Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"brine" Definitions
  1. water that contains a lot of salt, used especially for preserving food

589 Sentences With "brine"

How to use brine in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "brine" and check conjugation/comparative form for "brine". Mastering all the usages of "brine" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Step Two: To Brine or Not To Brine This one is easy.
The next day, remove the pork from the brine, discarding the brine.
Transfer brine to a large brine bag or 220-gallon food-safe bucket.
These bags held nothing, empty hydroids, hydroids that had just been fed brine shrimp or brine shrimp only.
Now you can keep your holiday debates focused on the real issues, like to brine, or not to brine?
A taupe jigsaw of desert roads connecting brine wells evokes a circuit diagram ("Brine Wells #1, Salt Flats, Atacama Desert, Chile," 2017).
So lo and behold, in 2012, a company called Texas Brine was drilling near Bayou Corne for brine, which has many industrial uses.
At the moment, this is done by soaking them in water, or brine, or brine followed by a solution of sodium hydroxide known as lye.
It refrigerates a mixture of carbonated brine and lake brine to make sodium sulfate and primary borax, some of which is transported to the Trona plant.
City hams can take on water weight from the brine, and some processors inject extra brine or even water into their hams to improve profit margins.
I follow the teachings of Kim Severson and use a salt cloak instead, what's called a dry brine but which is hardly a brine at all.
In addition to salt, the brine makes your turkey less likely to be dry and the sugar in the brine will make the bird brown up nicely.
In 2008, it was found that brine near the site contained radioactive elements, suggesting that the mine was leaking its waste contents due to the movement of brine.
Brine from desalination plants that tap brackish lakes, aquifers or rivers far inland is harder to treat than brine from coastal plants that can be piped into the seas.
He chose rock salt ("halite", to give its geological name) because its crystals often trap tiny pockets of the brine it is precipitating from, and this brine contains dissolved air.
"We did a really nice brine last year at the restaurant with orange and clove, and so I'm going to do an orange and clove brine turkey again," she said.
Lazerson says pilot projects using oilfield brine have been successful and the aim is to ramp up to processing 1,200 cubic meters of brine per day around the end of the year.
I brine my bird in a big ass stock pot, but if you don't have one, you can buy a brine bag or a food safe five gallon container to do it in.
Place wings in a large bowl, and cover with brine.
Prepare the brine: Remove peel from oranges in large strips.
In the brine, longer casts tend to become more critical.
She likes to drink olive brine straight from the can.
I would not brine a turkey bound for the fryer.
Green olives add brine and Moroccan saffron an enveloping musk.
Garlic and coriander in the hen's brine impart uncommon succulence.
"All that brine has kept me pickled, too," he jokes.
For all the worry turkeys inspire—long cooking time aside, there's the concerns of salmonella, fear-mongering about deep frying, the question of wet brine or dry brine, the mere idea of spatchcocking etc.
Brine and finish the string cheese: Briefly wash the sticks to remove any butter on the surface, then place them in the brine to seal the cheese and add some salt to the picture.
That year, Alton Brown put forth a brine in his Food Network show "Good Eats," and newspapers on both coasts suggested a fussy, sugar-salt brine developed at Chez Panisse to their readers for Thanksgiving.
"It was pretty powerful, pressurize brine in that conduit," Pettit said.
If brine does not cover turkey, add additional water to cover.
Remove chicken from brine, and pat dry with paper towels. 3.
You can drink any leftover brine when you have a hangover.
Remove the turkey from the brine and bring to room temperature.
Initial efforts to plug the well with mud and brine failed.
This removes a lengthy cooling time from the brine-making equation.
Add the pork into the brine, cover, and refrigerate overnight. 3.
Be sure to brine, be it in buttermilk, Coke or saltwater.
Salty brine from pickles can add a punch to peanut butter.
Simply cover a chop or two with the brine and refrigerate.
You can set it up for a dry brine on Tuesday.
Remove it from its brine, and hold it at room temperature.
Brine the goat leg: Dissolve the salt in 2350 quarts water.
Pickle brine, on the other hand, I can't get enough of.
Bring brine to a simmer, stirring to dissolve sugar and salt.
If necessary, add more brine, leaving just ½ inch of head space.
Let the vegetables sit in brine for at least 2 hours.
I might brine a rare-breed heritage bird, skinny and lean.
Do you have a theory on why Portland loves its brine?
An overnight yuzu brine makes these fried Sriracha wings outrageously good.
Salt-rich brine holds in suspension the lithium that automakers covet.
No one flavor takes precedence, not sweet, sour, brine or tang.
Drawers. Want to pickle some peppers in a white vinegar brine?
So in drilling, Texas Brine accidentally punctured the wall of a cavern.
It was time to lift the pig from the vat of brine.
To prepare my turkey, I do a 24-hour brine on it.
While Cara prefers a dry brine, it never hurts to master both.
Lee then ordered the overseer to thoroughly wash our backs with brine.
Evaporation, Bolivia's chosen technique, leaves around half the lithium in the brine.
Chill for 48 hours, then flip, gently massaging salmon to redistribute brine.
The aquifers also served as incubation ponds for brine shrimp, a staple.
Both dishes, heady with the caramel brine of fish sauce, felt timeless.
Everything that couldn't be recreated was preserved in the brine of nostalgia.
But why not harvest the calcium and magnesium from the brine instead?
Coblentz has also considered sending brine into orbit, to evaporate into salt.
Cook: Pickle juice makes a great brine for a fried chicken sandwich.
That is how brine shrimps, or sea monkeys, survive being dried out.
Cook: Pickle juice makes a great brine for a fried chicken sandwich.
Treat the brine as if it's contaminated as soon as the turkey goes in, and dispose of the brine very carefully directly down the drain when you're done, making sure to disinfect your sink and the pot afterwards.
For more heat and acid, drizzle the fresno pickle brine over the noodles.
Remove the lamb from the brine and allow to come to room temperature.
Cover with the pickle brine and refrigerate for 2 days before using. 53.
If crispy skin is your main goal, though, go with a dry brine.
Ikura is easy to love, little popping balls of softly-scented oceanic brine.
Pro tip: The brine from preserved lemons is great in a bloody mary.
Environmental regulators handle permits for brine, while the water authority permits freshwater pumping.
No citrus, no sweetener — just gin or vodka, dry vermouth, and olive brine.
It then cools the brine to minus 22 degrees Celsius (minus 21 Fahrenheit).
Of course I love the star anise brine used in the original recipe.
You can even dry-brine a frozen turkey while it thaws, he discovered.
Drain the brine from the cornichons and transfer to a small bowl. 3.
Both water and brine are scarce commodities in the world´s driest desert.
My thought was to brine one turkey Tuesday and cook it Wednesday night.
A few bloated green wieners still floating in a steel pond of brine.
Salt dissolves in the hot sludge, turning it to brine, and the brine gets trapped in pockets that then act like wetlands, absorbing organic matter and toxic metals, including beryllium, which is then incorporated into growing crystals of aluminum silicate.
Since 2010 the right to extract lithium brine has been reserved for the state.
The clams will add a bit of brine; chili flakes will imbue subtle heat.
Vegetables left in a salty brine turn sour-tasting over time, but stay edible.
Snoop adds crushed barbecue potato chips for crunch and doesn't bother with a brine.
I put some ahi tuna in a brine and soaked chickpeas for tomorrow's lunch.
Owner Tracy Gates explains that they brine the chicken for 12 hours before frying.
Add turkey to brine; seal bag or cover, and refrigerate 1 to 2 days.
What water remained evaporated in the intense heat, leaving brine lakes and saline flats.
Sure, you can brine your turkey if that's how you prefer to do it.
In a large bucket or pot, submerge the chicken pieces in the pickle brine.
Remove the chicken pieces from the pickle brine and submerge it in the buttermilk.
To start, you need to brine your cabbage—which is no big deal. Really.
Have you been asking yourself when the ultimate brine video is coming to MUNCHIES?
The brine comes from smoked fish and crawfish powder, the fervor from Scotch bonnets.
Trader Joe's Authentic Greek Feta is made from sheep's milk and packed in brine.
Should you brine the wings, boil them before frying, or just roast them all?
Bring on the brine — Pickle Day returns to the Lower East Side on Sunday.
Regardless of the method used, all plants produce concentrated brine as a waste product.
The most widespread current practice is to pump the brine back into the sea.
