At Kircubbin Bay, people were out at low tide with their rakes, collecting cockles and winkles. |
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Few things warm the cockles of my heart more than pleasant memories of this novel. |
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It's a heady mix of cool cafes and cockles, windsurfers and artists, beach volleyball and bookstalls, fresh fish and funky T-shirts. |
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They are also rich in cockles and for generations local people have gathered small bucketfuls of the shellfish to eat. |
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The best known are the cockles of the Glamorgan sands and laver, edible seaweed that is gathered around the south and west coasts. |
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A gang of Chinese immigrants, face deportation after being caught stealing sackfuls of protected cockles from a Scottish beach. |
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The chef dishes it up with parsley sauce, in fish pie, and with samphire and cockles in his recent book Fish, Etc. |
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But it would be stretching credibility to suggest much of this game warmed the cockles of your heart. |
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Most bivalves lead a fairly stationary life, either anchored to rocks, like mussels, or buried in sediment, like razor-shells, cockles and clams. |
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They can gather up to 30 tons a day in summer, which is around five million cockles, each one raked and sieved by hand. |
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This bizarrely delicious lunchtime dish consisted of steamed cockles and fat udon noodles, all swimming in a greenish chili-cilantro broth. |
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While Brits eat turkey at Christmas, Spaniards look forward to festive feasts of clams, crabs, cockles, mussels, octopus and goose barnacles. |
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Naturally I look for something a little different such as pepperami, garlic sausage meat, strong smelling cheeses, cockles or mussels. |
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The issues that I would like to focus on are the geoducks and whelks to start off with, and cockles and pipi. |
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But the cusk is not fastidious as to bait, accepting clams, cockles, and herring readily. |
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Iron forks with three curved prongs, called craams, are sometimes used to scoop the cockles out of the sand. |
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Fauna and fauna include live cockles, trough shells, carpet shells and tellins. |
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As mentioned in your article, mussels, cockles and perlemoen were in abundance. |
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Clean the cockles or clams by soaking them in cold water for at least 30 minutes to remove any sand or grit. |
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For those with decadent dreams and a dismal credit rating, the following advice will warm the cockles of your heart. |
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It warms the cockles of my heart to hear of people so committed to our pastime. |
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I am really, really happy with the way these photos came out and it would warm the cockles of my heart if you went and perused them. |
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This is not likely to warm the cockles of your heart, but it can be hugely seductive and at times totally absorbing in its intensity. |
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Shellfish such as oysters, mussels, cockles, winkles, whelks and crabs were collected for food from the estuaries and sea-shores. |
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A leek and potato fondue, steamed cockles in their shells, smoky bacon, roasted wild mushrooms and a lemony chimichurri all made a huge difference. |
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There's nothing better than a good lunch and a good time sitting around the table afterwards to warm the cockles of one's heart. |
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The good old Scottish weather can make conditions rough through the winter months, and the cold water does nothing to warm the cockles of your heart. |
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Fresh oysters, clams, scallops, mussels and cockles should close their shells when you tap them. |
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All the traditional English fare will be on offer during the day, such as roast beef, cockles and jellied eels, fish and chips, candy floss and popcorn. |
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For doing so, I was likened in comments to Josef Mengele, a comparison that warmed the cockles of my gay, half-Jewish heart. |
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Boil oysters, clams, scallops, mussels and cockles until the shells open, and then boil for an additional 3-5 minutes. |
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I've seen them crying when the local gang set fire to their cockles … It was terrible. |
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From there, it is into the clams, cockles, mussels and scallops. |
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Just thinking about that scene warms the cockles of my heart. |
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This results in a film base that shrinks, becomes embrittled, cockles and ultimately leads to emulsion loss. |
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Ten years ago this week, 23 men and women lost their lives searching for cockles in Morecambe Bay. |
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A wood fire not only warms the sitting room and the cockles of one's heart, it also soothes one's conscience! |
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I remind him that it warms the cockles of my heart to point out that hypocrisy. |
