Crackers and sweet biscuits reinforced one of the tins of oatcakes, which had stood throughout the meal on every table. |
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The waste matter for the blue bin includes papers, magazines, cardboard, food tins, aluminium drink cans, milk cartons and plastic bottles. |
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Hazardous materials such as batteries, empty paint tins, oily rags etc must be delivered separately and similarly labelled. |
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As Michael packed tins of beans, soup and spaghetti into cardboard boxes he nervously looked around. |
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We have developed food packaging to a fine art with shrink-wrapped plastic everywhere, colourful drinks cartons and easy-open tins. |
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People using the recycling facility are asked to segregate plastic bottles, cartons, food tins, tetra packs and beverage cans. |
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He drives off, leaving his bags of rubbish, old fridges and washing machines, mattresses, paint tins and a choice of cast-offs behind. |
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When the dough had risen she would cut it and put it into baking tins, and with what was left she would make stotty cakes. |
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Why not buy a couple of tins of cat food today, so you will be well prepared should you ever have an unexpected feline visitor? |
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In my house there's a compost bin, a box for tins and bottles, a plastic container, a holder for plastic bags, and an old newspaper corner. |
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A start was made by encouraging and facilitating the recycling of tins and bottles. |
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This involved separating their waste into bins for glass, tins and paper, then composting suitable material. |
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He emptied the basket, removed two tins of plum tomatoes, put them on the floor and repacked. |
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They had routinely heated paraffin oil with a flashpoint of 175 degrees centigrade in its baking tins to stop pies sticking. |
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The American Civil Liberties Union tins asked the 11 th U.S. circuit court of appeals in Atlanta to reconsider the ruling. |
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Or, pour melted wax over sawdust in paper egg cartons or muffins tins lined with cupcake papers. |
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They catch the night dew for water, we are told, and eat old tins of carrots, left by the company that once mined this spot. |
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Children will soon grasp basic concepts, from boiling, beating and cooling to greasing tins, grating, blending, creaming and folding. |
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Protesters are invited to bring kazoos, whistles, pots, pans and biscuit tins and to meet at 11.30 am at Speakers Corner. |
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I'm off to the supermarket later to clear the shelves of white sliced bread and tins of baked beans. |
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Lay them off on buttered tins, about the size of walnuts, flat them down, and bake them in a slow oven. |
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If there is any label glue left on the outside of the tins clean it off with white spirit. |
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He has seen film of a man walking down a supermarket aisle, and all the tins flying off the shelves as they pass. |
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Then she mixed up a batch of cement in a bucket, poured it into the pie tins and leveled it off. |
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Yes, it's been scorching so keep spraying that ozone layer with your tins of hair lacquer! |
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Everything nowadays comes in high quality, glossy cardboard boxes, or tins with lovely labels on. |
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A businessman has been left in a stew after a computer glitch landed him with 250,000 tins of lentil soup. |
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A lot of the paint comes in full tins, left over from industrial contracts. |
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Small tins of fruit with ring pulls make refreshing snacks, but choose the ones in fruit juice rather than in syrup. |
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I forgo interaction with eight biscuit tins surmounted by illuminated photographs. |
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You never see them scurrying to school, as we did, with baskets and biscuit tins containing ingredients. |
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Materials ranged from oil paint, house paint and wire to dental floss, toothpicks and cookie tins. |
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Look for containers at garage sales and discount places during the year such as jars, baskets, tins and canisters. |
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One of my strongest early memories is the old corner store with its wooden floor, wooden bench and tins full of packets of biscuits. |
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Much of the material was wrapped in old newspaper, or was contained in tobacco tins, biscuit tins, pill boxes and the like. |
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Photo collections in biscuit tins and shoe boxes mediated the void left by this absence of myth and history. |
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We had loads of unmarked tins, and we never knew whether we were going to open a tin of beans or a tin of pears! |
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I used to live on tins of beans and ravioli that I would heat up in my room. |
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Despite my best efforts I have failed to consume 20 kg of pasta, 30 jars of peanut butter and 50 tins of beans in the last month. |
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Then the meat went in and cooked for a long while, followed by a couple of tins of kidney beans. |