I'll brine a pork shoulder in hickory sap and pine needles for nineteen days.
Irish whiskey, with its occasional hints of fruit and brine, is another excellent choice.
The corporate world is in a pickle — a strong brine of its own making.
We keep everything about the recipe identical except for how we brine the bird.
" Despite Big Time's court claims of buying plain old brine shrimp from China, the enclosure boasts that "after years of crossbreeding, we developed a hybrid," and "These amazing new hybrids grow larger and live longer than any 'natural' variety of brine shrimp.
Sometimes it leaves the rice loose but still moist, with a vague hint of brine.
Aside from producing incredible amounts of brine, all forms of desalination are incredibly energy intensive.
Brine the lamb: Heat 8 cups|2 liters water in a large saucepan over high.
Maybe that was a placebo effect of having consumed the brine—not the killer bees?
Flavor: An intense mix of brine and honeydew nectar unlike anything else on the market.
Industries that harvest brine or minerals from the lake, like Morton Salt, will also suffer.
Orocobre is currently ramping up production at its Salar de Olarez brine operations in Argentina.
In 2016, California passed the Desalination Amendment, which tightened regulations for intake and brine disposal.
At SQM's facilities the brine is pumped from an underground reservoir into hundreds of ponds.
China gets much lithium from spodumene rock in Australia, an alternative to South American brine.
Brine lakes on Earth can remain liquid at 8.6 degrees Fahrenheit, according to the study.
The brine could have acted as a culture for the purple microbes to begin sprouting.
Let cool and refrigerate, before fully submerging the chicken in brine for 12 hours. 3.
Brine the cabbage: In a large pot, bring the water and salt to a boil.
Rose water, pink peppercorns, and cava are added to the fiocco brine to enhance it.
What it does best is absorb flavors, in this case seaweed's wistful, half-remembered brine.
Place a small shallow ramekin inside the jar to depress the contents in the brine.
As for the brine, immersing pork chops in it always improves their flavor and texture.
The entire roast chicken is juicy without tasting of brine, a rare thing these days.
In another bento, salt koji is a marinade for chicken, perhaps the best possible brine.
As the salt dissolves and forms a brine, it helps the pork retain its moisture.
Minced ginger packed in brine or vinegar, on the other hand, holds up very well.
The first sip triggers the nostalgia centers for ketchup, and then the brine kicks in.
Because of the salt in the brine, you don't even need to add any extra seasoning.
Zest some lemon over the top and finish with a small drizzle of the oyster brine.
The found increasingly fewer animals as the brine got more salty, which is to be expected.
The researchers worry about the threat that uncontrolled discharge of brine could cause to marine life.
This critical water basin provides habitat for millions of native birds, brine shrimp, shorebirds, and waterfowl.
It's a secret recipe that involves vermouth, and it is the best brine in the world.
The simple salt brine brings out the natural flavors, and the texture is everything but dry.
Instead, those are the markers of a brine rich in minerals, concentrated as the water evaporates.
Place the chicken thigh into a large container then tip the cold brine over the top.
Lithium is mostly mined from hard rock deposits in Australia and brine pools in South America.
The plan requires the world's number two producer of lithium to reduce its extraction of brine.
Soak the marrow in a water salt (3%) solution for a day, changing the brine twice.
Pelicans and other birds that normally wade and swim in brine were nowhere to be seen.
Sparks flew, and my face was pelted with bits of ground pork and slicked with brine.
We just have to add a bunch of garlic powder and salt and brine it overnight.
After the mutz is braided, it goes into a salt brine, which lightly seasons the cheese.
Brine-soaked gherkins may be pickle's western cousin, but similarities in taste and texture are minimal.
Unwrap the salmon, discarding any excess brine, and transfer skin side down to a cutting board.
Brine and marinate the chicken: In a medium saucepan, bring 4 cups water to a boil.
Drain the chicken, discarding the brine, and place the chicken and the marinade in a bowl.
Brine alternatives Some communities in North America are looking for environmentally safe alternatives to road salt.
But why does a brine-y pizza elevate itself to 10,000 leagues above a regular slice?
Another approach is to try to do something with the brine other than throwing it away.
After the chicken has been brined for 24 hours, remove from the brine and pat dry.
After they are soaked in brine, the eggs are quickly frozen to be sold as caviar.
One heart comes studded with bacon shards and wrinkly edamame, a duel of brine and earth.
The tonkatsu sauce has the proper notes of brine from dashi and soy, offset by lemon.
Each mouthful is a shock of brine and milk and grassiness, amplified by crunch and cold.
It tasted of salt and sweet brine, and was no less delicious for being so tidy.
Pete Wells: Brining is a pain unless you have a second refrigerator for your brine pail.
Chances are it has been soaked in brine to make it appear fresher than it is.
As per tradition, all of Pete's meat sits in a brine for ten to 14 days.
Fresh fish, served the day it comes out of the brine (even if the brine in question is a judicious mixture of tap water and salts), would thus become accessible to millions of landlubbers who must now have their fish shipped in from afar, deep-frozen.
One method that's popular in South America is to evaporate it out of brine under a lake.
I always cognac-brine my turkeys and stuff the inside, under the skin, with black truffle butter.
A third cell might be covered by a shallow layer of hyper-saline, Pepto-Bismol-pink brine.
Around the world, desalination plants produce nearly 50% more brine (141.5m cubic metres a day) than freshwater.
Make the cabbage: In a medium saucepan, bring the cabbage and the pickle brine to a boil.
The pipeline to the Dead Sea will need constant repairs because of the corrosive brine it carries.
We're going to have it tomorrow night with our guests, and I want to brine it overnight.
Brining is always a virtually painless fix for whatever bird you're cooking—I'm a wet brine person.
It might not be better than a dry brine, necessarily, but that's how my mom did it.
A Vermont Agency of Transportation (VTrans) snowplow, with flashing orange lights, was spraying brine on the road.
The other is brine, mostly found in Chile and Argentina, which can take seven years or more.
In a large stock pot, bring all the ingredients for the chicken brine to a boil. 2.
Remove the chicken from the brine, and refrigerate on a rack to dry for 2-3 days.
Eric would count teammates in line, hoping he wasn't left with the stiff, plastic-coated Brine ball.
Make the brine: In a large bowl, dissolve the salt into 8 cups of cold water. 2.
Dissolve the salts, then remove from heat and cool completely before adding the chicken to the brine.
Don't go past 13 hours, though; too much time in the brine will toughen the chicken. 4.
As our photographer looks on in disgust, I down the whiskey and brine shots McGraw offers me.
Do you prefer vinegar brine over lacto-fermentation, which has been all the rage in recent years?
The hypersaline conditions make it inhospitable to fish, but very hospitable to brine shrimp, algae and bacteria.
And I knew that they would be taking at least a brief bath in a salty brine.
Unlike city hams, which are wet-cured in a brine, country hams are dry-cured with salt.
A study by the UN Institute for Water, Environment and Health published earlier this year contends that the problem of brine waste has been underestimated by 50 percent and that, when mixed with the chemicals meant to keep systems from fouling, the brine is toxic and causes serious pollution.
Shamus Jones founded Brooklyn Brine eight years ago and considers himself part of a new guard of picklers.
The salt then dissolves in the exuded liquid, forming a brine that is eventually reabsorbed by the poultry.
Add the ice cubes to the brine and allow to cool to room temperature then submerge the chickens.
But, with more time, the brine will reabsorb into the meat and create a super flavorful steak. 2.
But, Mono Lake does support some life, like bacteria, large blooms of algae, and trillions of brine shrimp.
I also quickly put some turkey meat in a brine for dinner, and then pump while reviewing documents.
Make the pickle brine: In a large pot, combine all of the ingredients and place over high heat.
Added perk: Both wild and farmed salmon aren't very dense and can absorb brine faster than other meats.
Begin by making a brine: Put all the ingredients in a container (8 quart if one is available).
If the lake keeps drying up, the paper notes, the region's $57 million brine shrimp industry will wither.
The commission said Albemarle had failed to adequately explain how it would increase production without extracting more brine.
Dan BidondiAccording to the Providence Journal, Hydrogen from corrosion of copper cable likely caused the Salty Brine blast.
Each duck is put in a 14 percent brine with treacle, thyme, and star anise before being poached.
