Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

44 Sentences With "culinarily"

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

"There will be various unique flavors that are culinarily focused," he said.
A potluck meal with your similarly culinarily-inclined friends, however, totally is.
CNBC's own culinarily challenged Eric Chemi checked out one meal from each of the three companies.
It's also a community space for people to gather; a bodega centralizes all different people, culinarily and culturally.
But across the East River in my culinarily blessed neighborhood of Jackson Heights, Queens, it's a different story.
What if the woman holding that bag of slivered almonds is, in fact, merely a culinarily adventurous hetero?
Artichokes are essentially the unflowered bulb of an edible thistle, but that doesn't do much to help us culinarily.
This book is the perfect tool for ushering the culinarily curious but timid into the world of badass home cooking.
But, I would like to be privy to every facepalm-worthy, culinarily-dubious detail, without any of the actual suffering.
And flexibility like that, Raij says, is what has allowed the Basques to retain their identity both culturally and culinarily.
I'm feeling culinarily uninspired so I scroll through saved recipes on my recipe app, but can't come up with anything.
While Kendall may not be the most culinarily-inclined of the KarJenner sisters, no one can really argue with cheesy pasta.
For chef Darren Robertson, it was "a blessing in disguise," a restriction that led to more freedom — both personally and culinarily.
But it took the input of Mr. von Stuelpnagel to make sure the play is both culinarily accurate and theatrically adept.
Get in on The Home Depot's select small kitchen appliances sale and find nifty gifts for even the most culinarily challenged.
There's even an online recipe for scones made with hagfish slime—courtesy of the Museum of Awful Food—for the culinarily adventurous.
Netflix and Amazon Prime don't even have the same movies, and yet people expect our enormous, diverse country to be culinarily synced throughout.
This is simply, culinarily stupid and wasteful (unless he's slurping all that lost butter out of the crumb tray, which frankly wouldn't surprise me).
"Because of this guy we nearly lost three of the most culinarily versatile and nutritionally potent plants on the planet: chia, amaranth and quinoa," says Brown.
Not only does it serve to make the less culinarily inclined feel more confident cooking, it shifts the narrative of what a food influencer looks like.
When you work in a restaurant, the menu changes only so often, but going out to eat really exposes you to a lot more stuff culinarily.
By 2003, when Professor Lobel earned her doctoral degree in history from the City University, culinarily inventive and locally sourced delicacies had become an American obsession.
If I'm feeling culinarily adventurous, I can spend $600 eating at restaurants and, as long as I don't go over my total spending limit, I'm still sticking to my budget.
She frequently mugs for it, then raises an eyebrow, then gives it a conspiratorial grin, as if to invite viewers into her quest to convince Midwesterners to be more culinarily adventurous.
In 2014, he became the executive chef of an outpost of the barbecue chain Kang Ho Dong Baekjeong in Manhattan's Koreatown, a neighborhood that he and his Korean-American friends considered culinarily moribund.
If this makes you a little queasy, keep in mind that New York is generally a culinarily clean city: The A rating is by far the most common, with more than 21,500 restaurants claiming that blue card.
We stopped at a town called Latacunga and ducked into a hole-in-the-wall restaurant for chugchucaras, a local dish of deep-fried pork served with a number of side dishes — more culturally charming than culinarily compelling.
If you don't live in queso country, fear not—for you, we have the dankest fondue known to man as well as a culinarily advanced but still delightfully trashy 7-Layer Dip that will rock your sick, sad world.
But seemingly the biggest reason why Trader Joe's has gone all-in on pumpkin spice, besides the obvious reason that it sells and Trader Joe's is in the business of selling things, is that it's a perfect fit culinarily.
They will take the place of Dottir's young chef Victoria Eliasdottir (the half sister of the likewise culinarily inclined artist Olafur Eliasson, who has his own cookbook); she will be cooking in Hong Kong for the next two weeks.
"What we tend to forget is that China, although it's one massive country, it really is the size of Europe and it's just as complex, historically, culturally, and culinarily, as Europe," Phillips told me, not assuaging my fears one bit.
