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delicate and cuisine
Cidon's presence in modern Spanish cuisine began expanding after he graduated from college, and he became a well-respected cook during the decade of the 1980s, while also studying the relationship between delicate drinks such as wine and food.
In contrast to cuisine classique, an older form of haute cuisine, nouvelle cuisine is characterized by lighter, more delicate dishes and an increased emphasis on presentation.
Rice is always used in Cajun cuisine, whereas the French / Belgian version typically uses milk, and is therefore generally more delicate than the Cajun variety.

delicate and oil
Using a cold cathode gauge in gases with substantial organic components, such as pump oil fractions, can result in the growth of delicate carbon films and shards within the gauge that eventually either short-circuit the electrodes of the gauge or impede the generation of a discharge path.
A good marinade will have a delicate balance of spices, acids, and oil.
Leonardo's delicate color modulations result from the tiny disconnected spots of paint that he probably derived from Illuminated manuscript techniques and first brought into oil painting.
The zucchini has a delicate flavor and requires little more than quick cooking with butter or olive oil, with or without fresh herbs.
" He states that a well-fed specimen will yield one gallon of good oil, but that the " fine and delicate fluid extracted from his jaws is exceedingly valuable " and is used by jewelers and watchmakers.
The delicate multicolored decoration was then added by people, mostly women, working at home using an oil lamp or spirit lamp to re-heat the cores and the fine wisps of colored glass used to decorate them.

delicate and is
One can even argue -- though this is a delicate matter -- that every justification existed for their returning the Public Lecture to the First Church, and so to suppress it, rather than let Parker use it as a sounding board for his propaganda when his turn should come to occupy it.
Because the urn itself is so delicate, it has been allowed to travel to Australia only twice.
That the emperor sincerely sympathized with Alexei, and suspected Peter of harbouring murderous designs against his son, is plain from his confidential letter to George I of Great Britain, whom he consulted on this delicate affair.
Chervil ( Anthriscus cerefolium ), sometimes called garden chervil, is a delicate annual herb related to parsley.
The Indians and English use them mush, boyling ( sic ) them with sugar for sauce to eat with their meat ; and it is a delicate sauce, especially with roasted mutton.
It is a special and delicate printing technique on both sides of the cloth in indigo blue and red patterns covering the base cloth.
Djibouti is greatly affected by events in Somalia and Ethiopia, and therefore relations are important and, at times, very delicate.
Various styles dictate the curve of the fingers and thumb, as do the style of piece ; a more pronounced curve and lighter hold on the bow is used for virtuoso or more delicate pieces, while a flatter curve and sturdier grip on the bow sacrifices some power for easier control in strokes such as detaché, spiccato, and staccato.
A double boiler, also known as a bain-marie, is a stove top apparatus used to cook delicate sauces such as beurre blanc, to melt chocolate without burning or seizing, or cook any other thick liquid or porridge that would normally burn if not stirred constantly.
Other than enhancing flavor, its significance is that the body needs and maintains a delicate electrolyte balance, which is the kidney's function.
Shows these virtues by fainting and crying whenever her delicate sensibilities are challenged, usually starts out with a mysterious past and it is later revealed that she is the daughter of an aristocratic or noble family.
Looking like a delicate woven bag above the woven cotton wick, the mantle is a residue of mineral materials ( mostly thorium dioxide ) which is heated to incandescence by the flame produced by the wick.
Nonetheless, they constitute an important minority whose naturalization / settlement in Lebanon is vigorously opposed by most Lebanese, who see them as a threat to Lebanon's delicate confessional balance.
His furniture is known for fine craftsmanship, a mix of traditional luxurious fabrics like leather combined with modern chrome frames, and a distinct separation of the supporting structure and the supported surfaces, often employing cantilevers to enhance the feeling of lightness created by delicate structural frames.
If the temperature rise is too high, thermal motion will destroy the delicate cooperative ordering of the LC phase, pushing the material into a conventional isotropic liquid phase.
The fiber is extremely delicate and soft, and highly valued for the purposes of weaving, but the quantity which each animal produces is minimal.
The cheese is then stretched and kneaded to produce a delicate consistency — this process is generally known as pasta filata.
Their family, Piperaceae, is most closely related to the lizardtail family ( Saururaceae ), which in fact generally look like smaller, more delicate and amphibious pepper plants.