Get your brine on with their fresh shucked clam pizza with garlic and lemon wedges on the side.
It called for three hours of cooking after a 12-hour soak of the pork chops in brine.
While the cod simmers, he throws together a quick brine for some Serrano chilies, cucumbers, and pearl onions.
Take off the heat and immediately pour the hot vinegar brine over the onions in the jar. 5.
The thinking behind the odd pairing is that the brine neutralises the burn and taste of the alcohol.
Anti-icing materials, such as salt brine or salt, can be used to treat trouble spots in advance.
If you can't find it, the cake will be more forthrightly sweet, lacking that sly note of brine.
The briny taste of her souse, pickled pigs' feet served in an acidic brine, recalled the salty waves.
The concerns are leading some investors to prefer low-cost projects, especially Argentine brine, over other costlier projects.
Then take the second turkey and brine it overnight on ice in the garage and cook it Thursday.
Potash is a component of the brine that bubbles up in the spring and thickens the salt layer.
Zha cai is an optional but, to my mind, necessary punch of brine to offset the sweet sauce.
If you like to brine your bird, you can still do that, but be very cautious, Quinlan said.
They extract lithium-bearing brine from wells sunk deep below the salt crust and deposit it in evaporation pools.
Trader Joe's offered a slightly cheaper price on its all-natural, fresh young turkey in brine ($1.99 per lb.).
Chile's SQM, for example, has pushed back an expansion of its domestic brine capacity until the end of 2021.
The result, when the Mississippi gushes into the brine of the Gulf, is a huge oxygen-free dead zone.
As Highsmith watched his company's exploration well pump out lithium brine, he thought about how much is at stake.
Yes, the salty brine is being mashed up with the famous icy drinks that dye your tongue bright colors.
Remember how disappointed you were when you found out they weren't really humanoid organisms, but boring old brine shrimp?
The continent is better known for its vast lithium brine deposits that supply about half of the world's lithium.
Leave a head of cabbage in brine for a week or a month and you will have delicious sauerkraut.
It's served in a wet brine of sweet grease, and the skin is crisped up with a maltose glaze.
This trial involved whole olives, which Ms Johnson put in flasks filled with commercial storage brine and FPX66 beads.
Berkshire's geothermal business operates in California's Salton Sea, which is part of the Imperial Valley, using lithium-rich brine.
Celebrate the oyster with some lemon or hot sauce or just enjoy its salty brine, you brazen oyster fiend.
The two-day brine for this chicken is packed with Thai chilies, lemongrass, makrut lime leaves, garlic, and galangal.
Remove the vinegar-brine from the heat and immediately pour over the eggs in the jar to cover well.
I have come here to try making their signature dish: clay-baked duck with brine-pickled carrots and cabbage.
"Too often we continue to treat the symptom rather than the cause," said Minister for Public Health Steve Brine.
At this point in "The Light Between Oceans," the pounding surf turns into soapsuds and the brine into tears.
Without any added preservatives, which are typically found in the brine, these sorts of cheeses can spoil very quickly.
As refreshing as cucumber water, its subtle but distinct hint of brine gives it a frozen-yogurt-like tang.
Each packet contains hot and spicy slices of pickle and no brine, so you can avoid making a mess.
When they're ready, they'll rub the briskets with spices that are pretty similar to the ingredients in the brine.
Brine for 1 hour before snarfing, and store any remaining string cheese in a dry container in the refrigerator.
The masterminds behind Gordy's Pickle Jar have crafted canned pickle juice: Gordy's Fine Brine ($16.00 for a 4-pack).
The beans taste of smoke and brine, leached from green olives, with a touch of velvet from melted cheese.
A whiskey shot followed by pickle brine, the sour drink has become popular in New York in recent years.
If you're going to spoil it with brine, you might as well use water from the Thames for that.
The taste of ocean brine is hard to pin down, until you do, and then its flavor is irrefutable.
Until we have justice, we will continue to live in a country full of brine, and bitterness, and fire.
And though it's not strictly necessary, I let them have a short soak in a simple, quickly made brine.
In recent years, Intrepid Potash has been returning 0.6 million tons or less of salt brine to Bonneville's surface.
They added ginger and cilantro to the inside-brine mixture, and boosted the overall seasoning so it was stronger.
Brine evaporates, leaving crusty formations colored by minerals, iron and salt-thriving halophile algae to create this multicolored scenery.
Such carotenoid-rich brine shrimp are important to a flamingo's diet — remove the carotenoids, and its feathers go white.
Roughly 16,000 desalination plants around the world produced about 141.5 million cubic meters of brine each day, the report says.
This easy weeknight chicken dish relies on pineapple juice to round out the tartness of kimchi brine and black vinegar.
Brine, water comprising about five percent salt, often includes toxins such as chlorine and copper used in desalination, it said.
Brine can be used inland for irrigating salt-tolerant crops, for fish farming or to produce table salt, he said.
The lake itself is made of brine, which is heavier than regular water and so pools on the ocean floor.
They'd store the hides, salt them, roll them up, and then put them in a brine solution to store them.
The rover will also be equipped with ground-penetrating radar to look for unusual features such as ice or brine.
And I used the pinot as a brine for ribs, and I used it to make my own barbecue sauce.
C. does the dishes while I brine a chicken breast to grill tomorrow for the rest of this week's lunches.
"We marinate the chicken in a salt and sugar brine overnight, and then we bread and freeze it," he explains.
You might think brine is reserved for poultry or pickling, but its basic mechanisms work just as well for fish.
Under Thursday's deal, Strongbow would get royalties from any lithium extracted by Cornish Lithium from brine springs in the area.
The product description on the company website says each portable package contains two ounces of real Van Holten's Pickle Brine.
During the annual dry season surrounding waters always turn salty, as brine from the sea pushes up the delta's channels.
Elsewhere in town I'm often conscious of an extra fingertip's worth of sugar, tipping the balance of the pickling brine.
They say the brine solution used to chill the pipes is highly corrosive, which could make them break or leak.
One at a time, pull the chicken breasts from the brine and while still wet, dredge in the flour mixture.
Go for stirred if you want your dirty martini warmer, less diluted, and with possibly not-entirely-incorporated olive brine.
"Pickle brine has got lots of natural vitamin C," claims Żaneta Jamrozik, a student from Krakow now living in Manchester.
It's made of rice simmered in chicken broth and white wine, with collapsed tomatoes, sofrito and olives leaching their brine.
And as the demand for lithium increases, companies may resort to using energy-intensive heating to speed up brine evaporation.
Obvious targets are calcium and magnesium, which occur naturally in seawater and remain in the brine through the desalination process.
Carbone and I stood in the restaurant's kitchen during a lunch rush eating all the variations, talking butter and brine.
For those celebrating St. Patrick's Day on Friday, it's time to slide a brisket into brine for homemade corned beef.
These proteins protect the tardigrade in much the same way that trehalose sugar protects the brine shrimp, Dr. Boothby said.
In addition, they are subject to quotas on the lithium they can produce from the brine, which also yields other minerals.
Brine and cook the shrimp: In a medium bowl, toss the shrimp with the salt and let sit for 5 minutes.
Both have recently won approvals to boost their quotas of lithium production without using more brine, or saltwater, in the process.
They help to lower the freezing temperature of water, which means that this water is likely a very salty liquid brine.
In 2010 scientists announced that they'd found evidence of metazoans living in pools of brine at the bottom of the ocean.
Place the radishes in a zip-top bag or a sealable container and pour over the brine to submerge them completely.
Again, don't get carried away with Byzantine brine recipes that involve ten ingredients, because salt and sugar are all that matter.
Your bird will probably need one and one half gallons to brine it, but make two gallons to keep it simple.
Take it out of the brine and put it back in the fridge—breast side up—to let it air out.
In July 2015, a bizarre blast on Salty Brine beach in Narragansett knocked people off their beach chairs, injuring one person.
The country also became one of the cheapest places to produce lithium from brine when Chile raised industry royalties last year.
Rabe produces dill gherkins, but also salty sour [lacto-fermented and pickled in brine with no sugar or vinegar] and mustard.
"All women should be able to access the nutrients they need for a healthy pregnancy," Mr. Brine said in a statement.
Then, he makes a quick vinaigrette by heating up some honey with pickle brine, dill, and a little more jalapeño sauce.
Whether it's battered and fried, steamed and cocktail-sauced, or boiled until tender in spicy brine, shrimp is a national obsession.
