The flower is the part employed as a condiment coloring the food yellow.
The berry-like fruit of the pepper is more extensively used as a condiment in cooking than in the treatment of disease.
In Spain and the Philippines it is very popular as a condiment in the kitchen of the confectionery and as a flavor for chocolate; in fact in those countries it takes the place of vanilla in France.
The entire plant is edible, in the form of a salad or as a condiment with meat or fish.
The fruit of this species of pepper plant is called agí in Cuba and Porto Rico; it is in common use as a condiment in the Philippines.
It is employed chiefly as a condiment in the preparation of food, and its essential oil is used to prepare the native "anise cordial" by mixing it with alcohol obtained from the palm or from sugar cane.
When Thorley's condiment was given it required more food to produce a given amount of increase in live-weight.
Nor should anycondiment be cooked with woodcock, save butter or pork.
First comes wild boar, stewed in a delicious condiment called sour-sweet sauce, composed of almonds, pistachio nuts, and plums.
Their cooks are Michel Angelo and Leonardo da Vinci in a humbler sphere.
Since then, for Bengal Proper, the supply of the condiment has been obtained chiefly by importation, but in part by private manufacture under a System of excise.
The condiment vessels form no small part of the collection.
Major Warfield kept his word, and as soon as breakfast was over he dispatched Mrs. Condiment with a carriage filled with provisions for the sick woman.
Mrs. Condimentwent away to mix a plum pudding for dinner, and Cap was left alone.
And, with a strange smile, Mrs. Condiment hurried away just in time to escape Old Hurricane, who came raving out of the study.
And, bidding her little maid take up the night lamp, Capitola wished Mrs. Condiment good-night and left the housekeeper's room.
The entrance of Mrs. Condiment with the tea-tray put an end to the controversy.
Mrs. Condimenthad a formidable collection of accredited stories of apparitions, warnings, dreams, omens, etc.
Mrs. Condiment taught her the mysteries of cutting and basting, back-stitching and felling, hemming and seaming.
She turned her mischievous gray eyes about, pursed up her lips and asked Mrs. Condiment if she were about to open a fancy bazaar.
She soon exchanged her riding-habit for a morning wrapper, and took her needlework and sat down to sew by the side of Mrs. Condiment in the housekeeper's room.
When she entered the breakfast-room she found Mrs. Condiment already at the head of the table and Old Hurricane at the foot.
As a condiment it is useful in torpor and coldness of the digestive organs.
A liquid or semi-liquid condiment or seasoning for food.
As a condiment its properties resemble those of the onion, than which it is much more powerful.
In eating cream with fruit persons are hardly aware of the large quantity they consume, until they find it disagree with the stomach, when the condiment is blamed for the indiscretion of those who take it.
It is warm, pungent, carminative, and stomachic, and is largely used as a condiment in the East, and in Europe as an adjuvant in other medicines.
As a condiment and flavouring ingredient, it is perhaps one of the most wholesome of the aromatic kinds, and is less acrid than the peppers.
Thus the eye is gratified at the sacrifice of the stomach, and an insidious poison introduced into the system, simply to give an unnatural appearance to a condiment which tastes better without it.
The Horse Radish of our gardens is a cultivated cruciferous plant of which the fresh root is eaten, when scraped, as a condiment to correct the richness of our national roast beef.
Prior to 1720 no such condiment as Mustard in its present form was used at table in this country.
Ordinarily as a condiment of a warming character the Nutmeg is employed to correct cold indigestible food, or as a cordial addition to negus: and medicinally for languid digestion, with giddiness and flatulence, causing oppressed breathing.
Carlyle asks in Sartor Resartus about "an unknown condiment named 'point,' into the meaning of which I have vainly enquired; the victuals potato and point not appearing in any European cookery book whatever.
The roots, which are the edible part, consist of a watery fibrous pulp, which is comparatively bland, and of an external skin furnished with a pungent volatile aromatic oil which acts as a condiment to the phlegmatic pulp.
The Pennyroyal was named by the Greeks Bleekon and Gleekon, being often used by them as a condiment for seasoning different viands.
It is not improbable that the Romans, who were great eaters of Mustard-seed pounded and steeped in new wine, brought the condiment with them to our shores, and taught the ancient Britons how to prepare it.