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Spoon into lightly greased muffin tins and bake at 200 degrees C for about 12-15 minutes. |
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Place in two well-greased 18 cm tins and bake for 30 mins in moderate oven. |
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Pour into the prepared tins and bake for about 30-35 minutes, until the surface of the cake springs back when lightly pressed. |
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I use a gas oven and loaf pans made of black steel, as these take and retain the heat much better than tins. |
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The artwork, made up of empty bottles, cigarette boxes, full ashtrays and paint tins was put together by Damien Hirst. |
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Every housewife stacking her shelves should be proud to have her tins of beans stamped with a such a badge of high distinction. |
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In the past two weeks, they have also got through more than 6,700 tins of baked beans. |
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Aluminium tins, matchboxes and canteen tables were replaced with sophisticated musical instruments. |
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Those who attend school are often seen walking there carrying tins or plastic or wooden stools as seats since many school have no furniture. |
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My Lords, does the Minister agree that sardine tins and anchovy tins are also very difficult to open with their tin-openers? |
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Mr Colley said one source would be rubbish tips, where half-used tins could be collected in recycling bins. |
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Caviar in tins and jars range from salmon's red at 99 roubles for a 113-gram can to the luscious, silvery-grey beluga at 500 roubles. |
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Wasabi, white miso paste and sushi rice share space with tins of golden syrup and packets of Smarties. |
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Packets of rice, pasta, couscous, lentils and bulgar wheat are all larder essentials, as are tins of tomatoes, tuna and anchovies. |
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In the morning he bought milk and bread, margarine, three tins of tuna fish and four newspapers. |
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Conscripts get to eat blood sausage and mashed potatoes made from dehydrated spuds, sauerkraut from tins and drink chicory coffee. |
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A student of smarm, he roamed the land dispensing jam tins of cash to people who at first glance appeared to be businesslike. |
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A quantity of beef and pork and about fifty tins of bouilli were placed on board her. |
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Open one of her cupboards and you would find tins of food all neatly stacked. |
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Take a metal tray that will accommodate the three tins and turn the tins upside-down, creating, in effect, inverted ovens. |
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Sammy Leslie and Ultan Bannon know that wine lovers want good wines first and good trimmings after, so there are no stray tins of spam here. |
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I open up a few tins an' in no time I've fixed us a good bush tucker meal of sausage stew. |
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As the only Scot in the company, it was my duty to address the haggis, which we had brought with us in tins. |
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We have a blue box for plastic bottles, tins and white cardboard packing. |
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Consumers can be rewarded for their participation with Molson Scratch Cards or handouts such as blinking buttons, tins of mints, key chains, beverage wrenches and T-shirts. |
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As well as contacting the company and petitioning them, I'm putting out an appeal for people to try to find any old tins which the company could use to work out the formula. |
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And, as you'd expect, all things Elvis clutter the shelves, from figurines to drinking glasses to wallets to tins to plates to clocks to jukeboxes to lamps to cookie jars. |
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Has one of those tins ever actually contained a Danish Butter Cookie? |
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I thought to myself that a long period on a coach trying to pass out with the aid of many tins of Stella and the least comfy seats in showbiz might result in some kip. |
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Not only that, it's an opportunity to find decorations, tins of biscuits, liqueur chocolates etc, and all the other bits and pieces that you cannot find anywhere else. |
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In the kitchen the original tins stand on the mantelshelf, an Edwardian overhead drying rack is operated by a pulley, and her father's old Gulbransen radio is on the table. |
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The work involves storing all the collecting tins and boxes, organising the collection and ordering the poppies and wreaths to lay on Remembrance Sunday. |
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South Lakeland residents are being urged to slot their coins in the collecting tins of the Royal British Legion to invest in a poppy to wear with pride. |
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If I eat any more tins of tuna fish, I'm going to turn into a dolphin. |
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Mum walks over to the larder and there is much clanking and banging, I hear tins being pushed along the shelves, even the Christmas puddings being moved. |
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Sometimes there would be a large pyramid of tins of spaghetti, baked beans or Palm corned beef and I would marvel at the symmetry and apparent stability of these tin edifices. |
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We all feel safe in our own homes, though that's where an awful lot of accidents happen, and many people wind up in casualty as a result of trying to open tins of corned beef. |