Bob is preparing the holiday bird for a special three-day brine when it mysteriously finds its way into the toilet.
They positioned lights at the top and bottom of the tanks, turning them on and off to attract the brine shrimp.
Thomas Wake (Willem Dafoe) is a lighthouse keeper so grizzled that you can practically smell the brine wafting off of him.
There is no histrionic sweetness, just a tamarind undertow, a kiss of lime and brine from knots of dried shrunken shrimp.
However, another dilemma then surfaced: The olives rotted because he would go through their brine much faster than the olives themselves.
So he called every olive farm and importer he knew to see if it was possible to just order olive brine.
Indeed, according to the new report, desalination process produce about 1.5 liters of brine for every 1 liter of fresh water produced.
We know that water flows on Mars today, and the salty brine explanation gives us a method by which it can happen.
Smoke the radishes: Remove the radishes from the brine and place in 225°F smoker over your choice for 6 hours. 3.
The herring are now split on a machine—rather than by the hands of the herring girls—before being placed into brine.
The pilot will handle around 300 barrels per day (bpd) of brine and the initial commercial target is to process 60,000 bpd.
His ecosystem, which is about to undergo commercial trials, constantly recycles the same supply of brine, purified by three sets of bacteria.
In a corner of the salt flat, turquoise-colored brine slowly evaporates in rows of vast square pools, leaving behind lithium crystals.
The tangy brine from the cheese and ocean-freshness of the caviar perfectly balanced the heaviness of the foie gras and crust.
Make the brine: Combine the salt, chili flakes, and citrus peels in a large pot with 2 quarts water over medium heat.
Tom Mylan of The Meat Hook explains, step by step, how to brine and brown your turkey into truly prime centerpiece form.
The brine from which miners extract lithium is water, but in Chile, it is regulated as a mineral like copper or iron.
And so, a minimalist fried chicken dish was born; no brine, no buttermilk, no flour, just big flavor and crispy chicken skin.
When it was first discovered, the company began dumping a mix of brine and mud down the well, to contain the gas.
It's important to read labels, because brine (or water) is often injected into the ham and can impact the taste and texture.
I can boil the brine, pour it over the vegetables, and they're done in two days instead of two to three weeks.
"I brine whether it is scientifically justifiable or not, because, well, it is a religious matter," said the cookbook editor Rux Martin.
"We do believe that brine is not just for discharge," said Nikolay Voutchkov, a technical adviser to the Saline Water Conversion Corp.
They can sting a brine shrimp to death on contact — leaving it in the mucus for the jellyfish to suck back up.
The new deal allowed it to expand production at its brine operation in the Salar de Atacama salt flat in northern Chile.
A third of the world's iodine is produced by Japan's natural gas drillers, who extract it from brine pumped from coastal wells.
Though all salt crystals are produced by evaporating water from saltwater brine, the pace of evaporation determines the shape those crystals take.
Lithium is produced by drilling holes into salt flats — usually found in massive crater-like lakes — and pumping brine to the surface.
But concerns over sustainability have long plagued Atacamas miners, which extract the metal from pools of brine beneath the world's driest desert.
Put the greens and the chilli in a clean jar and pour over the vinegar-brine, making sure it is fully covered.
One of the least understood environments in the deep, these brine pools are areas where extremely saline water sinks to the bottom.
A yellow hose douses them with brine made of New York water, kosher salt and as many as a dozen spices and herbs.
In many of these cases, however, the researchers note that better technology is needed to make these elements' extraction from brine economically feasible.
Although the raw material can be produced more cheaply from brine in South America, political, business and legal risks are lower in Australia.
The meat's cells have a lower concentration of salt than the brine, so water rushes out of the cells as salt flows in.
The plant will use an adsorption process to capture lithium ions from liquid brine, typically a waste product from a bromine production process.
It is a brine deposit washed off the Andes millions of years ago, containing about a fifth of the world's known lithium resources.
Hard rock is more expensive to mine, and "once supply meets demand in the future...you'd rather be in the brine," he said.
Brine the chicken: Heat 2 gallons of water in a large saucepan over medium heat along with the sugar and salt until dissolved.
Take the okra out of its brine and place on some paper towels to get rid of any excess liquid before frying. 4.
Our favorite special was the bowl of delicate clams in a scrumptious sake broth, a marriage of wine and brine made in heaven.
They make sausages, brine and cure meat, and peel more than 100 pounds of potatoes a day for catering and take-away meals.
"Under the brine, the lactic acid bacteria will thrive and the molds can't grow, because they need the flow of oxygen," he notes.
Steamed in foil, they taste of the sea, contoured in brine from dried shrimp and sardines, with buried slivers of hard-boiled eggs.
Beet wastewater -- left over from sugar beet processing -- cheese brine, pickle juice and potato juice are some of the unconventional deicers being tested.
"You have to get them into the brine as fast as possible or they'll break," said Kayla Allen, one of the egg washers.
A few tablespoons of sodium nitrite added to a gallon of brine once or twice a year isn't going to cause anyone problems.
As for the roads, New York City's Sanitation Department spread liquid brine on highway ramps yesterday, and salt spreaders were dispatched on streets.
The minerals are deposited on the surface when brine from an aquifer below rises in winter before drying in the spring and summer.
Just two companies, Chile's SQM and Albemarle of the United States, are allowed to extract brine under leases that were signed in the 230s.
That water would have lots of dissolved salts, either as a brine pool or a sludge where water saturated soil, according to the paper.
Enhanced geothermal involves drilling wells into the hot rock, and forcing fluid — water or brine — into the hot rock through fractures or permeable areas.
The EPA has listed two oil waste disposal pits formerly owned by the Brine Service Company in Corpus Christi on the Superfund priorities list.
There are towers and towers of copper-skinned Rollrights, each one needing its rind brushed with brine every day, as well as careful turns.
It has acquired acreage that establishes it as Canada's biggest holder of lithium brine assets with around 2 million acres' worth in North America.
The brine then evaporates from the lakes, leaving behind mineral salts like sodium chloride (rock salt), potassium (potash), bromine, halite, gypsum, and magnesium chloride.
Brine the radish: In a large bowl, whisk together the vinegar, salt, peppercorns, oregano, and garlic with 2 cups water to dissolve the salt.
A simple brine of salt and water should be enough to permeate the cell walls of a salmon filet, kickstarting the process of osmosis.
"Latin American countries once produced lithium from ore, as with other metals, but can now do so from brine, which is cheaper," Speirs explained.
A good, salty, garlicky pickle brine here will open your eyes to all of the new uses for pickle juice other than shot backs.
Lithium is most commonly mined from rocks in as well as brine pools in South America, in countries such as Bolivia, Chile and Argentina.
The case, now resolved, raised questions about how much brine and fresh water was left beneath the Atacama, and how long it would last.
No butter in this dish either, just puréed garlic and other aromatics with tomato water and the sweet brine that drips from shucked clams.
Makes: about ¾ pound|337 gramsPrep: 5 minutesTotal: 43n minutes for the brine:¼ cup kosher salt for the string cheese:1 pound mozzarella curd 1.
But if you're a real brine hound, the Beausoleil or the La St. Simon from New Brunswick used to be the kinds to eat.
I like the brine we use because it makes them caramelize on the outside when they hit the deep-fryer just a little bit.
The next day, remove the chicken from the brine, pat dry and refrigerate, uncovered, for 2 to 3 hours to dry the skin. 83.
The cochinita taco with red onions in vinegar and a habanero-chili brine (Spanish) is as unique as the blue of the Mexican Caribbean.
To increase the margin of error for meats that tend toward dryness, brine them before cooking to plump them with a little extra water.
The piquant apples and chile bits can be eaten alongside the meat while the brine gets drizzled on top for an even sharper jolt.
Lyubov Miroshnick, who works in a dental office in Wasilla, planned to smoke her catch after a soak in her Ukrainian grandparents' brine recipe.
After six hours in a brine, dark meat is dipped into a buttermilk-cayenne batter foaming with baking soda and fried à la minute.
Steve Brine, the government's public health and social care minister, said the calorie reduction program was the first of its kind in the world.
She would pull pickles from buckets all day, and go home with fingertips tinted green, the smell of dill and brine in her skin.
That lowers the aquifer below the salt flats and reduces the amount of brine that rises to the surface, so natural restoration is minimal.