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Fishing was temporarily banned, due to a high mortality rate amongst cockles and clams in the Bay of Douarnenez. |
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As we have had particular problems in Wales concerning the testing of cockles, this is very important for us at this time. |
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The harvesting of cockles is a long-standing and much-valued industry in coastal areas of Wales, such as the Burry Inlet and the Welsh Dee. |
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The sixth race produced a contest to warm the cockles of your heart. |
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At low tide families of Pacific islanders collect cockles, pipis and greenlipped mussels for beach barbecues. |
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Add the red pepper flakes, mint, cockles, razor clams, littleneck clams, wine, and water. |
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In very cold winters, marine life is washed up on shore, including sea urchins, razor shells, mussels and cockles. |
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This has meant that during the period when the cockle beds have been closed in Wales, cockles from other EU countries, which have not been subject to the same tests, could be, and have been, imported into Wales and sold. |
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It works less well for dishes such as char kway teow Singapore's hot mess of fat rice noodles, sausage, cockles and bean sprouts that need a master at a wok. |
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Rifle with external hammer, two shots with central percussion, bronzed steel guns black, rocks key between the hammers, embedded locks, half cockles. |
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Once cooked, it can be used in soups and fish stews, or made into traditional Welsh laverbread oatcakes, fried in bacon fat and served with cockles. |
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Here were kept up the old games of hoodman blind, shoe the wild mare, hot cockles, steal the white loaf, bob apple and snapdragon. |
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I cook a lot of traditional food: crab, herring eggs, seal, sea lion, cockles, clams, sea prunes, Chinese slipper, black cod, halibut and all kinds of salmon, plus salmon berries, soap berries, jam, and Indian ice cream. |
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Those that did turn up sat huddled and swaddled but such has been the pace at which this match has been played, it is virtually a day ahead of where it might have been expected to be, enough to warm the cockles. |
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It's my favourite of all the Comic Relief TV spin-offs, because there truly is nothing that warms the cockles quite like watching celebrities being rubbish at baking. |
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Bivalve shellfish, the type that have a hinged two-part shell, are the common type of shellfish harvested recreationally. Bivalve shellfish include oysters, clams, scallops, mussels and cockles. |
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Wales is also known for its shellfish, including cockles, limpet, mussels and periwinkles. |
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Local produce includes cockles and laverbread which are sourced from the Loughor estuary. |
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Although many small edible bivalves are loosely called cockles, true cockles are species in the family Cardiidae. |
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There are more than 205 living species of cockles, with many more fossil forms. |
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A meal of cockles fried with bacon, served with laver bread, is known as a traditional Welsh breakfast. |
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Laverbread is traditionally eaten fried with bacon and cockles as part of a Welsh breakfast. |
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Instead of cockles, crayfish and calamary, they have been choosing pasta, pizza and pilau. |
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For females, the size of the oocytes was determined from histological slides, except for when the cockles were in an inactive stage. |
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He is aiming to warm the cockles of diners throughout January and February with traditional snowy mountain fondue recipes from the Alps. |
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Dipped in seething oil, kroepoek cockles like burning pink paper. |
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Now a Morecambe cockler has claimed a fight over territory a week earlier may have pushed the Chinese victims to make the fatal decision to hunt for cockles during the night. |
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Maybe the famous laksa lady who serves a tightly curated bowl of this spicy, coconut-creamy seafood noodle soup, scattered with mineral pops of cockles. |
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This contrivance of his did inwardly rejoice the cockles of his heart. |
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The partially confined nature of the Wash habitats, combined with the ample tidal flows, allows shellfish to breed, especially shrimp, cockles and mussels. |
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Laver is often associated with Penclawdd and its cockles, being used traditionally in the Welsh diet and is still eaten widely across Wales in the form of laverbread. |
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True cockles live in sandy, sheltered beaches throughout the world. |
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Mass strandings of cockles and other shellfish occurred on sandy beaches. |
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Shellfish include mussels, cockles, periwinkles, clams, and oysters. |
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