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A bottle bank for all types of glass and a can bank for food tins and aluminium drink cans is situated beside the Industrial Units on Church Road. |
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Most food tins are lined with a resin which contains a hormone-disrupting chemical called bisphenol A, which can leach from the tin into the food inside. |
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If crows have become unwelcome guests, Martens recommends scare tactics, such as Mylar tape, pie tins, scary eye balloons, scarecrows, and auditory alarms. |
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Perhaps they could be made to live on wartime rations tins of snook, dried eggs, carrot pudding until they return to normal size, and are ready to rejoin the rest of us again. |
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In the tuna canning factories close to Mari Tere's shop some 60 women clad in white robes, work manually cleaning and putting anchovies and tuna in glass containers and tins. |
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There were bags of flour on the floor, lumps of doughs on chairs, bottles of fruit and nuts in boxes, and towers of biscuit tins and cookie-making things in doorways. |
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Until I got married, pasta to me meant tins of spaghetti, boy was I wrong. |
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He was carrying several shopping bags, bulging with packets and tins. |
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In they went in the Saturday crush, full of soldiers, bairns, folk from the country, and an eident wife with a big shopping bag buying up tins of plums. |
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The good housewife always had homemade cake or biscuits in the tins. |
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As I watch him and his two staff line dozens of deep pie tins with pastry and fill them with his 16 fillings, it's obvious that this is a man dedicated to his craft. |
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The shelf in the bathroom was littered with tins of hair spray, styling mousse, shampoo and conditioner, blobs of each of which had been splurted onto every available surface. |
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Drink was either weak tea or water drunk from old petrol tins. |
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Baked once and stored in tins, fatless, sugarless squares of dough were cooked a second time before being distributed to men about to embark on a sea voyage or land battle. |
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There is rich detail, such as men on the Caroline Islands using their ear lobes to carry their tobacco tins, pipes, and matches. |
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While you're in the kitchen, dig out some flan tins and create these tasty tomato and leek croustades. |
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There were also some 200 empty petrol tins for measuring the blast, a technique that Penney had employed on Operation Crossroads. |
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In addition to its use in clothing, such as skirts and scarves, Royal Stewart tartan has also appeared on biscuit tins for Scottish shortbread. |
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Samples of the regular run butter were sealed in 1 pound tins and sent to Washington, where the butter was scored and examined. |
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You can find them, but they are sectioned off in an old blokes' ghetto with the tins of dubbin and stud spanners. |
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But these confabulated, sockdologizing tins refuse to warm up. I swear they are doing it to perversely annoy me. |
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Popovers are an American version of Yorkshire Pudding, often eaten sweet and cooked in muffin tins. |
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For this, I was issued with a small Primus stove and a three-day store of tins of baked beans and mini-sausages. |
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They have the most beautiful cats and are desperate for good homes, donations of money, tins of cat food or dried cat food. |
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Which means, of course, those whopping family tins of choccies are impossible to avoid. |
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French troops also received iron rations in the form of tins of boeuf bouille. |
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Other poignant reminders include stretchers, battledress buttons, bully beef tins, and army boots. |
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Spray two 20cm round sandwich cake tins with non-stick cooking spray and line with greaseproof paper. |
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On the other side of the thermostat, but equally local in subject matter, was Giorgio Morandi, the native Bolognian and mid-century painter of bottles and tins. |
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Fold in the hazelnuts and spoon into two 18cm, non-stick, round cake tins. |
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All my ingredients are stored immediately in sealed jars, tins or stout Ziploc plastic bags to prevent any of the local wildlife contaminating any item. |
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Place dessertspoons of the mixture in 10 paper cases or greased bun tins. |
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Divide the mix equally into two seven inch sandwich cake tins. |
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Similarly, Mark Sell as the philandering Claude who pays popsies with tins of company biscuits and Jacqueline Roberts as his highly verbal wife were both fine. |
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But it went through her like a flash of hot fire when, in passing, he lurched against the dresser, setting the tins rattling, and clutched at the white pot knobs for support. |
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I wanted to be fit and strong enough and train hard every day but I was living on 7p tins of baked beans and 7p tins of tunafish with bread and corn flakes every day. |
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Tins of biscuits, Christmas cakes, and boxes of sweets are also requested. |
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