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Example sentences for "cookery"

Lexicographically close words:
cookbook; cooked; cookee; cooker; cookers; cookhouse; cookie; cookies; cookin; cooking
  1. Why he could condescend even to me when, in my brave ignorance, I undertook to write that weekly column on Cookery for the Pall-Mall.

  2. For one thing, I could seldom keep my weekly article on Cookery out of my mind.

  3. St. Cloup is longing for our arrival at Kurnaul, that he may vary his cookery a little.

  4. Shere Singh gave this man a rupee a day to teach his cook English cookery like ours.

  5. In fact, it appeared to me that we used to do all our compound cookery between our jaws.

  6. Cookery with us is means to an end; therefore, as much a matter of economy of time and toil as building a road.

  7. Dissimilarities as marked prevail in the cookery of the two nations.

  8. He can give and take, and slay, and allay the scruples of the conscientious, and do all things (apparently) but interfere in the cookery of a turtle.

  9. We would have cookery inculcated in its most elementary form, and although we should shrink from any thing like harshness, we should not hesitate to put the beginners through a vigorous course of basting for the first year or so.

  10. Remember, that sick-cookery should half do the work of your poor patient’s weak digestion.

  11. With entirely new Coloured Cookery Plates, showing the Modern Modes of Serving Dishes.

  12. It is on a good stock, or first good broth and sauce, that excellence in cookery depends.

  13. Paper-bag cookery is invaluable as a means of warming up cold meats.

  14. For those who still hesitate whether to adopt paper-bag cookery or not, it may be as well to repeat the solid advantages of this method.

  15. Many other recipes might be given, but the cook who is interested in paper-bag cookery will be able to experiment for herself in fresh directions.

  16. Economy, however, is not everything, and paper-bag cookery appeals also to the epicure, who does not consider cost in ordering a meal to his taste.

  17. In spite of the condescending explanations given by our elders that it was only the hunger of the hunters that made such cookery palatable, the child still believes in the delights of such a meal--and the child is right!

  18. Paper-Bag Cookery is not a mere craze of the moment; for once its advantages have been discovered, it will become firmly rooted as one of the best and most economical means of preparing food ever invented.

  19. Paper-bag cookery should appeal especially to the caterer for a small family.

  20. It is in such cases that paper-bag cookery proves itself invaluable.

  21. In this case, too, paper-bag cookery solves the difficulty.

  22. So incessant were her labours, so unsatisfactory the results, that she hailed with joy and gratitude a newspaper article and some bags sent her by a compassionate relative, and now writes triumphantly that all her cookery troubles are over.

  23. There will be very little gravy, as that, of course, is the juice of the meat, and the claim of the paper-bag cookery is that it seals up the juices within the meat.

  24. On investigation, however, it will be found that these last-mentioned critics have not given paper-bag cookery a fair trial.

  25. One very great advantage of paper-bag cookery which will appeal strongly to the economist is the fact that meat thus treated loses little or nothing of its weight.

  26. But the compilation of which my friend was accustomed to partake nightly, and to which the vegetarian cookery book arrogates the patriarchal title, was wholly devoid of flesh-meat.

  27. There were no vessels in the camp in which they could boil anything, and it is my opinion, from what I afterwards saw of their habits, that their cookery is confined to roasting and baking.

  28. At the present day, English cookery is not much indebted to this plant (Rumex Acetosa), although the French make use of it to a considerable extent.

  29. There are several species of this plant; but that which is preferred for cookery is a native of Portugal, and is called sweet or knotted marjoram.

  30. Who would suppose, from Adam's simple ration, That cookery could have call'd forth such resources, As form a science and a nomenclature From out the commonest demands of nature?

  31. In place of plain joints, French cookery delights in the marvels of what are called made dishes, ragouts, stews, and fricassees, in which no trace of the original materials of which they are compounded is to be found.

  32. No cookery can be perfectly performed without the aid of the useful instruments shown in the engraving.

  33. China for the oil which is expressed from its seeds, which is much used in the domestic cookery of the country; flower single white.

  34. If you could only write a good cookery book, now!

  35. Strip off the skin," says the recipe in one cookery book, "and broil before the fire or over a quick clear one.

  36. If the criticisms on foreign cookery should offend the talented chef, I have the satisfaction of knowing that, as I have forsworn his works, he will be unable to retaliate with poison.

  37. The many cookery books which I have read give elaborate directions for the performance, of what is a very simple duty.

  38. Most of the cookery books give far more elaborate directions, but the above is the method usually pursued by the poor brown heathen himself.

  39. The great lauder of foreign cookery had only that day returned from a special mission to France, to "write up" the works of the cordon bleu for the benefit of us benighted Englishmen.

  40. The immigration of aliens commenced, and in the tight little island were deposited a large assortment of the poisonous seeds of alien cookery which had never exactly flourished before.

  41. It has been repeatedly urged in favour of French cookery that it is so economical.

  42. There are some words which occur frequently in French cookery which, to the ordinary perfidious Briton, are cruelly misleading.

  43. Each is afterward submitted to the best cookery that can be contrived.

  44. That is the stuff to make this sort of cookery relish well.

  45. He hovered over his pots without paying any attention to Pinocchio, but talking in a loud voice as if he wished to impart a lesson in cookery to half the world.

  46. We drove to the inn that Sterne has immortalised, or one at least that bears the same name, and found English comfort united with French cookery and French taste.

  47. French cookery can even get the better of French dirt.

  48. In fact, cookery is one of the chopper's trials.

  49. It's better to be broken in to sea cookery gently," Vane interposed with some dryness.

  50. The upshot of our cookery is in general so startlingly indifferent from what we had intended, that the result in the present case takes us by surprise.

  51. We did every thing by mass-meeting, in the good old national way, from swapping off one empire for another on the programme of the voyage down to complaining of the cookery and the scarcity of napkins.

  52. I am reminded, now, of one of these complaints of the cookery made by a passenger.

  53. As it happens, Hall looked in on us last night, and I gathered that he hadn't a very high opinion of your cookery and catering.

  54. The aim of Ecuadorian cookery is to eradicate all natural flavor; you wouldn't know you were eating chicken except by the bones.


  55. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "cookery" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    bakery; baking; boiling; brewing; broil; burner; caboose; catering; cooker; cookery; cuisine; element; furnace; galley; grilling; heater; kitchen; nutrition; poaching; roasting; stove