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"ripen" Definitions
  1. ripen (something) to become ripe; to make something ripe

184 Sentences With "ripen"

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

You have the same problem as in Bordeaux getting them to ripen, and getting each part to ripen at the same time.
Basically, some fruits and vegetables produce a gas as they ripen and that gas, called ethylene, can make some other produce ripen too quickly and begin to rot.
In August they'd ripen in the marsh below our house.
Some just pop out, some need more time to ripen.
Then, let it ripen at home over a few days.
Another consultant, Ripen eCommerce, analyzed 746,000 product searches on Amazon.
Pinot noir grapes ripen in the Willamette Valley of Oregon.
"There's a great deal on ripen-at-home avocados," the voiceover said.
Spaceports, though, aren't only banking on the slow-to-ripen commercial industry.
" More controversially, they say that historical practices "can ripen into constitutional rules.
That requires pickers to select and hand-pick berries as they ripen.
Many fruits produce a barely detectable chemical called ethylene as they ripen.
It waits for a market or market demand to ripen and then strikes.
Libra season coincides with the autumn harvest, when pumpkins ripen right before Halloween.
They stay fresh on the tree for weeks, but ripen quickly once harvested.
I planted tomatoes, because I wanted to see something ripen on the vine.
Hungary has a long growing season and moderate climate, allowing fruit to ripen properly.
It may be cool to buy some avocados today and allow them to ripen.
It was one of those hot summer days when the clouds ripen and burst.
The harvest season of Tanzania is October to February, and berries don't ripen uniformly.
If we believe Phillips' Jerk Theory, he didn't ripen so much as he indurated.
"Upon demand, we'll ripen it and ship it out to the customers," said Barnard.
He plans to keep scouring the landscape before the crops ripen or the rain returns.
Muzaffarpur is a major hub for growing lychees, which ripen at this time of year.
I now live with someone who thinks potatoes ripen above ground, hanging from potato bushes.
It's expected to legislatively "ripen" this week so a vote is possible, but not set.
"We simply don't have the problem of getting grapes to ripen anymore," said Mr. Würtz.
Blight-proof peppers, disease-repelling grapes, and rot-resistant raspberries ripen just behind the frosty glass.
This depression has just 24 hours or so to ripen into a full-fledged tropical storm.
Our mezcal is a touch sweeter because our mezcalero lets the agaves ripen a little longer.
Fresh, wobbly curds are ladled by hand into molds to ripen with microbes in humid conditions.
Another emerging issue: Grapes ripen earlier, and swallows and crows are eating fruit before the harvest.
For example, when grapes ripen, researchers cover them with nets to shield them from the sun.
David Rekuc, the marketing director for the e-commerce consultancy Ripen eCommerce, is skeptical that it is.
David Rekuc, the marketing directing for the e-commerce consultancy Ripen eCommerce, is skeptical that it is.
If certain produce items are nearby, the gas will lead them to ripen more quickly as well.
Thousands of green coffee berries turn brilliant red as they ripen, ready to be harvested by hand.
Oliva stored a new loaf of cheese on a straw bed to ripen before bringing it to market.
Let pears get super ripe Not all fruits continue to ripen after they've been harvested, but pears do.
Often the birds wait until the farmers cut the poppy pods to help them ripen, according to Earth.
But as conditions tend to ripen, you may see a tornado watch issued by the National Weather Service.
Ryan suggested the legislation still needs time to ripen amid continued instances of mass shootings around the country.
He observed that in Napa Valley, even in the best years, it was difficult to ripen grapes fully.
The vineyard is 1,000 meters high, or about 3,300 feet, the upward limit at which nerello can ripen.
Left to ripen on the stalk, the wheat will continue to dry down over the next several days.
Warmer summers mean that the grapes mature and ripen more quickly, translating to harvests that must happen earlier.
The San Marzanos will slowly ripen over the course of the winter because they're still on the vine.
The fruits of Democrats' post-2016 efforts, and anger over what's happened since, has already begun to ripen.