Walk in and out of a half-dozen other shops and end up in a kitchen store, where I pick up a spice grinder and a flight of salts for my culinarily-inclined cousin and a few magnets for my sister ($69.63).
Sitting down at an outdoor table to enjoy slabs of Queijo Vaquinha on thick, fresh bread with a strong local coffee and a fresh sea breeze is more or less obligatory for any culinarily curious visitor to Terceira, but it's just the tip of a particularly tasty iceberg.
I'm not about to launch into a slagathon—a fish-in-barrel-shooting peppered with deep-fried Mars bars and Irn Bru—but even with all nationalistic love, I have to say that my home country's reputation as being culinarily challenged has not been achieved without putting in the work.
"Quite a few of the entries would actually end with "$0" but would consist of a long description of what was or wasn't happening at work, getting frantic calls from one's parents, or (in the case of a few of our culinarily blessed participants) the most amazing half-recipes for what we were currently cooking," explained Cindy.
But the most successful Asian chains planting US roots — Din Tai Fung, Little Sheep Hot Pot, and Ippudo Ramen — do well because they offer an experience that is true to their home cultures, not a watered-down version that condescends to an audience of American diners who are more culturally literate and culinarily adventurous than ever before.
Then there's the jaw-cracking, mouth-slicing kettle chips that are marketed as a more "authentic" potato chip experience; the "healthy" oven-baked potato chips that gained popularity in the '90s, along with bagel and taro chips; and the popular Popchip, made by subjecting potato starches to high pressure to create the distinctive (and culinarily vapid) puff.
But Matt and Emily Hyland, the restaurateurs behind Violet, made their name, in part, by giving a platform to a specialty of Michigan, another culinarily overlooked state: Detroit-style pizza—thick-crusted and rectangular, with the sauce atop the cheese instead of vice versa—served at their beloved restaurant Emmy Squared, which has locations in the East Village, Williamsburg, and Nashville, Tennessee.
The treasure he had in her, culinarily and pecuniarily, though he didn't know it!
Older roots left in the ground become woody, after which they are no longer culinarily useful, although older plants can be dug and re-divided to start new plants. The early season leaves can be distinctively different, asymmetric spiky, before the mature typical flat broad leaves start to be developed.
Melanogaster Cross Section Melanogaster is a genus of fungus that resemble truffles, and are often mistaken for them. However, they do not have the characteristic aroma and value of truffles, although some have been used culinarily. None are known to be poisonous. The genus contains 25 species that collectively have a widespread distribution.
It is a good source of fiber, vitamin C, magnesium, and potassium; and it is a source of vitamin A. Although botanically a fruit, butternut squash is used culinarily as a vegetable that can be roasted, sautéed, toasted, puréed for soups such as squash soup, or mashed to be used in casseroles, breads, muffins, and pies. The squash is also used as an alternative diet for Monarch butterfly caterpillars alongside cucumbers. It is part of the same squash family as ponca, waltham, pumpkin, and calabaza.
Managing Editor Gary Schwiekhart wrote that Beardemphl and Ross, both accomplished chefs, "deeply despised one another, both journalistically and culinarily, and frequently used their newspapers to launch vicious personal attacks" on each other. Beardemphl hired Jack Nichols as his news editor, and in 1982 brought Alfred back, this time as Editor-in-Chief. Beardemphl refused to use the word gay, preferring homosexual, and he initially thought that the idea of a gay-related immune deficiency disease was a government plot to stop the gay community from having fun. Beardemphl wrote an April Fools' Day editorial in 1982 lampooning the new disease: "Gay Cancer Caused by Brunch".
The species was first described in Flora de Filipinas. Según el sistema sexual de Linneo (1837) by the Spanish friar and botanist Francisco Manuel Blanco from specimens in the Philippines. The specific name is derived from Tagalog kamansi (Philippine Spanish: camansi), a local name for the tree in the islands. Other common names for plant include chataigne, castaña 'tropical' (French and Spanish for the unrelated but culinarily similar chestnut), kapiak in New Guinea, katahar in Guyana, kluwih in Indonesia, kulur or sukun biji in Malaysia, kos-del (කොස්දෙල් ) in Sri Lanka, pan de fruta in Dominican Republic (Spanish for its relative breadfruit), and pana de pepita in Puerto Rico.

No results under this filter, show 44 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.