Salted Sentence Examples

salted
  • In its outskirts and the surrounding country are an immense number of xarqueadas (slaughter-houses), with large open yards where the dressed beef, lightly salted, is exposed to the sun and air.

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  • Josh salted that mine and strung along the owner just enough to get a salary out of him.

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  • Of anchovies alone, to,000,000 jars are prepared annually, while salted fish is, next after bread, the staple food of large masses of the population.

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  • The ordinary method of adding resin consists in stirring it in small fragments into the fatty soap in the stage of clear-boiling; but a better result is obtained by separately preparing a fatty soap and the resin soap, and combining the two in the pan after the underlye has been salted out and removed from the fatty soap. The compound then receives its strengthening boil, after which it is fitted by boiling with added water or weak lye, continuing the boil till by examination of a sample the proper consistency has been reached.

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  • Being thus soluble in salt water it cannot, of course, be salted out like common soaps; but if a very concentrated salt solution is used precipitation is effected, and a curd soap is separated so hard and refractory as to be practically useless.

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  • The primary products of the dissociation of albumins are the albumoses, characterized by not being coagulable by heat, more soluble than the albumins, having a far less complex composition, and capable of being " salted (7) out " by certain salts, and the peptones, similar to albumoses but not capable of being " salted out "; moreover, peptones are less complex than albumoses.

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  • In order to soften meat before it is salted, so as to allow the salt to extract the blood more freely, the meat is soaked in water for about half an hour.

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  • Of the edible river fish, the best known is the pirarucd (Sudis gigas), a large fish of the Amazon which is salted and dried for market during the low-water season.

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  • These, salted and dried, are exported to all parts of the world, and form, when taken in connexion with the enormous quantity of fresh cod consumed, a valuable addition to the food resources of the human race.

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  • The food of the people consists as a rule of boiled rice with salted fresh or dried fish, salt, sessamum-oil, chillies, onions, turmeric, boiled vegetables, and occasionally meat of some sort from elephant flesh down to smaller animals, fowls and almost everything except snakes, by way of condiment.

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  • Salted fish forms, along with boiled rice, one of the chief articles of food among the Burmese; and as the price of salted fish is gradually rising along with the prosperity and purchasing power of the population, this industry is on a very sound basis.

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  • The staple exports are beans, pulse and peas, marine products, sulphur, furs and timber; the staple imports, comestibles (especially salted fish), kerosene and oil-cake.

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  • Cod-liver oil and salted fish are exported with some reindeer-skins, fox-skins and eiderdown; and coal and salt for curing are imported.

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  • The value of the herring fisheries is enhanced by the careful methods of smoking and salting, the export of salted fish being considerable.

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  • The skins arrive simply salted.

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  • Dried and salted fish eggs; called batarekh, command a ready market.

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  • If salted in the proper way, they would doubtless be in all respects equal to Dutch anchovies, if not to those imported from Italy.

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  • The siawan is a species of fish found in the rivers and valued for its spawn, which is salted.

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  • Great numbers of cattle are reared; and cheese, butter and hides, as well as salted meat and fish, are exported.

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  • A thick woollen cloth called shayak, coarse cotton chintzes and a kind of soap prepared from the efflorescences of the lake, with dried and salted fish, are also produced.

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  • Either fresh or salted they form an important article of diet of the poorer people.

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  • They are also salted and eaten with rice, prepared in the form of pickles or candied and preserved in sugar.

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  • Lake Menzala yields large supplies of fish, which are dried and salted, and these, with rice, furnish the chief articles of trade.

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  • The food of the Irish was very simple, consisting in the main of oaten cakes, cheese, curds, milk, butter, and the flesh of domestic animals both fresh and salted.

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  • Besides, Fred will have the audience salted with all his old lady friends.

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  • Or if you like, and can find them, you could use salt brisket, silverside or salted ox cheeks.

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  • Now that would have seen off the salted butter caramel - sorted!

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  • The cooking is French inspired, if a touch eccentric - salted cod in cider may not be to everyone's taste.

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  • While the vegetables are cooking place the pasta in a large pan of boiling salted water and cook until tender.

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  • Dart Boards Two packets of ready salted crisps and a half of cider.

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  • A salted herring nailed to a bannock on a wooden plaque.