Barbera doesn't need quite as much heat or light, while dolcetto will ripen quite happily just about anywhere.
Their fruits grow at the same rate, in the same abundance, and ripen at precisely the same time.
And research from the University of Innsbruck found that allowing pears to really ripen increases levels of certain antioxidants.
By tomorrow we'll have more and more and more, but we'll have to let them ripen over the week.
The window between unripe and too ripe is a narrow one: Too much natural lighting and they ripen quickly.
The sky could ripen your vines or ruin your crops and there was nothing you could do about it.
The star fruit are coming into season now, and the first few to ripen are scattered on the ground.
The best grows naturally here in the high elevations, the green berries protected by the shade until they ripen.
Grapes don't continue to ripen once picked, so they stay as sour or as sweet as when they're harvested.
Other tribes also called it the "moon when all things ripen" the "blueberry moon" or the "wheat cut moon."
Green as the leaves beneath them, immature fruit use sunlight to manufacture sugar, and in this way they ripen.
So far, researchers have developed various strains of tomatoes that can resist disease, ripen faster, and don't produce seeds.
And you had to wait for the problem to ripen to an international issue involving, this time, so many countries.
But if there is one thing that can put us off 'nanners altogether, it's how quickly the damn things ripen.
I like to buy my stone fruit a few days before making my pie, giving everything a chance to ripen.
A drawback before the ripening rooms was Chinese consumers having to wait for the fruit to ripen before consuming it.
I don't want to do that because I feel like I will, to quote Woody Allen, 'ripen and then rot.
It doesn't ripen or deepen in the manner of cheese and wine, and it doesn't fall apart, at least not figuratively.
Unlike in Napa, Sonoma and Paso Robles, other California sources for cabernet, it's a struggle to ripen cabernet in these hills.
Like Facebook, it may be going public a bit early — and it may take time for revenue to ripen into profit.
Once they've reached their destination, the crescent-shaped fruits are placed in sealed, heated rooms to make them ripen once again.
In that same paragraph, Justice Stevens made a second prediction, one that took a little longer to ripen into brilliant wrongness.
Vodka is thought to inhibit the production of ethylene, a gaseous hormone that causes flowers to mature and fruits to ripen.
"Grapes were able to ripen well at 500 to 550 meters, but not at 750, so it was abandoned," Mr. Torres said.
Some have focused on offerings that ripen in late December and January, when the main commercial varieties are not at their best.
Before they ripen it is up to Mrs May to light the proverbial candles, to head off the chilling effects of Brexit.
In September, when the apples ripen, Neighbors are welcome to pick them, even Those rare Arkansas Blacks that spill over The hedge.
He then turned his hand to growing fruit but, in his inexperience, planted mostly apple varieties that ripen in summer and fall.
This process is called chaptalization, and it is more common in cooler wine regions such as Oregon, where grapes ripen more slowly.
Nebbiolo is the most difficult of the grapes to ripen, and so it will have the warmest, sunniest places in the vineyard.
Vintners historically produce top wines when an early wet season soaks the plants and a drought succeeds it, allowing the fruit to ripen.
The new additive lengthens that ripe window, but warning: It also means that the fruit takes at least twice as long to ripen.
It was warmer and drier than 2011, without any of the anxiety over whether the grapes would ripen before the fall rains began.
"You can let it sit in your place for two to three days at 65 degrees, and [it] will ripen naturally," he says.
A little over 44 percent of the products — some sold directly by Amazon, others by third parties — were billed as discounted, Ripen said.
Unlike tomatoes, say, which are picked green and bred tough for transport, beans can ripen on the vine and stay sturdy once dried.
Some residents, however, refuse to attend Sunday Mass in a church where the former nave had been repurposed to store and ripen cheese.
Climate change has steadily pushed up temperatures, providing ideal conditions for the chardonnay and pinot noir grapes that had sometimes struggled to ripen.
Indeed, the Champagne region was once considered a marginal climate, on the blurry edge of the line at which grapes could reliably ripen.
That morning he stopped his truck to buy two giant avocados from a street seller, even though they looked unlikely to ripen for months.
