Around this, fold a layer of Bayonne ham, the two layers of caul and tie gently in 3 or four places. |
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I was at the charcuterie yesterday to buy a few slices of jambon de Bayonne, an air-dried cured ham from the French Basque country. |
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Then there's a very authentic cassoulet, rabbit with Bayonne ham and sage, spiced puy lentils. |
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There's a large all-you-can-eat breakfast bar with fresh fruit for the slimmers and jambon de Bayonne for the bingers. |
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With Bayonne white or Noir de Bigorre pork we look for three qualities: sweetness, softness and a long-lasting taste. |
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Across the river in Petit Bayonne are the Château Neuf, the Bonnat Museum, and the Basque Museum. |
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The local gastronomy, Bayonne ham, Espelette pimento peppers, Itxassou cherries, Irouléguy wine, chocolate, Basque cake and so much more. |
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In France, Marranos who returned to Judaism settled in the cities of Bordeaux and Bayonne. |
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The manufacture of chocolate in France was, historically, associated with the port of Bayonne in the south-west, although other towns now practise this. |
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That's typical of Bayonne, a narrow neck of land right across from New York City. |
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We had to leave the Sud Express at Bayonne and took a hard-benched local to St-Jean, a place that Hemingway had greatly enjoyed. |
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After a game of Basque pelota, Bayonne Organisation arranges a meeting with some of the top champions of this superb sport. |
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Piperade is traditionally served with scrambled eggs and a slice of grilled Bayonne ham. |
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Fotunuupule Auelua and Rory Lamont, still convalescing, are expected for the match against Bayonne on Saturday, 3 April. |
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From the Bayonne white pig, we produce dry sausage, streaky bacon, pork belly and coppa ham. |
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The workshop concluded with the presentation of the draft agenda for the seminar in Bayonne which was approved by the Regions. |
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He and his family then crossed the English channel from Bayonne to Plymouth and safety. |
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A vessel waiting idle in the Bay of Bayonne that drifted onto La Madrague beach in Anglet during a violent storm. |
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There is also a university outpost, and the old town and its historic buildings have helped make Bayonne a tourist centre. |
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The agreement was signed at Bayonne hospital and covers reciprocal medical collaboration between the two parts of the Basque Country. |
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The most advanced project concerns the setting up of a regular line between Bayonne and Liverpool. |
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Nonetheless, when the city obtained the privileged tariff status of a free port in 1784, goods arriving from abroad at Bayonne rose by 60 per cent. |
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Bayonne also has metallurgy, electronics, and telecommunications industries, but the town is above all an administrative and commercial centre. |
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And whether the Bayonne Bridge project will be completed on time. |
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In the process the Bayonne Statute was initialed as the first Spanish constitution. |
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In 1023 Bayonne was the capital of Labourd and, in the 12th century, extended to and beyond the Nive. |
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In 1951 the Lacq gas field was discovered whose extracted sulphur and associated oil are shipped from the port of Bayonne. |
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Bayonne is also a cultural capital, a city with strong Basque and Gascon influences and a rich historical past. |
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Since the network restructuring in the summer of 2013, the lines converge on Bayonne. |
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The following table details the origins of Labord, Bayonne, and other names in the commune. |
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Documentation on Bayonne for the period from the High Middle Ages are virtually nonexistent. |
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When Labourd was created in 1023 Bayonne was the capital and the Viscount resided there. |
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Like many cities at the time, in 1215 Bayonne obtained the award of a municipal charter and was emancipated from feudal powers. |
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Also in 1808 the French Empire imposed on the Duchy of Warsaw the Convention of Bayonne to buy from France the debts owed to it by Prussia. |
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A centre for engagement of foreign volunteers was established in August 1914 in Bayonne. |
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Bayonne is the focus of much of the hospital services for the agglomeration of Bayonne and the southern Landes. |
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Bayonne is in the Diocese of Bayonne, Lescar and Oloron, with a Suffragan bishop since 2002 under the Archdiocese of Bordeaux. |
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Bayonne is the economic capital of the agglomeration of Bayonne and southern Landes. |
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In 2013 549 new establishments were created in Bayonne including 406 Sole proprietorships. |
