So prehension is a ferment of qualitative valuation which need not necessarily be conscious. |
|
Otherwise, the sugar will ferment and could cause deadly salmonella poisoning to hummingbirds. |
|
Microbes in the animals' stomachs help ferment grass and other foods into a digestible state, producing the offending gases. |
|
It is the mix of yeasts in and around the winery that have the potential to ferment a wine to dryness. |
|
The roasted bola could also be left to ferment, yielding a mildly alcoholic drink known as mescal crudo. |
|
It is the same souls that quiver, the same passions that ferment, the same vices that grow, the same straining toward the azure. |
|
In my opinion, the albuminous materials were never the ferments, but the nutrients of the ferment. |
|
Over time, their trivia games lead to sexual exploration and all kinds of would-be kinky relationship layers start to develop and ferment. |
|
Added to selective breeding is another step, another human act, that of using yeast to raise the bread or ferment the wine. |
|
Therefore the distiller must let the skins from white grapes ferment before distilling them. |
|
Without lactase, milk and other lactose-rich foods ferment in the intestine, releasing excessive gas. |
|
The bacteria that live there release hydrogen and carbon dioxide when they ferment the lactose. |
|
You have to get the leftover solids to ferment and then you have to distill them. |
|
Native bacteria ferment natural sugars to lactic acid, a major flavoring and preservative in sauerkraut and in naturally fermented dills. |
|
What happens is that yeasts ferment the sugar in the grapes into alcohol, producing wine. |
|
Apparently an army of anarchists is going to descend on Dublin from all corners of Europe and ferment trouble. |
|
I would not want anything to be said in relation to that that would ferment any problems. |
|
If kept at room temperature, the manure may eventually ferment or decompose, with significant breakdown of the solids. |
|
Next, the juice is placed in stainless steel tanks or oak barrels where the wine will ferment following the addition of yeast. |
|
The underlying political ferment among many social strata is revealed by a growing number of smaller protests and meetings. |
|
|
By polarising discontent, it is transforming it from ferment to turmoil into energy spent constructively. |
|
His analysis of the causes of agrarian unrest and ferment in Punjab was proved correct. |
|
Out of this extraordinary ferment of experimentation came a major breakthrough. |
|
In this time of ferment, Suliman found some support from inside her family. |
|
The problem is that we can't ferment the democratic revolution ourselves because most of the democratizers seem to be telling us to keep our distance. |
|
Such an overwhelming slime pit of sagas would normally infect and ferment your average low budget B-movie, rendering it as unappetizing as moldy headcheese. |
|
The beer is then left to ferment for twenty four hours before the mix is strained through an empty cotton bag to remove the solid husks of the seeds. |
|
If fermented fruit on the ground is out of the question, so too is the notion that the fruit could ferment in the stomach of elephants, the study authors say. |
|
Good bacteria ferment lactose by converting it to lactic acid. |
|
Much of this cultural ferment was a reaction to colonialism, as Nigerians were rediscovering their own cultures, their history, and forming a sense of their national identity. |
|
Hollenstein's education also went on outside the studio classroom, for Munich was a major site of artistic ferment in the first decade of the twentieth century. |
|
Anything organic is going to putrefy or ferment very, very rapidly. |
|
Craft ciders typically take seven months to a year to ferment and mature. |
|
Instead, the baby flies simply ferment the cheese, break down its fats, and cause it to become extremely soft. |
|
Many farmers store and ferment these alfalfa clippings in silos. |
|
These plant-derived, non-digestible sugars pass through the stomach and small intestines to the colon, where the good bacteria ferment them for fuel. |
|
The traditional method used in West Africa is to peel the roots and put them into water for three days to ferment. |
|
All this created a ferment in the Malankara Church and its effects are still discernible in the Church as a whole. |
|
The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae have been used for thousands of years to ferment beer and wine, and to leaven bread. |
|
These Tinaja were used pretty much from Roman times until a generation ago to ferment and store wine. |
|
|
A lone bacterium, genetically tweaked, can demolish switchgrass and ferment the sugary rubble to ethanol in one fell swoop. |
|
It's the critical time when the fruits of the labour turns into wine as the must ferment the grape sugar into alcohol. |
|
Hadia is a rice beer, created by mixing herbs with boiled rice and leaving the mixture to ferment for around a week. |
|
They are unique among rodents in that they lack a cecum, a part of the gut used in other species to ferment vegetable matter. |
|
To make it, the cabbage is finely shredded, layered with salt and juniper and left to ferment in wooden barrels. |
|
The Naga use oil sparingly, preferring to ferment, dry, and smoke their meats and fish. |
|
Like other tribes in the northeast, the Garos ferment rice beer, which they consume in religious rites and secular celebrations. |
|
The civic tradition of the Scottish Enlightenment contributed to the intellectual ferment of the American Revolution. |
|
Here some of the red grapes harvest are vinified as a light pink wine, rather than letting it ferment to a gutsy red. |
|
The juice bubbles and gives off heat as it begins to ferment. |
|
The late Weizmann's process employs the bacterium Clostridium acetobutylicum to ferment sugars into acetone, butanol and ethanol. |
|
Within next process gut microbes ferment starch to produce beneficial molecules known as short-chain fatty acids, such as butyrate. |
|
We lack an herbivore's caecum to ferment and efficiently digest much plant material. |
|
By the 40s AD, the political situation within Britain was apparently in ferment. |
|
This will usefully blunt the keenness of the stomachic ferment. |
|
Next, the scientists used the same protocols with pretreated corn stover and were able to ferment more than 99 percent of the sugars in the hydrolyzate. |
|
There's ferment is Philadelphia where the ad agency with the oldest name in the business after a very bad year is picking itself up and coming out swinging. |
|
Products collected from living horses include mare's milk, used by people with large horse herds, such as the Mongols, who let it ferment to produce kumis. |
|
Inducing alcohol fermentation by the alcoholic dialytic ferment secreted from yeast, bio-ethanol is manufactured through the processes of distillation and dehydration. |
|
A Ferment... somewhere reconded out of the Road of the circulating Blood, and there gradually maturated. |
|