The fruit trees are tagged with basic information, indicating when the tree will be ripen and that the fruit is for sharing with others.
Cooler temperatures allow the coffee to ripen more slowly -- and that means more time to develop more complex flavor elements like acidity and sweetness.
I think this one is getting ready to ripen and I promise we will be doing a deeper dive on the subject very soon.
While other stone fruits grow tender on the surface as they ripen, apricots take an alternate path to maturity, softening from the inside out.
"I'll be filing cloture on Secretary of State nominee [Rex] Tillerson, which will ripen next week," McConnell told reporters during a weekly press conference.
In the old days, you'd buy a pear or an avocado and put it in your fruit bowl for a few days to ripen.
This allows them to ripen ... This technology ... It's a thing, a wrap without chemicals so you don't have to use chemicals to do it.
Mold added to the milk eventually develops into a soft white rind as it ages, and begins to ripen the cheese from the outside in.
That, he said, was why so many producers delay picking their grapes, because they were waiting for all the elements of the grape to ripen.
Their airy, dough-like interior transforms as the spores within ripen, turning it from milky white to yellowish and finally to a dark brownish purple.
It made sense because of the diverse soils and the cool climate, in which riesling can thrive while many other grapes often struggle to ripen.
Other varieties ripen to satin creaminess, like the fruity Ameribella and the mushroomy JQ: Jacobs & Brichford Farmstead Cheeses, $5.75 to $6.75 per quarter pound, jandbcheese.com.
The story and central ideas still need time to ripen and connect; they remain merely suggestive, slightly unsure, a little garbled, like Yoshiko's own reasoning.
I could probably embezzle another moment or two of watching it ripen, but I put my back to the miraculous and get on with life.
It makes sense, Apeel says, to start with avocados since they ripen so quickly, and that U.S. produced 2.4 billion pounds of the fruit last year.
As you probably know, avocados darken as they ripen, and the sticker has three shades of green to correspond with key stages of the ripening process.
Illustration by Edward Gorey / Courtesy the Edward Gorey Charitable Trust These dark territories give the book's overt themes a place in which to burrow and ripen.
Now he lets this influence ripen with a new version of Chekhov's comic drama about an aristocratic family undergoing a crisis of love and real estate.
Valtellina is also Alpine, but the grapes are planted on south-facing slopes that trap the sunlight, which helps them ripen sufficiently to make rich wines.
There would just be some ashes scattered in the Pacific Ocean, or however my family would choose to honor a life that had no chance to ripen.
They cheer them on, offer advice, and call them out when they make mistakes (see the OP who thought avocados ripen in the fridge — FYI: they don't).
Clomiphene tricks the body into producing higher levels of hormones that stimulate the ovarian follicles, causing eggs to ripen and to be released into the fallopian tubes.
After all, most of the tomatoes we eat out of season are plucked from their vines probably in Florida or Mexico, just as they started to ripen.
At the home of Barry and Shirley van Oostrom, the approach is not only green, but also dusky purple, at least when their Cabernet Cortis vines ripen.
Brown bears on Kodiak Island, across the water from Katmai, have begun eating more berries as changing conditions allow the berries to ripen later in the year.
No acquisitions made by Google or Facebook were examined, despite mounting concerns that tech giants are able to buy up new firms before they ripen into true competition.
But when temperatures rise, as they have slowly been doing in Ethiopia for years, the warmth causes the coffee to ripen too quickly, which means less flavorful beans.
PopSugar explains that the soft pink hue, which can be spotted inside the fruits as well as on the outside as the pineapples ripen, is due to lycopene.
Incidents like the one in Washington typically occur when a dense patch of tumbleweeds ripen and break off at the same time there are high winds, he said.
The mountainsides were clear-cut, and the living ecosystems of the cafetales became barren rows of bushes, with nowhere for birds to nest, berries to ripen, orchids to bloom.
Even though Sunday night's episode has been the slowest of the season, we finally got to see theories, characters, and relationships ripen — some to the the point of spoiling.