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  • Caviar This is the salted roe (fish eggs) of sturgeon Caviar contains twice the nutriment of almost all meats.

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  • The drive arrived the next day packed in salted peanuts - instead of foam peanuts.

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  • In addition there was a ready market overseas for United Kingdom exports of salted skins and pickled pelts.

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  • Newlyn has been exporting salted pilchards to Italy since c.1550.

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  • The wings were succulent with a sweet, tangy sauce, while the fries were crisp, golden and lightly salted.

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  • In the news, a company is attempting to patent salted chips apparently to show the stupidity of existing patent law.

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  • The growing importance of the lagoon townships, owing to their maritime skill, their expanding trade, created by their position between east and west, their monopoly of salt and salted fish, which gave them a strong position in the mainland markets, rendered it inevitable that a clash must come over the question of independence, when either east or west should claim that Venice belonged to them; and inside the lagoons the growing prosperity, coupled with the external threat to their liberties, concentrated the population into two well-defined parties - what may be called the aristocratic party, because it leaned towards imperial Byzantium and also displayed a tendency to make the dogeship hereditary, and the democratic party, connected with the original population of the lagoons, aspiring to free institutions, and consequently leaning more towards the church and the Frankish kingdom which protected the church.

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  • There is some trade in furs, mammoth bones, dried and salted fish.

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  • I have made a satisfactory dinner, satisfactory on several accounts, simply off a dish of purslane (Portulaca oleracea) which I gathered in my cornfield, boiled and salted.

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  • Cheese Cheese slices and spreads Cottage and cream cheese Snacks Crisps, salted peanuts and cheese savory biscuits.

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  • Warm salted water is the best douche to use 1 Dissolve ¼ teaspoon salt in a cup of warm water.

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  • Salty Dogs combine gin or vodka with grapefruit juice and are generally served in a glass with a lightly salted rim to cut the grapefruit acidity.

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  • When going out for Japanese food in San Antonio, you will find that the usual appetizers such as edamame (soybeans that have been steamed and lightly salted) or gyoza are in ample supply.

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  • One of the simplest garnishes for soup is a tablespoon of salted whipped cream sprinkled with a dash of paprika or a little very finely chopped parsley.

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  • Whole eggs poached in salted water or slices of hard boiled eggs can be used as a soup garnish.

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  • Salted, smoked, or roast nuts and seeds are not raw.

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  • Remember to stay away from onions, turkey bones, chocolate, raisins, heavily salted foods and too much stuffing, not to mention alcohol of any kind.

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  • Eat lightly salted foods which can help replace salts lost through perspiration.

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  • Another element that needs to be restricted in children's diets is the intake of sodium through salted foods.

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  • Once that process is complete, the cheese is salted, injected with cheese mold and aged for five or six weeks.

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  • Desperados offers several signature side dishes such as corn pudding, cornbread with honey butter, coleslaw and salted potatoes.

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  • Rice is the chief article of export, dried or salted fish, pepper and cotton ranking next in order of value.

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  • The soap is from this again grained off or salted out, and the underlye so thrown down carries with it coloured impurities which may have been in the materials or which arise from contact with the boiler.

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  • Though cod is much the most important fish (in 1905 fresh cod were valued at $991,679, and salted cod at $696,928), haddock (fresh, $1,051,910; salted, $17,194), mackerel (value in 1905, including horse mackerel, $970,876), herring (fresh, $266,699; salted, $114,997), pollock ($267,927), hake ($258,438), halibut ($218,232), and many other varieties are taken in great quantities.

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  • The take of 1898 consisted chiefly of cod, haddock, lobsters, mackerel, alewives, pollock and hake, but was valued at only $48,987, which was a decrease of 67% from that of 1889; in 1905 the total take was valued at $51,944, of which $32,575 was the value of lobsters and $8166 was the value of fresh cod-the only other items valued at more than $loon were soft clams ($2770), Irish moss ($2400), alewives, fresh and salted ($1220), and haddock ($1048).

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  • Large flocks of geese are kept in the moist lowlands; their flesh is salted for domestic consumption during the winter, and their feathers are prepared for sale.

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  • These liinus, as they are called by the Kanakas, are washed, salted, broken and eaten as a relish or as a flavouring for fish or other meat.

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