Old mate seal was loaded into a truck (seems heavy), ready to be relocated out of suburbia and back into the brine-y blue.
A breeze blows up from the sea, tasting of brine and minerals, so fresh that a spontaneous cheer wafts along the crowded parade route.
Albemarle's operations are now only 50% efficient in the Atacama, meaning they are able to extract half of the lithium from the region's brine.
Freddie gives the British pub classic a Mexican twist by throwing chipotle chiles into the brine and serving the finished eggs with tortilla chips.
And it just so happened that Nick Brine, who'd engineered quite a few of our other records, had become the house engineer at Dan's studio.
Jordan would desalinate Red Sea water, sell some to nearby southern Israel and pump the brine into the Dead Sea to raise water levels there.
More optimistically, they also point to opportunities to use reject brine, for example, in aquaculture, where it has achieved increases in fish biomass of 300%.
Other organisms, like yeast, brine shrimp, and nematode worms, use a sugar called trehalose to tolerate dehydration, or desiccation as it's referred to by scientists.
Orocobre's brine project in Argentina was slow to ramp up and Galaxy Resources eventually sold a processing plant after it continued to operate below capacity.
A good rule of thumb for brine is one cup of kosher salt and a half cup cup of regular sugar per gallon of water.
She leads us into the kitchen, which smells of pickle brine, then out the backdoor and toward the garage where our frog-gigging mobile awaits.
" This led the lead author of the study to surmise that pickle brine triggered a nerve reaction by sparking some kind of "neutrally mediated reflex.
Pickle company Gordy's recently launched "Fine Brine" canned pickle juice, which it markets as a drink ingredient, with "for cocktails" displayed prominently on the label.
Chicken Brine 21 ½ quarts water22 ounces salt23 ¼ ounces sugar24 ¾ ounces pink salt25 ¾ ounces maltose13 sprigs fresh thyme21 cloves garlic22 bay leaf23 teaspoon black peppercorns 1.
For me, brine is a good thing, but it needs to be balanced by those yummy starches and sugars like a balanced potato chip flavor.
By the same point last winter, the agency had used less than half that in salt and liquid calcium and just over half in brine.
They added salt to preserve the fish, crunchy limu (seaweed) for texture and brine, and inamona, buttery kukui-nut hearts, roasted and pounded into rubble.
Brine from pimento-stuffed olives is designated for vodka, and it has a nice little kick: Gaea Dirty Martini Juice, $2.49 for 8.5 ounces, gaeaus.com.
A government study last year found that more water and brine were leaving the system than coming back, prompting the government to announce new restrictions.
Added to this, chemicals and brine -- water saturated with salt -- left over from the process are discharged into the sea, and can damage marine ecosystems.
My grandfather, Harold Nathan Braunhut, was the semifamous inventor of Sea Monkeys brine shrimp aquarium kits, X-ray Specs and other 1960s oddities for kids.
The biggest compliment came from Dale "King Cocktail" DeGroff, who said that Dirty Sue is the best olive brine you can use in a cocktail.
Google users were ready to get busy in their own kitchens by searching for top recipes like beef stroganoff, apple crisps, corn casserole, and brine turkey.
I marinate a flank steak in a white balsamic vinaigrette, brine pork chops, steam green beans, and pop a few frozen salmon filets into the oven.
According to the report, 42 percent of toxic brine produced by desalination can be traced to just two countries: Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
Fortunately, the researchers behind the paper say there may be several ways to make use of the brine, instead of dumping it back into the ocean.
Alex Drak, an engineer at IDE Technologies in Israel, a leading water treatment firm, said properly processed brine from coastal plants dissolves quickly in the sea.
The UNU paper concentrated on a third drawback to desalination: what happens to the salty sludge (known as brine) left behind by the pristine, desalinated water.
Scientists suspect that the salt heaps found in craters like Occator (shown in the video above) were excavated from a subsurface brine layer during ancient impacts.
And the next picture was the same day, a couple hours later, of her floating face-down in the brine, the beer still in her hand.
After watching a freshwater wetland get hosed down with brine, Mazzei and I drive south to a brackish site, where the same treatment is being applied.
Take the sulfuric charm of pickled eggs as you know and love them, then add the hot and smoky depth of chipotle peppers to the brine.
Albemarle has told both regulators and investors the upgrades would boost output without using more lithium-rich brine, or saltwater, from the environmentally sensitive salt flats.
The chicken is marinated in ranch-dressing-based brine, topped with a dill-pickle-chip mayo, and seated between two honey-butter-slathered buns of bread.
"We're pretty much done now, we feel like we've diversified across hard rock spodumene in Australia and quality brine assets in Argentina and Chile," he said.
Brine-poached in mulberry juice, and served alongside a sorrel-potato puree, coarsely grated grilled beet, caramelized shallots, a wild berry compote, and fresh sorrel leaves.
The Dolly (Parton, of course) paints grilled seitan with sweet barbecue sauce, layering onions and sour-pickle slices from the Buffalo producer Barrel & Brine for crunch.
SQM told Reuters its production plans had already incorporated the commitments made to regulators, and that the reductions in brine extraction would not impact lithium output.
With no brine necessary, this recipe requires a little less planning—just make sure to dry it as much as possible to ensure crispy, crispy skin.
Whiteside said Orocobre's difficulties were typical of many smaller players, noting that the Olaroz facility was the first new major brine operation started in 20 years.
"Because the number of brine operations has been so few historically, there are very few technically experienced chemical engineers to assist these junior companies," he said.
The company already has conversion capacity in China's Jiangxi and Jiangsu provinces, as well as a smaller facility in Qinghai that processes brine from salt lakes.
For every gallon of successfully processed seawater, about one gallon of brine (water twice as salty as the sea) is discharged back in to the ocean.
"I'm not afraid to admit evolution has occurred with my cooking, and I'll go on record as someone who has a great brine recipe," she said.
She had never applied the dry brine she famously used for her chickens to a turkey, although the book had a recipe for wet-brining one.
Just blanch regular lemons a couple times in plain simmering water before setting out to cook them in the brine she calls for in the recipe.
The only thing about these otherwise-perfect little artichokes is that, unlike the marinated ones, they come in a slightly tangy but not especially seasoned brine.
Serious ingredients are kept in the back: canned mackerel and dried shark; green jackfruit in brine and wood apple jam; dried leaves from the hummingbird tree.
Wetting the pavement and applying brine solutions help the salt adhere to the road, meaning cities and municipalities can cut back on how much they use.
All of the cheeses are displayed in a pristine stainless-steel basin, bobbing in a light brine, when the store opens for business at 10 a.m.
For Punjabi-style burvan lal mirch, long red chiles were individually stuffed with fennel seeds, onion seeds and fenugreek seeds, then stored in oil, not brine.
In other lakes where brine shrimp live alongside the carotenoid-producing algae, the shrimp turn pink after eating the algae and its carotenoids, Dr. Norman said.
It turned out to be a challenge, since he couldn't find an olive farm big enough to supply the amount of olive brine that he needed.
In Australia, Galaxy Resources has just announced the dispatch of its first shipment of spodumene, the hard-rock alternative to brine lithium, from its Mt Cattlin mine.
VECTOR, to Brine, is an entity with its own life, existing in its own spacio-temporal realm and governed by three laws: change, devotion, and no planning.
Offered a choice of brine shrimp and hydroid polyps (small coral-like organisms), the slugs opted for polyps that had swallowed the shrimp—a clever caloric twofer.
As additional rifting in the south caused chunks of crustal material to sink, alien ocean brine was extruded upwards, oozing everywhere and smothering the surface in ice.
Sadly, samples taken from the "interface zone," the area of steadily-increasing brine just on top of these incredibly dense briny pools, cast doubt on the discovery.
Oh, to look out across the snow-tipped fjords of Norway with the taste of brine on my teeth and a sleet-coloured beard to nestle into.
A lot of people scoop out the roe and wash it in a salt brine, but I think you should keep the urchins in their natural juices.
But a less chattered-about problem is the effect on the local environment: The primary byproduct of desal is brine, which facilities pump back out to sea.
Lazerson said he could not comment on whether his technology would work on Cornwall's brine springs, but said working in oilfields had advantages of scale and infrastructure.
Demand for lithium carbonate, which miners extract from the brine in these pools on the Atacama Plateau, is forecast to boom as production of electric cars rises.
