oenophile does not become of professional concern to physicians until he becomes an oenomaniac, that is, one who is overly wild about wine. |
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The oenophile had a large wine cellar stocked with bottles from around the world. |
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Palm wine, locally known as Neera, is a sap extracted from inflorescences of various species of toddy palms. |
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New York State is the third most productive area in the country for wine grapes, just behind the more famous California and Washington. |
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Neither hotels nor restaurants were allowed to serve wine or liquor before or after meals. |
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Many Mediterranean cruise ships stop in Sicily, and many wine tourists also visit the island. |
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The Sardinian agriculture is now linked to specific products such as cheese, wine, olive oil, artichoke, tomato for a growing product export. |
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Corsica produces gourmet cheese, wine, sausages, and honey for sale in mainland France and for export. |
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Corsica's main exports are granite and marble, tannic acid, cork, cheese, wine, citrus fruit, olive oil and cigarettes. |
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Waiter, this wine is corked. Could you bring us another bottle? |
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South Africa has also developed into a major wine producer, with some of the best vineyards lying in valleys around Stellenbosch, Franschhoek, Paarl and Barrydale. |
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The dipsomaniac and the abstainer are not only both mistaken, but they both make the same mistake. They both regard wine as a drug and not as a drink. |
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The silence of our meal was alone broken by the dull clattering of knives and forks, and the tinkling of the bell to summon the brisk waiter to bring wine and draw the cloth. |
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Argentine wine is the national liquor, and mate, the national infusion. |
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This style of wine uses small-berried, thick-skinned grapes which produce less juice than those used for crisp white wines, but with more concentration and weight. |
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Give three freshmen six bottles of wine, and hilarity will ensue. |
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The city became one of the richest burghs in the country, doing trade with France, the Low Countries and Baltic Countries for goods such as Spanish silk and French wine. |
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Food and wine have long been an important staple of the economy. |
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By the reign of Aurelian, the state had begun to distribute the annona as a daily ration of bread baked in state factories, and added olive oil, wine, and pork to the dole. |
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A flabby wine might be described as a wine in which nothing stands out. |
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Potter threatens to cut her daughter off, Beatrix reminds them of her brother, Bertram, who married a wine merchant's daughter and was not disowned. |
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After saluting her, he led her to a couch that fronted us, where they both sat down, and the young Genoese helped her to a glass of wine, with some Naples biscuit on a salver. |
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There is a battery-powered frother, and a small glass channel that adds turbulence and air bubbles as the wine flows through it from the bottle into the glass. |
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She took a big slurp of wine, and then we all got stuck into the food. |
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His team came second in the pub quiz and won a bottle of wine. |
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Moreover, Dolores' promise had gone to my head like new wine. |
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The Agape feast is mentioned in Jude 12 but The Lord's Supper is now commonly used in reference to a celebration involving no food other than the sacramental bread and wine. |
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Pancho, the major-domo, came up to say that Colonel Morales was waiting below. Appleby bade him bring out cigars and wine, and rose from his seat when Morales came in. |
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Arms draped on shoulders, kick-stepping in circles, they swing bottles of wine. Purpled thumbs cork the bottles. The wine leaps and jumps behind green glass. |
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If I spilled wine on their new carpet, I'd never hear the end of it. |
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From the Middle Ages through the 15th century, the northern European coastal ports exported domestic goods, dyes, linen, salt, metal goods and wine. |
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Another monk gave us a bowl with hot buillion mixed with wine to warm us. |
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Both Mal and I had a glass. We would swing the Hills hoist around and if the arm that was loaded stopped above either one of us we would pour a glass and drink the wine. |
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Cabernet Sauvignon The Private Reserve is a true showpiece wine, but the regular bottling has been rather standardish to date, with a couple of exuberant exceptions. |
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Many a glass of wine have we all of us drank, I have very little doubt, hob-and-nobbing with the hospitable giver, and wondering how the deuce he paid for it. |
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During the period, lead was used increasingly for adulterating wine. |
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When they locate a victim he is offered the wine to keep him alive while the other dog runs back to the monastery to lead the monks who transport the lost back. |
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In Spain, they are consumed mostly steam cooked, sometimes boiling white wine, onion and herbs, and served with the remaining water and some lemon. |
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The ladies brought some wine coolers. I was glad I brought a roadie. |
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For instance, imagine that Portugal was a more efficient producer of wine than England, yet in England cloth could be produced more efficiently than it could in Portugal. |
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To mix some Sugar of steel, or steel wine with the first glass. |
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Eventually, by the 1560s and 1570s sugarcane plantations in Brazil dominated the sugar industry and Madeira switched from sugar production to wine. |
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Like its neighbor Philadelphia, many rare and unusual liquors and liqueurs often find their way into a mixologist's cupboard or restaurant wine list. |
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In the Eucharist or Holy Communion service, the Book of Common Prayer specifies that bread and wine are consecrated for consumption by the people. |
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It was later attributed to her having drunk a bottle of wine. |
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Other Low Church Anglicans believe in the Real Presence but deny that the presence of Christ is carnal or is necessarily localised in the bread and wine. |
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He expected me to bring over a bottle of wine, or something of the like. |
