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"curdle" Definitions
  1. [intransitive, transitive] curdle (something) when a liquid, especially milk, curdles or something curdles it, it separates into solid and liquid parts
  2. [intransitive, transitive] curdle (something) if something curdles your blood or makes your blood curdle, it makes you extremely frightened or shocked see also blood-curdlingTopics Feelingsc2

101 Sentences With "curdle"

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

Set aside to allow milk to curdle (curdle effect will be better with soy milk). 3.
But now it seems that enchantment has begun to curdle.
Opinion Life on the defensive can curdle into reactionary politics.
Dear Heloise: What makes milk curdle in cream of tomato soup?
Anodyne still lifes and depopulated landscapes curdle into premonitions of disaster.
Plus, those things curdle and make a mess of my wash sink.
But when the claims appear to hide wrongdoing, they begin to curdle.
Since then, however, the enthusiasm that greeted his election has begun to curdle.
Deceit will curdle a happy relationship much quicker than a high-octane libido.
Then the cheese master plays with time and temperature to curdle the milk.
How does the love at the heart of fandom curdle into something so caustic?
Already, frustration with Pelosi in the Democratic base is threatening to curdle into despair.
Bit by bit, that culture began to curdle and metastasize, from invisibly to visibly poisonous.
But what was initially a positive experience began to curdle when other fans became jealous.
And while Didion's estrangement sharpens her reportorial eye, it can curdle, at times, into condescension.
Thanks to its composition, camel milk is very difficult to curdle and won't coagulate well.
It's like the entire home was dipped into an Instagram filter and then left to curdle.
You want the melted butter warm, but not so hot so as to curdle the eggs.
"The milk is too light to curdle, so you have to trick the milk," explains Khoubbane.
When we wanted to explain how once-hopeful democracies curdle into majoritarian extremism, Max went to Myanmar.
Exceptionality might fade to proficiency; motivation might curdle into frustration or boredom; interests might lose their appeal.
They heat it in vast copper cauldrons then curdle it with an enzyme found in cow stomachs.
Early cheese makers, for example, made milk curdle by adding a piece of calf stomach to it.
It sets out to explore what happens when the lies we tell about happy endings start to curdle.
So there are blog posts — in which you can see minimalism's can-do optimism curdle into something tyrannical.
The main thing here is to make sure the milk doesn't curdle into tiny chunks in your drink.
Those delicate egg-based mixtures should not be heated higher than about 170 degrees Fahrenheit, lest the eggs curdle.
Guilt and resentment curdle their lives as Makiko ponders the move she thinks will restart her life: breast implants.
And no doubt, what Sanders has set in motion is not going to curdle in Vermont after the convention.
And then there was Costello's bass, which emanated a deep, ugly curdle—the aural equivalent of a stomach ulcer.
But life on the defensive can also foster a kind of ideological contrarianism that can curdle into reactionary politics.
It is the late 1960s, almost two decades into Queen Elizabeth's reign, and public opinion has begun to curdle.
"It's usually thicker and doesn't curdle or chunk up in iced drinks like almond milk can," explains Allison Crooks, 232.
Most cheese is made using starter cultures, bacteria that curdle the milk, and often, those starters come from a packet.
Soy milk and almond milk, for example, can curdle in coffee if its temperature is significantly different than the coffee itself.
Even if you're able to keep your supply refrigerated, milk only lasts so long before it starts to stink and curdle.
But, early on, I worried that Taylor might curdle into sainthood, becoming a figure of alien purity, as representational pioneers often do.
Note: The figure may curdle the dish, unless he appears at first to be a joke, a clown, or a total idiot.
As it turns out, Erlich was the cream sauce of the show, a gooey, heavy richness that while indulgent, had begun to curdle.
As sexual and ideological rifts curdle their romantic attraction, she is drawn into another, purer entanglement, with a sensitive refugee from the Balkans.
It's also a game that captures the horror of the way relationships can change and curdle, and the various forms that hauntings can take.
Sinan himself often resembles a Dostoyevsky character — a man whose aspirations outstrip his prospects and whose romantic temperament threatens to curdle into corrosive cynicism.
Elsewhere, artists probe the act of looking and seeing, creating surfaces that shift and curdle, complicating any cursory impression one might have of their subjects.
Irritation pulses through Oh No: you can hear them in the album's dizzying rhythms, in the synths that slowly warp and curdle around Lanza's voice.
It's important to start collecting right away: if the salt isn't scooped up quickly enough, it sinks to the bottom and will start to curdle.
Others, mainly Democrats and anyone who witnessed his response during the AIDS epidemic, believe that Reagan let his country curdle while ignoring the AIDS crisis.