On Monday, the city began pretreating some routes and bridges with a brine solution to prevent freezing, Atlanta Department of Public Works Communications Director Kim Rankins said.
For seasoning the turkey, I like the dry-brine method, patting a mix of salt, herbs and aromatics onto the turkey a day or two before roasting.
You won't be squeezing more than tiny guppies or brine shrimp into this miniature ecosystem, but it's a better desk distraction than staring at a Newton's Cradle.
Set yourself up for lunch time success next week by getting started on some corned beef that takes up to a week to brine for full flavor.
Which the water with 4 packets of the salad dressing mix, the sugar, and 1 tablespoon of the salt into the pickle juice to make a brine.
Kaldereta can be made with beef, but why, when you could have goat shank, braised beyond resistance alongside manzanilla olives, for deepening notes of sourness and brine?
But I delighted in eating an easy version of the dish in the middle of the week, without the brine, and you may feel the same way.
Fermented at a low temperature over two years in a vegetable and medicinal herb-based brine, this tofu decomposes and attains a creamy texture and gray hue.
Researchers are now devising more effective and durable ways to produce more water per unit of energy and to deal with the highly concentrated brine that remains.
The chemical is part of the slushy brine mix used to store the shrimp on most fishing boats before they make it to shore for further processing.
These are ghosts who leave behind damp carpets and the brine-soaked clothing in which, twenty-five years before, they drowned while escaping a war-torn homeland.
It's my favorite roast chicken, and it just so happens that buttermilk plays the role of three separate elements — a sugar, an acid and a liquid brine.
He calls for a wet brine in the recipe, but as he points out in his "City Kitchen" column this week, you can substitute a quick dry brine if you don't have time for a soak, sprinkling a mixture of crushed fennel seeds, black pepper and a couple of tablespoons of salt all over the meat and allowing the chops to sit for an hour or so before cooking.
Tianqi has announced both a hydroxide plant in Australia, implying a lift in production at Greenbushes, and the purchase of a small stake in Chilean brine producer SQM.
With higher quotas, the Atacama salt flat alone could more than quadruple production to 2083,2208 tonnes a year without extracting more brine, says Eduardo Bitran, Corfo's chief executive.
After clean water is extracted from salt water, desalination plants are left with a large reservoir of brine, which is about twice as salty as normal sea water.
Koshering works to season the meat, improve its texture, and help it retain moisture -- if you buy a kosher turkey there's no need to brine or salt it.
Lithium output is closely watched by Chile, despite the $100 million in royalties the country collects annually from Albemarle, due to concerns about Atacama water and brine levels.
And, of course, this new paper says nothing about the presence of life—it's unclear what kind of life form, if any, could survive in this cold brine.
She also stresses soaking the meat in cool water for 15 minutes after taking it out of the brine if you plan on making gravy from the drippings.
Instead, Cornish Lithium says it will use special filtration techniques called reverse osmosis and ion-exchange to extract and purify lithium compounds from any brine that it finds.
If you just let it chill in the brine for 24 hours and then take it out overnight and let it dry, you're pretty much good to go.
What is more, a big lithium-brine project in Argentina, run by a joint venture of Orocobre, an Australian miner, and Toyota, Japan's largest carmaker, is behind schedule.
Brining is the way to do it, and Cara Nicoletti—a butcher, baker, and author (does she make candlesticks too?)—most certainly knows her way around a brine.
A lack of communication between the two, combined with a lack of understanding about how freshwater and brine interact beneath the Salar, has left authorities hamstrung, says Cristi.
Mussels Marinière had all the brine of the sea tempered with a lemon-garlic white wine broth that had us asking for more bread to dunk in it.
And, as a bonus, I could dilute the brine with a little more unsalted stock and toss stale bread in the flavorful liquid so that nothing was wasted.
In New York homes, like the one I was raised in, my relatives brine the pork shoulder that will become pernil, then get prettied up for evening festivities.
In the crater, a central dome called Cerealia Facula is thought have been formed by icy lava sputtering up through fractures, possibly pushed by gases in the brine.
A buttery homemade bun piled high with super-juicy pork (it's all about dat brine), pickled cukes and cabbage, crispy pork skin, and a generous smear of mayo.
Some stinky tofu in Taiwan uses brine containing seafood or pork, while some vendors have been found to use chemicals as a shortcut to obtaining the funky odor.
Hungry City 9 Photos View Slide Show ' In the Philippines, itlog na maalat is egg soaked in brine until the yolk turns as dark as a dying sun.
More than half of lithium is gathered using brine extraction from deep inside the earth, especially in South America, and the rest is still mined traditionally from rock.
Brine-based lithium, of the sort mined in Chile, is more difficult to convert into the chemicals used for car batteries than is Australia's output, extracted from rock.
There it will be desalinated, with the brine deposited in the shrinking Dead Sea and the fresh water transferred into Israel for still-to-be-built desert farms.
This represents the second wave of lithium production investment, bringing together an existing brine operator (SQM), an existing lithium processor (Ganfeng) and two off-take partners (Ganfeng and Banghcak).
Picklers begin the fermentation process by putting fresh veggies in a brine that's at least 2.25 percent salt by weight, which ensures that only the lactic acid bacteria survive.
And their occurrence in craters across the Ceres' surface hints at a likely origin: a subterranean brine layer, one that spans the entire planet and gets excavated during impacts.
She furnished me with a shower cap to wear during my treatment, and an oversized Ziplock bag, the kind you'd use to brine turkeys, "for your clothes," she said.
The goal of the ocean outing is to explore and sample the unique habitats around seafloor seeps, where rich hydrocarbons like methane and hydrogen sulfide permeate in brine pools.
This is because heavy mud and brine has to be delivered near the origin of the gas in order to cut off the flow of gas toward the surface.
He declares that there are seven recognized species of artemia brine shrimp and that artemia nyos "claimed by plaintiffs is not one of them," because it is a hybrid.
SQM, however, agreed on Monday to reduce pumping of lithium-rich brine by about 10 percent through May 2020 to remedy several years of overpumping from the salt flat.
Make the pickled white onions: We make most of our pickles with a simple cold brine solution because we're not preserving these ingredients so much as focusing their flavors.
Almost all our pickles work the same way: slice up what you're going to pickle and put it into a jar, mix the brine solution, and pour it in.
The city divided North and South by the brine-y old Thames, with East End boys and West End girls, and a heaving population of varying cultures and nationalities.
What we'll do is we'll take our lamb, we'll brine it the night before we cook it, then we smother it in yogurt whisked with a certain spice blend.
Though Maroilles is washed in brine, not beer, these perverse monks must still have liked it—they've been churning out stinky wheels of the stuff since the tenth century.
The public health minister, Steve Brine, announced on Tuesday that the government would consider evidence about the benefits of folic acid fortification, as well as the practicality and safety.
"The Weight of Time" is by Jarrett Melendez, Danica Brine and Taylor Esposito, and "Day at the Park" is by Eliot Rahal, Jason Copland, Josh Jensen and Zakk Saam.
Brine the chicken: Heat the salt, sugar, allspice, garlic, habanero, and ginger with 103 gallon water in a large saucepan over medium until the salt and sugar have dissolved.
In Argentina Orocobre is ramping up output from its Olaroz brine operations and is already looking at a second-phase expansion and the construction of a battery-grade hydroxide plant.
It will buy a 19.9-percent stake in Lithium Americas in return for a $174 mln investment which will finance the development of a new Argentine brine operation, Cauchar-Olaroz.
Desalination plants often dispose of this toxic brine by pumping it back into the same marine environment the water was drawn from, which poses a serious threat to aquatic life.
Of course, by investment, I mean a $3,299 upfront cost to buy the tank, plus the copious amount of baby brine shrimps you'll need to keep the jellies happily fed.
Not only did Rick's Picks find distribution in artisanal food stores all over New York City, other successful artisanal pickle brands, like McClure's and Brooklyn Brine, emerged in following years.
Moreover, Mr Brinsden argues that spodumene can be processed directly into lithium hydroxide, which is preferred by battery-makers to the lithium carbonate that comes from lithium chloride in brine.
Howard Klein, a lithium analyst and partner with New York-based RK Equity, said the regulatory decision suggested brine-based lithium suppliers would continue to face hurdles in boosting output.