Opiates come from a milky substance in the poppy plant that occurs long before the plant's seeds ripen, and by the time that happens, any narcotic properties are gone.
From the sound of it, critics seem to think that Margaret Atwood wrote The Handmaid's Tale in 1986 just so it could ripen to its full potency in 2017.
Apples can continue to ripen if left on your counter, so you should always, always refrigerate them, or risk them turning into mealy, mushy impostors of their former selves.
As its spores ripen, the puffball's outer skin, or cuticle, develops one or two small holes called ostioles through which millions of dry spores escape at the smallest disturbance.
The fires have also disrupted production of palm trees and factories, because smoke and haze weaken photosynthesis, some commercial crop, such as palm may cost more time to ripen.
Dive in when the top of the cheese begins to sag a little bit, indicating that the inside has begun to soften and ripen into a pool of pure heaven.
So Marie was like, "Yo, father, what a great idea!" and she decided to make miniature Brie-style wheels that would ripen faster because they were so little and cute.
In her hometown, Lachiguizo, Miahuatlán, tepextate agave—one of the most labor-intensive species to harvest, in part, because it takes 30 years to ripen—tobasiche, arroqueño, jabalí and biliá, grow.
With sunnier autumns and average temperatures one degree warmer across parts of the UK than they have been throughout the 20th century, grapes have the opportunity to ripen further before harvest.
You can apply it to produce anytime during its lifespan — Apeel even claims they were able to make a bunch of bananas grown at the same time ripen on different days.
Outside his home in southern England, 250 different apple varieties ripen on a single tree — everything from the common Golden Delicious to the rare and bitter cultivars bred for making cider.
He's been taught about mulching, to trap moisture into the soil, as well as using short-season varieties that ripen in two months instead of six, giving him more reliable produce.
The untimely rain and hail over the past week could reduce the yield of the crops as they ripen and force the government to raise imports of edible oils, pulses and wheat.
Years ago, for instance, after watching wild strawberries gradually ripen amongst fields of wildflowers on our 1778 Massachusetts farmstead and then plucking them in June, at the peak of their sweetness – wow!
"I cannot run my business without migrant workers," Poskitt said after a team at his Yorkshire farm had finished planting thousands of seedlings which will grow and ripen in time for Halloween.
Of the 52 old and forgotten Catalan varieties gathered in the search, Mr. Torres and his colleagues identified six of particular interest because of their high acidity and tendency to ripen late.
Senate rules mandate that a cloture vote has to "ripen" for one full day before it the Senate can vote, unless the currently quarreling Senate unanimously decides to hold a vote sooner.
There were no defining traumas or fractures with society, only small signs that, in retrospect, hinted at trouble: too much time spent online, perhaps, or a fearlessness that could ripen into fanaticism.
The tiny hole was to allow light in, and with it, an image of the falls that would gradually ripen on a large sheet of photographic paper pinned to the tent's back wall.
When Don Luis was a boy, he was one of the children sent up those trunks to open the canopy and let in the sun when the coffee fruit was starting to ripen.
When they ripen, however, their thin husks turn tan and papery before they drop to the ground—thus their name—presumably to get eaten up and have their seeds spread by forest creatures.
Grape varieties ripen at different times, but many grapes have already been harvested by this point in the season, said Christian Butzke, professor of enology, or the study of wines, at Purdue University.
Originally it was planted around 1910 on silty, sandy soil in a sort of amphitheater facing north and east, about 3,000 feet in elevation near the limit at which nerello mascalese can ripen.
Rozman gave us each a pair of clippers and instructed us to sample the grape clusters, trimming only those that tasted "like sunshine, with acidity behind it," and leaving the rest to ripen further.
It took over two years to ripen on the vine, but it finally got off the ground when President Obama named General Stanley McChrystal as Commander of allied forces in Afghanistan in May 2900.
But they complain of government red tape that delays arrivals and of unpredictable weather patterns that can prompt fruit to ripen prematurely, before workers are scheduled to show up — which both result in losses.