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For the moment, the wiseguys in Bayonne were lying low. |
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This was learned the hard way in 1715 by an imposter, who claimed to be a marquis, but gave himself away by using a fork to serve himself olives during a dinner with the commandant of the port troops of Bayonne. |
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Then – in one 343km leap – I was in Bayonne, a shuttered, half-timbered, riverfront town within easy hitching distance along the coast of the swish resorts of Biarritz and St-Jean-de-Luz. |
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Nevertheless, from the Seminary of Vitoria, they asked him to go to the Seminary of Bayonne and help there the seminarists from Vitoria sheltered there. |
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The French jambon de Bayonne from the Lower Pyrenees and the home-cured Estremadura and mountainsmoked presunto of Portugal form the basis of an extensive traditional cookery in those countries. |
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The TAA members operate on the market for containerized liner shipping services between the western European ports, in the range from Bayonne to the North Cape, and the ports along the eastern coast of the United States. |
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The research findings show that pesticides were found at the mouth of each of the four watercourses, most often in the Bayonne and Assomption rivers, which drain more farmland. |
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Mr Solana, a few months ago, you attended Mr Polin's funeral in Bayonne. |
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The peña atmosphere is a genuine part of the festive spirit of Bayonne. |
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In reality, true nature is as difficult to be met with in authors, as the Bayonne ham, or Bologna sausage, is to be found in the shops. |
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When Charles died in 1380, only Calais, Bordeaux and Bayonne were left to the English. |
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The history of Bayonne proper started in 1056 when Raymond II the Younger, Bishop of Bazas, had the mission to build the Church of Bayonne. |
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The port of Bayonne is located at the mouth of the Adour, downstream of the city. |
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In 1313, in a famous case the St Mary of Bayonne, from Gascony, ran ashore at Chale Bay. |
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Passenger ship facilities are New York Passenger Ship Terminal, the Brooklyn Cruise Terminal at Red Hook, and MOTBY at Bayonne. |
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Two brothers, Saubat and Johannes Sorhaindo who were both lieutenants of the mayor of Bayonne in the second half of the 16th century, perfectly embody this period. |
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The attribution of Bayonne as Civitas Boatium, a place mentioned in the Antonine Itinerary and by Paul Raymond in his 1863 dictionary, has been abandoned. |
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Before this capture the Nive had deposited pebbles from the Mindel glaciation of medium to large sizes that slowed erosion of the hills causing the bottleneck at Bayonne. |
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Bayonne occupies a territory characterized by a flat relief to the west and to the north towards the Landes forest, tending to slightly raise towards the south and east. |
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Its name may derive from Capbreton near Bayonne, or more probably from the word Breton, the French adjective form of the proper noun Bretagne, the French historical region. |
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During the sporadic conflicts that troubled the French countryside from the mid 17th century, Bayonne peasants were short of powder and projectiles. |
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From this community Bayonne gained its reputation for chocolate. |
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Bayonne is known for its fine chocolates, produced in the town for 500 years, and Bayonne ham, a cured ham seasoned with peppers from nearby Espelette. |
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In 1523 Marshal Odet of Foix, Viscount of Lautrec resisted the Spaniards under Philibert of Chalon in the service of Charles V and lifted the siege of Bayonne. |
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The Nive divides Bayonne into Grand Bayonne and Petit Bayonne with five bridges between the two, both quarters still being backed by Vauban's walls. |
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The effort failed, and with the Treaty of Bruges in 1375, the great English possessions in France were reduced to only the coastal towns of Calais, Bordeaux, and Bayonne. |
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Due to its proximity to the ocean and the foothills of the Pyrenees as well as its historic heritage, Bayonne has developed important activities related to tourism. |
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It is said by some that Bayonne is the birthplace of mayonnaise, supposedly a corruption of Bayonnaise, the French adjective describing the city's people and produce. |
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Bayonne has few such industries, as indicated in the previous tables. |
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The Way of Bayonne joins the French Way further downstream at Burgos. |
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On 5 April 1942 the Allies made a landing attempt in Bayonne but after a barge penetrated the Adour with great difficulty, the operation was canceled. |
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Bayonne turned instead to the steel industry with the forges of the Adour. |
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The official publication in 1273 of a Coutume unique to the city, remained in force for five centuries until the separation of Bayonne from Labourd. |
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