North Africa had long been the granary of Italy, and it continued in this role until the Vandals swept through in the 5th century. |
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Serve the fish with some herbed yoghurt sauce, some toasted granary or wholemeal bread and a fresh rocket salad. |
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You can also, while they last, have granary or white crusty rolls or sliced bread. |
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The granary is an old 19th century grainstore, six storeys high, fronting onto the river Suir whose quays were once crowded with sailing ships. |
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Place a slice of lightly buttered granary toast on each plate and spoon the scrambled egg on top. |
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Each group's harvest was stored in its own granary for use throughout the year. |
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Alternatively, take your own rye or granary bread and buy a salad to eat with it. |
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Four years ago, Arner and Handeen moved an old brooder house onto a concrete slab that once supported a granary. |
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My starter of home-made broccoli and cauliflower soup was excellently creamy, and came with two wedges of granary bread. |
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She chose a salmon, cream cheese and prawn sandwich in granary bread and said it was excellent. |
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Marinated in Cajun spices and olive oil, pan-fired, it was served on toasted granary bread, topped with guacamole, and a mixed salad. |
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They are located at one end of the farmyard and are used for the purposes of a milking parlour, dairy, calf shed and granary. |
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Use slices on pumpernickel or granary bread with horseradish, on crostini or in salads. |
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Raymond told how he slept alone in a old stone granary that was infested with rats during the winter in preparation for the programme. |
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I had ended up with two large bottles of water, four Granny Smiths, a loaf of granary bread and a jar of lemon curd. |
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He ordered the establishment of an emergency granary to store a tenth of the harvest each season to be used in times of emergency. |
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Early on, America became the arsenal as well as the granary for the Allied powers. |
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For the first time in decades, wheat yields in the granary of Bulgaria were smaller than those harvested in the western parts of the country. |
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In sandwich bars, ask for granary bread, and in supermarkets choose granary rolls, pittas and tortilla wraps. |
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Below lie suburban sprawl, motorways, and the remaining wheat fields of the Ile de France, the golden granary of Paris. |
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Over the centuries it has served as granary, poorhouse, barracks, theatre and, since renovation in 1995, an artistic venue. |
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Toast the bread until lightly browned and spread with the butter or margarine. Spoon the prawns over one slice of granary bread and place another slice of toast on top. |
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A former granary, it was remodelled and covered after 1725 with bombproof vaults. |
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Today, only a scattering of cobblestones and a granary remain from the estate of a former Russian general, the nucleus of which formed the boundary of the camp. |
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Poland and Ukraine, ruled by their powerful nobility, became Europe's granary. |
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This is the harvest that humanity offers me but I ask, is this harvest worthy of my granary? |
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A pair of bul-ol figures carved from hardwood stands watch over each family's granary. |
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In Madebe, the granary is now nearly empty because people are too afraid to go to the field to cultivate or harvest their crops. |
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It is at the heart of the rice granary of this island, which is the most populous in the world. |
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Jefferson was thus able to thresh the wheat from one field, then have the threshing machine follow the harvesters to the granary in the next field. |
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Opposite this doorway is a small granary that is on staddle stones and is the perfect resting place for the Labrador dog that happily ran up to lick our hands! |
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A host of additional outbuildings were discovered as well, including two dairies, a smokehouse, a granary, and two storehouses, all adjacent to the house. |
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The Dogon thoroughly carve their granary doors. |
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The shed was collecting flyspecks and dust in a vault-like granary tucked away on his property. |
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Served with two ces of warm granary ad, it was creamy and orting and just what you er a stomp. |
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I refer for example to Zimbabwe, the country that used to be known as the granary of Africa and that is now ravaged by starvation, in part and in the main because of the mismanagement of dictator Mugabe. |
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Around this time, the Bellarine Peninsula was regarded as the granary of the Victorian colony. |
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Several ranges of buildings were built around the inner ward, including a chapel, kitchen, service buildings, a granary and a great hall. |
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Sicily served a level of high importance for the Romans, as it acted as the empire's granary. |
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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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Of the outhouses, Tull's granary and his stables are still in existence, although deteriorating. |
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As one of the largest countries in Africa and a beneficiary of irrigation from the Nile, Sudan could without doubt become the wheat granary of Africa if it lived in peace. |
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A woman shows us the rice seeds that she keeps in her granary. |
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A leading economic journal has suggested that in addition to our traditional part as the granary of the Commonwealth, Canada may also become its arsenal. |
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The tale involves a millionaire in Claridges, recalcitrant descendants of Boswell and old boxes in a dusty granary in Ireland. It has become clear that Boswell was no mere infatuated scribe. |
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Manda and I had field mushrooms, glazed with Welsh rarebit and served on thick granary toast with bundles of rocket. |
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Why is it, for example, that Zimbabwe, in a matter of a few decades, has been transformed from the granary and storehouse of the whole of southern Africa into a land ravaged by terrible starvation? |
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Stay at The Mistal at Glanton, between the Cheviot Hills and the Northumberland coast, a converted granary that sleeps up to six. |
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For instance the door is seen as the mouth, the windows as eyes, the granary as the stomach, etc while the decoration on the walls is related to scarification on skin. |
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From discussions with local farmers, the DTC area is no exception, whether due to insects, fungi or less commonly, baboons breaking into a poorly made granary to eat finger-millet. |
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He's brought the French sticks, the pittas, the rolls, the white sliced and the brown but there are four crusty bloomers where the granary torpedoes should be. |
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At the end of this granary, which Tull built, is an old well. |
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