Although we knew the tone of the evening when someone forgot the caldron and we had to make do with a fondue set. |
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Freeman will carry a torch around a stadium the way the former Australian Olympians did before Freeman ignited the caldron in Sydney. |
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Two dwarfs, Fjalar and Galar, who were weary of academics and learning, killed Kvasir and distilled his blood in Odhrǫrir, the magic caldron. |
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The fire under the caldron on the tar wagon serves to cook a large, juicy steak. |
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But she still boils down dates to the texture of honey in a copper caldron to make her haroseth. |
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For Hess, planet Earth was like a caldron of boiling water bubbling at the center and then convecting sideways before cooling and falling back into the interior of the pot. |
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Since there is no peace in existence today, as has been said before, there is no peace to keep in the seething caldron of racial hatred. |
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This biological liquid soap is fabricated in ancient according to the method of Marseilles, cooked in the caldron. |
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With English as an international language, the Anglophone native is like Obelix: he fell over in the caldron of English in his childhood. |
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This receipt of Méditérannéenne jam is cooked to the d caldron traditional emanière and only use the fruits and the cane sugar of high quality. |
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One last bit of fun before the playoff caldron starts boiling again. |
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After 45 minutes of crushing, we add one litre of water to eliminate the walnut grains in order to obtain a walnut paste that is collected and poured into the caldron. |
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The Dagda was credited with many powers and possessed a caldron that was never empty, fruit trees that were never barren, and two pigs—one live and the other perpetually roasting. |
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Jams cooked in caldron, pot-faceted, hat decorated with Provencal paper. |
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The tallow having been boiled, is poured hot from the caldron into an oblong bag, manufactured from the buffalo hide, into which the pounded meat has previously been placed. |
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These liquid soaps are fabricated by empattage and cooked in the caldron. |
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A bronze yetling, or tripod caldron, with an angular handle at each side. |
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