This culinary condiment is made with Sweet Fennel, cultivated in our kitchen gardens, and which is a variety of the wild Fennel growing commonly in England as the Finkel, especially in Cornwall and Devon, on chalky cliffs near the sea.
It is the black Mustard which yields by its seeds the condiment of our tables, and the pungent yellow flour which we employ for the familiar stimulating poultice, or sinapism.
Its dried leaves are put as a pleasant condiment into soups and stuffings, being also sometimes substituted for tea.
The Russians and Germans make from Caraways a favourite liqueur "Kummel," and the Germans add them as a flavouring condiment to their sawerkraut.
At a time when the duty on salt made the condiment so dear that it was scarce in a household, the persons at table were fain to point their Potatoes at the salt cellar, and thus to cheat their imaginations.
The oil is aromatic and acrid, and has been used as a condiment and a stimulant carminative.
Immense quantities of the capsicum are used by the native population of the West Indies, Africa, and Mexico; the consumption as a condiment being almost universal, and perhaps equal in quantity to salt.
The fruit in its green state is acid, and is eaten as a condiment in Borneo.
In China, Japan, and India it is used as a condiment in the preparation of food, and is chewed to promote digestion, and the native physicians prescribe it as a carminative.
An African tree, which has been introduced into the West Indies and Brazil for the sake of its seeds, which are known as Cola, or Kola, or Goora nuts, and extensively used as a sort of condiment by the natives of Africa.
Cinnamon is much used as a condiment for its pleasant flavor, and its astringent properties are of medicinal value.
This sauce is excellent for baked fish and all roasts and boiled meats, besides being a fitting condiment for the chicken "al diavolo".
We are completely in the dark regarding salt as a condiment till Moses, in the Book of Job, asks the pertinent question, “Can anything which is unsavoury be eaten without salt?
First to arrive may be a tray crowded with ceramic saucers, no two alike in shape or glaze, each offering a condiment or plant of the season.
A new condimentis not sought so much as a new color, and a new sauce is of less interest than a new saucer.
All enjoyment and amusement is only a condiment of folly.
Take away thatcondiment of life and the word of the orator cools, the poet is laughed at, the artist perishes with his art.
A very little cassareep, which is a condiment (only obtainable at a few London shops) made from the juice of the bitter cassava, or manioc root.
It is there ground, and makes the well known condiment found on most tables.
Several jars were filled, and furnished an excellentcondiment for our suppers.
The bird is covered with a layer of fat, half an inch thick, which is melted, and collects in the body, forming a condiment which is relished as the greatest luxury of Patagonian living.
While Mr. Ezy was gone on his errand, Major Warfield, Capitola and Mrs. Condiment remained below stairs.
At this Capitola and Mrs. Condiment exchanged looks, and the old lady, thanking him for his kindness, said that if it should become necessary, she should gratefully avail herself of it.
A very unnecessary reproach, since poor Mrs. Condiment had not ventured to look any one in the face since the discovery of the fraud of which she, as well as others, had been an innocent victim.
Therefore, what did the honest soul do but steal out to the stables, saddle and mount a horse and ride back to the house just as Mrs. Condiment had come out into the poultry yard to get eggs for breakfast.
Mrs. Condiment will see that your effects are transferred to another apartment.
The good minister finding that he could make no sort of impression upon the irate old man, soon took his leave, telling Mrs. Condiment that if he could be of any service to her in her trouble she must be sure to let him know.
He did nothing for himself or others, and Mrs. Condiment and Capitola had a hot time of it in serving him.
Mrs. Condimenthad to do all the cooking and housework.
And Major Warfield, Mrs. Condiment and Capitola were the only living beings left in the old house that night.
Mrs. Condiment sighed and wiped her eyes under her spectacles.
He went through the hall and up the first flight of stairs without interruption; but on going along the hall of the second story he met Mrs. Condiment coming out of Old Hurricane's room.
Mrs. Condiment went to her store room to inspect the condition of her newly put up preserves and pickles, lest any of them should have "worked" during her absence.
He says he abstained principally from animal food; using it, if he used it at all, only as a condiment for his vegetables.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "condiment" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: condiment; flavor; relish; sauce; seasoning; spice