An unknown quantity of brine and produced water, estimated to be more than 5,000 gallons, was initially discharged to streams that flow into the Ohio River, according to the EPA.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates about two billion gallons of brine are injected into rocks every day, 20 percent of which are used exclusively for disposing of the water.
The agency says the company has yet to explain how its technology will allow it to extract more lithium from the same amount of brine in the world's driest desert.
The real innovation may never have been the secret formula of his brine shrimp but the cognitive ignition of those four perfect words of distilled humbuggery: Amazing Live Sea-Monkeys.
I have found a new and very hard-to-find brand of particularly potent spice mix, and figured out how I can brine the bird in the concoction for days.
Pour the brine into a large zip-top bag and add the chicken; press out the air, seal, and refrigerate for at least 1 hour or up to 3 hours.
Many people focus on just the brine, or just the breading, or just on the oil you fry it in, but I think it is a balance of all three.
On Ceres, what appears to be happening is that reservoirs of salty brine — remnants of a subsurface ocean — still occasionally well up to the surface to create the bright spots.
That same raw ham, soaked in or injected with brine, spice, sugar and curing agents and perhaps smoked a little creates city ham, the preferred ham for the spiral machine.
"When making a high salinity solution (such as a brine), table salt will dissolve a little faster than kosher salt due to the smaller size of its crystals," he writes.
With six turkeys to defrost and brine, more than 236 pounds of sweet potatoes to cube and giant trays of stuffing to mix, this is not a one-day job.
Sometimes you can get them in Asian markets in the United States, but more often you will find them freeze-dried, or preserved in brine and sold in little tins.
The rest of their bodies lie in the depths of the pie, leaching their brine into a rich custard, larded with bacon and hard-boiled eggs and spiked with mustard.
It's hard not to smile at the creatures of the ocean's "Brine Kingdom," which is full of kaiju-sized, English-speaking marine crustaceans that do battle with Volkswagen-sized pincers.
A month ago, U.S.-based Albemarle announced it had developed a process to boost Chilean lithium output by 30% without extracting more brine from the Atacama, the world's driest desert.
Factories around the world are pumping out toxic brine at a rate much higher than previously estimated and dumping it back into the ocean, according to a report published on Monday.
However, made of steel and plastic, the work had rusted from brine, as a district official told AFP, and it was further damaged when Typhoon Chaba reached the shores in 2016.
On Wednesday it was put in a container filled with brine made of water from the mudflats, along with sea oak, sagebrush, and some extra salt, all purified by wild oysters.
This recipe from The Kitchn suggests firm avocados are ideal for soaking up sweet and sour brine to make a creamy pickle that perks up any quesadilla, fish taco or hamburger.
Cover this with a tea towel and leave for four to five days to ferment, then transfer the beetroot to a jar, cover in the brine, and place in your fridge.
The "Red-Dead project", as it is called, would desalinate seawater at the Jordanian port of Aqaba and pump 200m cubic metres of leftover brine into the Dead Sea each year.
MGX seeks to keep capital expenditure low and to maximize what Lazerson says is first-mover advantage by using small nanofiltration units that can be moved to wherever the brine is.
As the name implies, the new eatery will feature all-natural fresh chicken tenders brined in fresh lemon juice, pickle brine, fresh herbs, and buttermilk, served in a variety of manners.
Here, you will find young women cosplaying as jugs of Daiya vegan creamy dressing and old men pushing everything from kimchi brine "belly shots" to Paleo hummus made with raw tigernuts.
Vancouver, British Colombia-based Standard Lithium said it has developed a proprietary lithium extraction process that would rely on existing Lanxess infrastructure in Arkansas as well as the German company's brine.
It has thrown its hat into the ring for the 23 percent stake up for sale in SQM, another member of the lithium establishment with brine and conversion operations in Chile.
"The bottom line is that something has got to change," said Steve Brine, who quit as a junior health minister in May's government in order to vote against her on Monday.
In 1960, after observing the success of Uncle Milton's Ant Farm, von Braunhut first started shipping Instant Life — simple brine shrimp that could travel in their natural state of suspended animation.
Pulling out the cooler and mixing up the brine, with its precise, unchangeable list of aromatics, is as much a part of the holiday as a game of front-yard football.
Hunger pangs can be sated at Bread & Brine (19 Main Street) a casual restaurant with creamy New England clam chowder and soft milk buns to pull apart and absorb the broth.
In the caustic brine, the cartilaginous feet and eggs would melt into a slurry of digestible calcium, minerals, and protein to be eaten beginning three days after the baby was born.
Meanwhile, Bob has to resort to a one-day brine but buys an extra "decoy" turkey to help identify the guilty party (which leads to an awkward encounter with the butcher).
Kingfish ceviche comes with a pea puree rather than the citrus brine it gets everywhere else, and steak tartare is reimagined as a raw steak sandwich, doused in smoky Spanish paprika.
Possible solutions include recycling water and relying on desalination plants, which are often criticized for their high energy use and the potential environmental harm of ejecting brine back into the ocean.
Or Chinese celery with its bitter pang; drippings from steamed chicken; and pickled garlic with its brine, all tossed in yum woon sen, a cool, summery heap of mung-bean noodles.
Scientists previously only identified two animals living there—brine shrimp and a species of fly—though it serves as an important migratory stopover point for birds that feed on the shrimp.
But since the federal Bureau of Land Management first issued mining leases in 1963, mining companies have been pumping the brine into facilities across Interstate 80, south of the salt flats.
Lithium Americas, which is developing a brine lithium project in Argentina with China's Ganfeng Lithium Co , has not yet secured financing for Thacker Pass, a process expected to begin next year.
"Think about drilling a hole 2,000 meters long, through rock, to hit brine in Utah, and coming up with negligible lithium," said Jon Hykawy, a battery minerals analyst at Stormcrow Capital.
Mono Lake is three times saltier than the Pacific Ocean -- so salty, researchers said, that only two other species were ever known to live in it: brine shrimp and diving flies.
Lithium Americas, by the way, is also sitting on the former Kings Valley lithium prospect in Nevada, another potential lithium hot spot, already home to a brine facility operated by Albemarle Corp.
Albemarle previously said that it could achieve an increase in production using more efficient technology, and without extracting any more lithium-rich brine, or saltwater, from the environmentally sensitive Atacama salt flats.
" Cole, in an emailed statement, said Albemarle was confident the increase would be approved, "as it entails a project that presents a breakthrough technology to produce more lithium without using more brine.
Brine or salt to increase juiciness In the same way that you prepare to cook beef or pork, brining poultry in a saltwater solution boosts the flavor and juiciness of the meat.
Eels which delve into the lake are liable to toxic shock, and millions watched the eerie sight of the fish convulsing and tying itself in literal knots after diving into the brine.
Leave it to chef Naomi Pomeroy to take it to the next level; after all, she did teach us how to upgrade our turkey via a spiced cognac brine and truffle butter.
Today, NASA notes, the lake's water is three to five times saltier than the ocean's, creating a rich ecosystem that sustains brine shrimp, millions of migratory birds, waterfowl hunting, and so on.
Put the turkey into the brine the night before the big day (remember to remove the neck and giblets that are inside the turkey first please) and place it in the refrigerator.
Last June, the company installed a smallish data center on a patch of seabed just off the coast of Scotland's Orkney Islands; around it, approximately 933,333 bucketfuls of brine circulate every hour.
The brand has made the pouched pickle in eight different flavors and also sells its famous pickle brine by the bottle — which is supposedly great in mix drinks or for chasing shots.
BEIJING, Aug 18 (Reuters) - China's Ganfeng Lithium said on Sunday it had completed a $160 million deal to raise its stake in the Cauchari-Olaroz lithium brine project in Argentina to 50%.
But salts like magnesium, calcium and sodium already found on Mars could help the water to form a brine, which would lower the melting point to allow the lake to remain liquid.
Pipes almost 100 feet long have been sunk into the ground at roughly three-foot intervals, and filled with a brine solution supercooled to minus 30 degrees Celsius, or minus 22 Fahrenheit.
Even a Hawaiian-themed fried rice (with a wink of a mai tai paper umbrella) is improbably good, the pineapple's sweetness muted, yielding to ham and shrimp with their hits of brine.
In New Jersey, the Department of Transportation had used 700,2129 tons of South American salt, 22015,413 gallons of liquid calcium and 241,22.49 gallons of brine to clear roads as of Dec. 22014.
