Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: June 19, 2025
The delicate oil saturated everything in the house, and for a week or more the whole place smelled as if chicken fricassee was being made upon a wholesale plan. Except as garnishes, herbs are probably more frequently used in a dry state than in all other ways put together.
Arrange them on the toast, add a little salt and a very little butter, serve very hot. The chicken must be young, split down the back. Lay on the gridiron and broil evenly, turning frequently. Serve on a piece of buttered toast, salt and slightly butter the chicken. A little parsley garnishes the dish prettily.
Foremost among fashionable floating garnishes for soup are the colored custards known as pâte royale; they are perfectly easy to make, yet very effective served in clear bouillon. Colored Custard.
However good the taste may be, the effect will be spoiled if its appearance on the table does not come up to the expectation raised by the name on the menu. For this reason the subject of garnishes requires to be considered apart from the dishes they adorn. In the old time garnishes were few and simple, and when not simple, very ugly, as the camellias cut from turnips and stained with beet juice.
Ham that is used for pies, &c. should be cut from the under side, first taking off a thick slice. SUCKING PIG. The cook usually divides the body before it is sent to table, and garnishes the dish with the jaws and ears. The first thing is, to separate a shoulder from the carcase on one side, and then the leg, according to the direction given by the dotted line a, b, c.
"Beware to-night!" Voban whispered. "Come to me in the prison," said I. "Remember your brother!" His lips twitched. "M'sieu', I will if I can." This he said in my ear as Doltaire entered and came forward. "Upon my life!" Doltaire broke out. "These English gallants! They go to prison curled and musked by Voban. VOBAN a name from the court of the King, and it garnishes a barber.
It is plainly this that is meant, when persons disinclined to speak out give us a circumlocution of delicate phrases, "the conservative energies of the public institutions," "the majesty of the law," perhaps, and others of similar cast; which fine phrases suggest to one's imagination the ornamented fashion of the handle and sheath of the scimitar, which is not the less keen, nor the less ready to be drawn, for all this finery that hides and garnishes so menacing a symbol of power.
No woman a lady friend, whom we are always happy to consult, assures us makes mistakes in her own métier no woman trusses game and garnishes dessert-dishes with the same hands, or talks of so doing in the same breath.
As garnishes several of the culinary herbs are especially valuable. This is particularly true of parsley, which is probably more widely used than any other plant, its only close rivals being watercress and lettuce, which, however, are generally inferior to it in delicacy of tint and form of foliage, the two cardinal virtues of a garnish.
"Beware to-night!" Voban whispered. "Come to me in the prison," said I. "Remember your brother!" His lips twitched. "M'sieu', I will if I can." This he said in my ear as Doltaire entered and came forward. "Upon my life!" Doltaire broke out. "These English gallants! They go to prison curled and musked by Voban. VOBAN a name from the court of the King, and it garnishes a barber.
Word Of The Day
Others Looking