After the wildflowers have gone to seed, and the seeds have had time to ripen and drop, mowers clear the entire area again to keep trees from becoming established too close to the road.
"Making banana bread" But instead of answering her question, people kept giving Teigen their tricks for how to make bananas ripen faster, and just before 2 pm on Thursday, the cookbook author had had enough.
The zip was one of the later fruits of the Industrial Revolution, and one that was slow to ripen: the internal combustion engine, the turbine and the light bulb spread across the world much faster.
But MPC members agreed that in the coming months "conditions could ripen for increasing the interest rate by 0.25 percentage points", contingent on developments regarding the inflation environment and economic developments in Israel and abroad.
The U.S. has a deficit in agricultural trade with Mexico, in part because Americans prefer Mexican tomatoes that are picked after they ripen to U.S. tomatoes that are often picked green and ripened after harvest.
In an article posted on the company's website about its move into the facility last year, officials said it would give them the ability to ripen more than two million cartons of avocados each year.
The past 15 years have only served to ripen this tale of two star-crossed summer lovers, Allie and Noah, who persevere – despite meddling parents, lost mail and even a war – to keep their relationship alive.
Unless it's meant to be eaten fresh, most cheeses need to ripen for a period of time that can last anywhere from a couple of days up to a couple of years, depending on the style.
When tomatoes ripen in California, for example, they're harvested in a 12-week period that has sorters running round the clock, up to 24 hours a day, processing as much as 800 tonnes of vegetables an hour.
He has planted cover crops in between the rows of vines to absorb heat from the summer sun and has sculpted the canopy of leaves over the vines so that the grapes ripen slowly in the luminous light.
But according to minutes of the meeting, MPC members agreed that in the coming months "conditions could ripen for increasing the interest rate by 0.25 percentage points" contingent on the inflation environment and domestic and foreign economic developments.
Other crops (notably, legumes) ripen at different intervals, or yield harvests throughout a growing season rather than along a fixed trajectory of unripe to ripe—in other words, the taxman can't come once and get his proper due.
Now the couple has a cookbook that explains peach varieties, the history of the fruit in America and how to store, ripen and peel your peaches (though they don't mention the serrated peeler I use for the job).
Mr. Doctoroff, Michael R. Bloomberg's deputy mayor for economic development and rebuilding, writes that he waited nearly a decade after leaving City Hall to write this book so that he might observe the fruits of his strategies ripen.
He paused, waiting for the assembled press who had been summoned for a photo spray to watch him seal this barrel at the Old Glory Distillery, where it will take four years to ripen into full-fledged bourbon.
Ambition alone cannot explain Offill's patient rescue of facts and fragments from old books, a forgotten town meeting, annals of lonely polar explorers; her pressing them onto the poster boards, moving them around, waiting for them to ripen.
It was on this day in 1411 that King Charles IV granted the town of Roquefort-sur-Soulzon the sole right to ripen Roquefort cheese, one of the first protected designations of origin in the history of fancy foods.
Here's how the song went: I'm Chiquita banana and I've come to say / Bananas have to ripen in a certain way / When they are fleck'd with brown and have a golden hue / Bananas taste the best and are best for you.
There are two main types of mandarin in Cuties and Halos boxes, and the earlier of these to ripen — yellow-orange clementines marketed from November to mid-January — requires a more Mediterranean climate to produce the juiciest, most flavorful fruit.
Then they stay in a humidity and temperature-controlled room (no less than 55 degrees Fahrenheit) and ingest ethylene, a gas to make them ripen, for two to four days before being transported on a temperature-controlled truck to a warehouse.
Peruvian avocados aren't identical to their Mexican counterparts: Their skin has a different texture, the flesh has a different color, and they're harvested at a different stage in their maturation process, which means that Peru's avocados need more time to ripen.
The winery is lucky to be in a microclimate that enjoys fairly stable weather with cool nights, two large lakes nearby to temper Macedonia's summer heat and dry conditions as the grapes ripen — conditions that assure good acidity for the wines.