At the precise moment it curdles — it&aposs allowed to curdle until the optimal point and then the curds are cut very delicately, very slowly.
Unlike their elders, they hadn't watched the radical promise of the late '60s curdle into violence and farce, and so weren't disillusioned with the left.
But it was a strange show, garish even by the standards of WWE excess, and yet another overlong show which made the bad parts curdle.
Instead of trying to support each other and work through their issues as a group, the incels in certain communities allow their resentments to curdle.
Some remain consistent sources of wonder and awe and provocation for century upon century; others, removed from their context, curdle into irrelevance, if not offensiveness.
"It's going to curdle or something," my friend said, revolted, as if dumping an IPA into a hefeweizen would create some kind of strange, toxic sludge.
Take care that it does not curdle, and that the flour is not in lumps; serve it up with the last oysters that were put in.
It's a vision of black life in the city at a moment of change, as the achievements of the Civil Rights movement have begun to curdle.
She cries out in horror and cradles the newborn as it dies, praying for it—a scene of such devastation that it could curdle into bathos.
We've done that before, several times before, and the crowd's surprising acceptance of the two aging superstars' respective wins can quickly curdle if we do it again.
Stir gently over very low heat to achieve a creamy, slightly thickened sauce, taking care not to get it too hot, which would cause it to curdle.
In Wind Gap, where the idea that women must be nurturing and self-sacrificing has hung around for long enough to curdle, it's a devilishly effective strategy.
It wasn't long after we set off along the twisty, hilly roads alongside the Brandywine Creek that the smell began to curdle the beer in my stomach.
Team chemistry — particularly the relationship between defensive end Sheldon Richardson and wide receiver Brandon Marshall — seemed to curdle early in the season, when the losses piled up.
Witches have long been portrayed in popular culture as dark and sinister beings — often with warted noses, green skin, and shrill voices that can make your blood curdle.
For those earlier feminists, the shock of recognition in other women's stories turned the personal into the political (a once-radical notion, now threatening to curdle into cliché).
Best of all, if the horrors of the day visit you in your sleep, this pillow is conveniently located under your head to un-blood-curdle your screams.
Her knowledge of the painful trade-offs of governing can curdle into a paralyzing recognition of all the ways she could be attacked for taking a clear position.
"[It] curdles quickly, and the curdle is highly elastic and can be handled almost like a dough, easing the cheese production, both fresh and dried," the book says.
The movie is fascinating, not despite but because of these contradictions, which suggest how perilously easy it is for even the loftiest ideals to curdle into their exact opposite.
Drones should be able to carry much-needed supplies — but before they do, they should definitely be studied to make sure they aren't going to curdle the blood or anything.
Their (supposed) on-set tension only continued to curdle once the movie premiered — but I'll leave it to Feud to tell you all about that when the time is right.
"Lust for Life" is perhaps best remembered, however, for van Gogh's contentious back-and-forth with Paul Gauguin (Anthony Quinn), a relationship in which shared interests curdle into vicious rivalry.
Even when some films curdle into critically sour messes (see: Suicide Squad) or directors leave a project (see: Ant-Man), the public statements from those involved remain polite and unspecific.
In this, the video examines the tension between how the characters acted in the original Roseanne as opposed to the reboot, and how working-class sympathies can curdle into cultural resentment.
But he has not abandoned his aggressively dour worldview and resolute pessimism, particularly when it comes to romance, which he portrays as ephemeral and doomed to curdle into tension and ire.
And for them and for others (including the N.R.A. these days), the guns-and-citizenship ideal can curdle into a crude myself-alone libertarianism for an age of polarization and mistrust.
Sometimes the cheerful ones curdle too: on "We Belong Together," another duet between Koenig and Haim, the cutesy, mock-eager guitar strumming complements how sappily the singers coo at each other.
The opening number, "The Whiskey Song," was an uproarious drinking anthem during which the bacchanalian delights celebrated in the first verse curdle into groans as the performers' overindulgence catches up with them.
In late 2013, human rights activists said, it delayed releasing the list because it worried that the move — coming just before the Winter Olympic Games in Sochi, Russia — would further curdle relations.
Without astute comic performances like these the play might curdle before revealing itself fully as a fable for our times, about people so uncertain of the right path that they risk taking none.
It Chapter Two never really depicts the way dewy sentimentality can curdle into pain and regret or considers whether the other side of middle age offers a way of letting go of the past.
Simmons, George, Covington, Dario Saric, and Embiid would curdle the NBA's most fluid offenses, obliterate opponents on the glass, and create various size-related advantages when they have the ball for the next two years.
Also, you know, I hate to be a broken record, but there's this show with amateur British bakers, and if their meringues curdle it's no one's fault but theirs, for not watching them more closely.