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There is yet a fourth color, the color of gold, which is common to Binah and Gevurah in the mystery of the joysome wine which proceeds to Gevurah from Binah. |
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We finished the main course in short order and called for more wine. |
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After communion, the unused but consecrated bread and wine were to be reverently consumed in church rather than being taken away for the priest's own use. |
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The papacy further refined the practice in the Mass in the Late Middle Ages, holding that the clergy alone was allowed to partake of the wine in the Eucharist. |
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Some varieties of wine are produced from vines that are relatively unique to the island, such as the Nero d'Avola made near the baroque of town of Noto. |
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Vinum opii is made by combining sugar, white wine, cinnamon, and cloves. |
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Nonetheless, connoisseurs of perfume can become extremely skillful at identifying components and origins of scents in the same manner as wine experts. |
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I've brought a selection of fine cheeses to go with your wine. |
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In an effort to stem the tide of street Islamisation Bhutto agreed to several demands and banned the drinking and selling of wine by Muslims, nightclubs and horse racing. |
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There is some small scale production of wine, mead and cider. |
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Both were extremely fertile in all produce, except wine and olive oil. |
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To prevent the wine from spoiling, neutral grape spirits were added. |
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In 1869, an American Methodist dentist named Thomas Welch developed a method of pasteurising grape juice in order to produce an unfermented communion wine for his church. |
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Today, Madeira is noted for its unique winemaking process which involves heating the wine and deliberately exposing the wine to some levels of oxidation. |
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From the first settlement, the pioneers applied themselves to agriculture and by the 15th century Graciosa exported wheat, barley, wine and brandy. |
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It had a large storage room containing barrels of wine, cheese and ham. |
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Outside government, a jury or panel of judges may make determinations in competition, such as at a wine tasting, art exhibition, talent contest, or reality game show. |
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The organoleptic assessment of the wine showed that it was spoiled. |
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The host and hostess of these 'mummers parties' would serve a small lunch which could consist of Christmas cake with a glass of syrup or blueberry or dogberry wine. |
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The waiter posily slops a bit of wine into my glass, and I go through the cringe-making ritual of snorting into it and tasting a bit and saying fine, fine. |
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He demarcated the region for production of Port to ensure the wine's quality, and this was the first attempt to control wine quality and production in Europe. |
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Near the memorial were some wine casks and an unopened stubby of beer, whose label was yet to fade, which had been left to slake the thirst of the deceased. |
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Keykegs deliver the product under gas pressure, but it is internally held in plastic bag, rather like a wine box, so that the gas does not affect the beer. |
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He walked over, although somewhat stumblesome in his drunkenness and effortlessly slid a cabinet of fine wine bottles over on smoothly oiled tracks revealing an ironclad safe. |
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If he have never drunk wine afore, it will go near to remove his fit. |
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Mulsum was honeyed wine, mustum was grape juice, mulsa was honeyed water. |
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Newfoundland cod formed one leg of a triangular trade that sent cod to Spain and the Mediterranean, and wine, fruit, olive oil, and cork to England. |
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Hamlet does well at first, leading the match by two hits to none, and Gertrude raises a toast to him using the poisoned glass of wine Claudius had set aside for Hamlet. |
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Remoisten and reblot two or three times until what you're blotting up is colorless or the faint color of Red or Blue juice, but definitely not the color of wine. |
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The classic example of this is breaking a wine glass with sound at the precise resonant frequency of the glass, although this is difficult in practice. |
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In 1224, the French poet Henry d'Andeli wrote of the great wine tasting competition that Philip II Augustus commissioned, the Battle of the Wines. |
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The most learned Indian scholars say that Dionysus invaded India, and taught Indians several things including how to grow plants, make wine and worship. |
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My head was swimming after drinking two bottles of cheap wine. |
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So saying, he called for a reckoning for the wine, and throwing down the price of the additional bottle which he had himself introduced, rose as if to take leave of us. |
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Comparing them is an ideal lesson in California wine somewhereness. |
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Sops in wine, quantity for quantity, inebriate more than wine itself. |
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Sodium carbonate can be used to remove grease, oil, and wine stains. |
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He also enjoyed seemingly unlimited supplies of wine and champagne. |
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She turned half of his men into swine after feeding them cheese and wine. |
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Following Pliny's advice, I shall dip it into water, pound up leeks, mix them with speltmeal, and add these and the owlet water to the lees of white wine. |
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Millerandage is most commonly caused by cold or bad weather during the flowering stage of the vines. It impairs the quality of wine made from the grapes. |
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Amongst this number of cordials and alteratives I do not find a more present remedy than a cup of wine or strong drink, if it be soberly and opportunely used. |
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The ship bore salted beef, butter, cheese, bread, barley, peas, beans, groats, flour, oil, vinegar, mustard, salt, beer, wine, brandy, hardtack, smoked bacon, ham and fish. |
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Socrates remarks that when he is well he finds wine sweet, but when ill, sour. Here it is a change in the percipient that causes the change in the percept. |
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By the 13th century Southampton had become a leading port, particularly involved in the import of French wine in exchange for English cloth and wool. |
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By 8 November Gerrit de Veer, the ships carpenter who kept a diary, reported a shortage of beer and bread, with wine being rationed four days later. |
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