This belief among consumers stemmed from bad harvesting practices in the early days of the Oregon Truffle industry—specifically, using rakes to pick up truffles, including ones that weren't fully ripe that developed off-flavors and aromas when forced to ripen outside.
As a cheese professional who's been working with dairy since attending college in Vermont, Sam helps age and ripen over 25,000 pounds of cheese that resides in a dank, dark cave built in the 19th century, located below the streets of Brooklyn.
"If the rains are abundant starting in April like it usually is, a lot of pods will ripen well and the harvests will be good," said Bernard Koko, who farms near Soubre, where 5.8 mm fell last week, 8.9 mm below the average.
In a northern European country where getting even a white grape variety to ripen during a normal growing season was a challenge as recently as three decades ago, the shifting weather now allows for a greater variety of grapes in more places.
American recognition of Jerusalem will not ripen diplomatic prospects; to the contrary, it is likely to diminish what little opportunity for progress exists, as this unilateral U.S. action demands nothing of the Israeli government and gives nothing to the Palestinians in Jerusalem or anywhere else.
But I'm even more surprised later on when I taste the remarkably delicious product of that slow-to-ripen Maine fruit, Oyster River's flagship 'Chaos'—a richly-textured champagne style sparkler, with bracing acidity, notes of red apples and toast, and a slightly salty finish.
When the Yankees decided last July to part ways with Aroldis Chapman, Andrew Miller, Carlos Beltran and, soon afterward, Alex Rodriguez, it was assumed that a team built around young players would need at least a couple of years to ripen into a contender.
A recent study found that as much as half of all produce in the US goes to waste or is discarded  BluApple wants to fix that problem by prolonging the freshness and storage life of fruits and vegetables by absorbing ethylene gas that causes it to over ripen.
In addition to preventing ulcers, misoprostol can also "ripen," or soften, the cervix, and cause uterine contractions, which is why OB-GYNs use it so often "off-label," or for things a drug is not FDA-approved to treat — a legal and common practice with just about every drug.
That line between too moist and not moist enough is a fine one, Kindstedt said, and one the Dutch balanced perfectly: With Edam, they ensure enough moisture to allow the cheese to ripen and be flavorful, but not too much that the cheese would rot on its travels.
The cows must be Montbéliarde, the milk must be raw and super-fresh, and the 90-pound wheels must ripen on planks made of untreated local spruce for no less than four months, and sometimes upwards of two years, where they are rubbed with sea salt and painstakingly flipped, nurtured, and coaxed to perfection.
The one person who sleeps better as a result is Vladimir Putin as he sees the fruits of his labor ripen: Russia's information warfare campaign is geared at undermining our democracy and every attack the administration makes on its foundations is a win for Putin and his ultimate objective of weakening the United States.
What they do is they ship green avocados from California to Philadelphia, they send them to the ripening center, they warm them up and get ethylene in them, so they all ripen, and then, when they're moved out to the retail stores, you're actually buying something that's almost ready to eat or ready to eat.
Daily Harvest founder Rachel Drori claims its farm-freezing technique — in which it freezes organic produce that has been picked at peak ripeness and frozen within hours right at the farm — locks in nutrients far better than the conventional method of picking produce while still green and letting it ripen in transit or on store shelves.
The onset of barbecue season, as well as what hog-industry participants call "BLT season" — the summer period where pork production is at a zenith and tomatoes ripen in the Midwest and Northeast, making the crispy sandwich a popular menu item — may help lift prices to the 90 cent-per-pound range between now and Labor Day, analysts and traders said.
Producers might also try to address some of their concerns in the vineyard, through how they manage the canopy of leaves, which can be arranged not only to allow a steady movement of air, reducing susceptibility to diseases, but also to shade grapes from the sun or to permit more direct sunlight, affecting the rate at which the grapes ripen.
Bipartisan interest in resolving the intermedia economic bottleneck problem will ripen, because neither party, and neither end of the political spectrum, will want to tell over 95% of voters across America that they must suffer through effective economic recession so their government can continue to favor the most powerful, least accountable, and most entitled corporations in America — the intermedia — with special treatment and unfair competitive advantages.

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