I could get a Colgate Connect toothbrush to map my mouth and give me pointers; a Roomba vacuuming robot to clean up after me; or a smart refrigerator to warn me that the milk might curdle.
This past year dropped floodlights into the biblical depths of human behavior — the way an obsession with control or some sadness within a person can curdle and warp in the dark of a professional, civilized society.
She whisks frozen passionfruit pulp (you could also use fresh passionfruit), eggs, sugar and coconut oil together in a small saucepan until the sugar is dissolved, constantly stirring so the egg can cook but not curdle.
And with no one pointing a way through the paralysis, either in Washington or Western capitals like Brussels, democracy itself has seemed to curdle, especially with the Arab Spring degenerating into something close to civilizational collapse.
For years, I thought my alma mater, Penn State, was the exception to the rule, until it proved not to be the exception but the primary example of how any sort of Grand Experiment could ultimately curdle.
Freestyling, unless it is immaculately funny and uncannily anchored in the specifics of the moment—if it includes, say, a description of something somebody's wearing, the better to prove genuine spontaneity—tends to curdle quickly into kitsch.
Because those activists' tendency to view the party as a monolithically hostile, alien force carries with it a major downside, which was all too painfully manifested in 2016: Useful critique and insurgent energy can curdle into cynical disaffection.
The Rangers know how swiftly a series can curdle, how the vagaries of a frozen puck can deflate a team, a building and a city, and how any momentum gleaned vanishes as soon as the final horn blares.
In Brooklyn, his fourth home in four years, Howard's role under a coach who is allergic to dawdling post-ups and stale offense could curdle a positive yet delicate culture that seems to be heading in the right direction.
Somewhere near its core, Billions is an exploration of toxic masculinity, of the ways that codes of behavior between men can sometimes curdle and go wrong, most obviously affecting the women around those men but also hurting the men themselves.
She doesn't absorb my animus the way my toddler might, to let it curdle his development and turn that one boiled-over rage into the malignancy that ruins in his life and racks up thousands of dollars of therapy bills.
That the pugnacious debunkers of the earlier "Penn & Teller: Bullshit!" whose skepticism has been prone, on occasion, to curdle into what my daughter's kindergarten teacher calls "yucking someone else's yum," would turn into such enthusiastic, generous, downright sweet yummers of yuck.
There are piano notes that seem to echo across ruined spaces; sustained electronic tones that curdle aggressively into distortion; dense but distant orchestral thickets; "instruments" with an acoustic core that have been so heavily manipulated that they are no longer recognizable as physical sources.
There are piano notes that seem to echo across ruined spaces; sustained electronic tones that curdle aggressively into distortion; dense but distant orchestral thickets; "instruments" with an acoustic core that have been so heavily manipulated that they are no longer recognizable as physical sources.
With their frank and flexible acting, they show how easily a person might slide from vulnerability to cruelty and how a seemingly laudable goal, the desire of black South Africans to achieve equality with their white countrymen and women, can curdle into an ugly xenophobia.
This is the first time we see how much Lorelai's relationship with Emily both threatens and defines her relationship with Rory, and how easily all of the betrayal and broken expectations Lorelai feels with Emily could spill over and curdle all the warmth and affection she feels with Rory.
Making something as maligned as mayonnaise seem "cool" and "relevant" online seems sort of like Sisyphus pushing a giant tub of oil-and-vinegared eggs up a hill under the hot sun, only to curdle and cook just like the potato salad in that episode of The Office.
Today, we may giggle at the idea of #goals, but the desire to accumulate images of all the things we wish we could have and lives we wish we could live speaks to a longing and loneliness that, if it goes unacknowledged, can curdle into something much fiercer and darker.
Late Monday night, Zimmer stepped behind a lectern inside U.S. Bank Stadium looking as if he had just chugged a gallon of spoiled milk — which, to be fair, might have been more appealing than watching his team curdle on its home field against its fiercest rival with the N.F.C. North still undecided.
They set at a range that maxes out at 180 degrees (any hotter and they can curdle or scramble), which is why many recipes for such custard-based fare as cheesecakes and creme brulee call for using a water bath (or Bain-Marie) to provide moisture for the environment and keep the mix from boiling and/or cracking.
Maybe she'll swallow a word, maybe she'll strain a note, most often the Auto-Tune itself will sputter and curdle, dropping into her voicebox all sorts of digital vibrations and rhotics the human voice would have trouble producing alone, and the result is a startlingly aching and lyrical vocal portrait of flawlessness frayed at the edges, formalist craft starting to break down, a distancing strategy starting to fail, a singer starting to question her self-alienated self-mastery.

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