The menu reaches from the highlands to the sea, with earthy llapingachos, achiote-stained potato cakes with gooey hearts of mozzarella, served alongside encebollado, a stew of barely poached tuna, leaching brine.
In 2014, my Detroit pickle empire Perkins Pickles had the opportunity to start distributing on the West Coast, so I set out on a brine-scouting trip between Portland and Los Angeles.
Trebbio Journal TREBBIO, Italy — Deep in the Tuscan countryside, between a hill and a bleating sheep, Gianluca Tonelli tended to 303 pounds of pastrami soaking in a plastic container filled with brine.
He said hello to his two sons and his dog and his pig and his in-laws, and checked on the sous vide machine, the Coldline blast chiller, the brine, the smoker.
Uralkali had previously been cleared of any liability after an incident, in 2006, in which a mine in the Ural Mountains flooded with brine and a huge sinkhole opened in the ground.
"Britain is a global leader on tobacco control and our robust policies mean smoking rates have fallen to record lows," Public Health Minister Steve Brine said in a statement announcing the campaign.
Today, surface mining of the brine has largely ceased, but it is still being pumped out of wells on the mining company property by Intrepid Potash, current holder of the mining lease.
For dinner, Zhang kills a rooster for us and marinates it in a brine of chili oil, salt, chicken essence, and douban—a paste made with fermented broad beans and chili peppers.
The reason for this is that the salty brine sinks to the ocean floor, where plants and other aquatic life struggle to adapt to the rapid increase in the salinity of their environment.
Once in the saline reservoir, the CO11.53 reacts with brine and rock, which binds it in place, and the basin is topped with a layer of impermeable rock, ensuring the gas won't escape.
But cobalt's supply chain is much more fragile than that of lithium, with its big, established players operating brine lakes in the relatively stable environment of the "Lithium Triangle" straddling Chile and Argentina.
The treat also has a tang to it, which makes it taste similar to a half-sour pickle, or a pickled cucumber that spends only a short amount of time in its brine.
Albemarle asked for the increase last year, citing technological advancements that the company says allow it to obtain more of the mineral without needing to extract more brine, Corfo said in a statement.
The regulator-approved plan includes a new online system to monitor SQM's extraction rates of brine, which holds lithium in suspension, as well as its use of fresh water used in industrial processes.
But on Tuesday, the government announced that boys between 2417 and 22016 in England will be given a vaccine to protect them against HPV-related cancers, according to Public Health Minister Steve Brine.
Wanderlust On a sultry night in Accra, the air smells of wood smoke, brine from the wet but welcome breezes off the Gulf of Guinea and the plumeria trees that line the streets.
The name is believed to have been invented in Williamsburg back in 2006, when bars in the Brooklyn neighbourhood began to offer Old Crow bourbon and pickle brine made by local brand McClure's.
In "Stuffed Peppers" (1970), an asymmetrical pattern of vertical window reflections acts as a single-axis grid, flattening the picture in spite of the carefully modelled forms stacked in each jar's pale brine.
Setting up the brisket and the brine won't take 20 minutes, not counting the shopping, and it will pay off at 10 times the investment when you pull it out five days later.
Salt in the brine seasons the poultry and promotes a change in its protein structure, reducing its overall toughness and creating gaps that fill up with water and keep the meat juicy and flavorful.
Brine can cut levels of oxygen in seawater near desalination plants with "profound impacts" on shellfish, crabs and other creatures on the seabed, leading to "ecological effects observable throughout the food chain", he said.
But according to family lore, she was also known to have drowned "superfluous" kittens in a vat of pickle brine, a slice of 403th-century vérité it's hard to imagine the Apple show touching.
Potential applications range from preventing the icing of aircraft wings by freezing rain to reducing the corrosive effects of brine from ocean spray—and even helping people stay snug and dry inside waterproof clothing.
You can get a crispy skin with a wet brine, but you have to stick it in the fridge and let it dry for at least 12 hours so all that moisture gets out.
HERRING (genus Clupea, with four species found in the Baltic and North Seas) have been vital to northern Europe's economy since the Middle Ages, when fishermen worked out how to preserve them in brine.
She wondered whether adding these beads to the brine tanks in which olives are stored prior to processing with lye might make it possible to debitter olives without having to use lye at all.
The rover will also be equipped with a ground-penetrating radar called RIMFAX, which can investigate tens of meters beneath the surface it is traversing and look for unusual features like ice or brine.
Just get a big old salmon fillet; brine it for a couple of days in a mix of sugar, salt, alcohol, lemon, and spices; and chill for a couple of days while it cures.
I'd brine it overnight, put it in the bag with some salt, brown sugar and a little liquid smoke, and then cook it sous vide for a full 24 hours at around 22 degrees.
Auntie Kim also taught Mr. Tang to make bun rieu cua, rice noodles in a dusky red tomato broth with brine leaching from a rubble of crab paste, ground pork, egg and dried shrimp.
Barely touched by the heat of the other ingredients, the urchin maintained its brilliant color, along with enough brine and sweetness to balance both the sausage's fat and the bitter bite of the favas.
I make "regular" dessert too, but there was an chocolate avocado mousse tart with aquafaba (chickpea brine) whip cream that once stole the show, and taught me how amazing healthy-ish desserts can be.
What most distinguishes this family of cheese is that, during the aging process, the outside of each wheel is given naughty little wipedowns with some sort of liquid—usually a salt brine or alcohol.
The chef, Jason Aldous, forages and then finesses hyper-fresh ingredients — fiddlehead ferns, ramps, organic duck eggs, local oysters — into dishes that highlight the crisp brine of the waters and earthiness of the terroir.
The industry argues that if done correctly, locating outlet pipes properly and equipping them with diffusers and other devices to immediately dilute the brine, most, if not all, of those problems can be avoided.
About thirty homes within a mile of the well were evacuated and the EPA said more than 5,000 gallons of affected brine and water were discharged into streams that flow into the Ohio River.
For a Tuesday night meal, you could cut Tejal Rao's recipe for Somali-style rice in half for a fine and substantial vegetarian meal, or quick-brine some fish for the grill, guide-style.
On the tapas side, we have wonderfully crunchy croquetas with a soft core of warm raclette, pink shavings of jamón Ibérico, and a plate of anchovies, three cured in oil and three in brine.
Read for all this, but mostly to savor lines like these: 'he plunged into the sea and swooped between/the waves, just like a seagull catching fish,/wetting its whirring wings in tireless brine.
Desalination plants pump out 142 million cubic meters (5 billion cubic feet) of salty brine every day, 50 percent more than previous estimates, to produce 95 million cubic meters of fresh water, the study said.
Gurpal Toor, a water quality expert at the University of Maryland who was not involved in the study, said brine "could be a serious issue in a small body of water" like an inland lake.
The next day, remove the chicken from the brine and dry completely (you can leave it to dry for a few hours if you have the time, otherwise, just with some paper towels will do).
Its tail is visible in glimpses amid the froth to the right, while in the middle, an oarsman struggles to keep afloat his small boat, from which his mates have been tossed into the brine.
A dark drive across South Carolina gives the imagination something to do: "a plank of reflective dashes" and "the stink of brine like diesel" mean that we're reading a poem about driving on a bridge.
I could get used to this, I thought, as we sailed through the great blue expanse toward Manhattan, the skyline growing more majestic by the minute, the air invigorated by a sea and salt brine.
A spokesman for Chile's DGA water authority told Reuters that a benchmark assessment of the salt flat's brine and water supply, initially due by December 2018, had been delayed until the second half of 2019.
At Bolivia's Uyuni project, lithium-infused brine lies beneath 10,000 square kilometers of shining white salt, the remains of a vast prehistoric lake on a high Andean plateau that draws thousands of tourists each year.
Less fatty than the urchins I'd enjoyed as sushi, these carried an initial smack of brine followed by a lingering finish at the back of the tongue that varied from mildly sweet to downright honeyed.
And then, of course, the stuffing would need butter, herbs and something sweet to balance out the vinegar's edge, so I quartered some prunes and added them into the brine so they would plump up.
CURED AND UNCURED Virtually all sausages, except for fresh ones that require cooking like Italian sausage or fresh chorizo, are cured, since "cured" simply means preserved, whether it's with salt, smoke, brine or other methods.

No results under this filter, show 589 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.