delicate and often
However, this was a delicate process, and if a courtesan of " lower status " attempted to replace a courtesan who wielded a substantial amount of power within the court, it would often result in the lower courtesan being exiled from the royal court, or married off to a lesser noble in an arranged marriage, or even murdered.
In the Vietnam War, firing the gun often adversely affected the delicate electronics, which were at the early stages of the transition to solid state devices, so the missile and its guidance system was omitted from vehicles deployed to Vietnam.
Hate and love are often in a delicate and unstable balance.
Vilmorin was best known as a writer of delicate but mordant tales, often set in aristocratic or artistic milieu.
Intact tubeworm roots have proven very difficult to obtain for study because they are extremely delicate, and often break off when a tubeworm is removed from hypothermal vent regions.
It is a delicate perennial often cultivated as an annual.
In Central America and Mexico, a hole is often carved into the bottom of each resonator and then covered with a delicate membrane taken from the intestine of a pig to add a characteristic " buzzing " or " rattling " sound known as charleo.
Vibrato on the theremin, which is a continuously variable-pitch instrument with no " stops ", can range from delicate to extravagant, and often serves to mask the small pitch adjustments that instrument requires.
Always a poet, and usually gay, fresh, and delicate, in his presentation of idylls exquisitely dainty and characteristically Gallic, illustrating the more " charming " side of love, often pure and sometimes extremely materialistic.
When upon death the ammonites fell to this seafloor and were gradually buried in accumulating sediment, bacterial decomposition of these corpses often tipped the delicate balance of local redox conditions sufficiently to lower the local solubility of minerals dissolved in the seawater, notably phosphates and carbonates.
Others depict odd, apparently senseless machines, often with a delicate appearance, kept together by tiny filaments.
Much of the time in the United Kingdom, tea drinking is not the delicate, refined cultural expression that the rest of the world imagines — a cup ( or commonly a mug ) of tea is something drunk often, with some people drinking six or more cups of tea a day.
Too often, however, this fragile romance is crushed by a thoroughly absurd shoot-em-up, like ketchup poured over a delicate Pennsylvania Dutch dinner.
Mutarazi Falls ( often spelt Mtarazi Falls ) is a 762 m ( 2, 499 ft ) free-leaping waterfall of two delicate tiers, in the Honde Valley in the Eastern Highlands of Zimbabwe.
They made efforts to control the people below them on the economic and social scale, but they were often unsuccessful in maintaining a delicate balance between mass demonstrations and riots.
The poems, while by no means of equal literary merit, are generally characterised by delicate and true poetic feeling, and refined and often extremely felicitous language ; and it is a proof of the fidelity to nature with which its themes are treated that the book has become a religious classic with readers far removed from the author's ecclesiastical standpoint and general school of thought.
It is often sold wrapped in blue paper to protect it from light and so preserve its pale colour and delicate flavour.
His close friendship with professor J Berstenson, the Czar's court physician often helped the delicate negotiations relating to the welfare of the community.
Road touring clothes are often inappropriate due to their delicate fabrics and construction.
The wealthier families ’ waffles, known often as mestiers, were, "... smaller, thinner and above all more delicate, being compose of egg yolks, sugar and the finest of the finest flour, mixed in white wine.
Chiroubles cru are noted for their delicate perfume that often includes aromas of violets.
Loomis was married to Ellen Farnsworth for over thirty years ; she was beautiful, delicate, and often suffered from debilitating depression, eventually developing dementia.
Round-shaped British scones can resemble North American biscuits in appearance, but scones rely on cold butter for their delicate, flaky texture, while biscuits are more often made with animal fat or vegetable shortening and are crumbly rather than flaky.

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