Boil them in salt and water with a little vinegar.
A good way to clean leather furniture is to add a little vinegar to some warm water and wash the leather, using a clean soft cloth.
Remove from the fire and mix in quickly half a teaspoonful ground English mustard blended with a little vinegar; seal immediately in small well-closed jars.
Take the flour, mustard and tumeric powder, work to a cream with a little vinegar, then gradually stir into the boiling vinegar to thicken it.
An excellent diet drink may be made of toast and water, with the addition of a little vinegar, or a few grains of nitre.
First mix the ivory black and sweet oil together, then the lemon and sugar, with a little vinegar to qualify the blacking; then add both the acids, and mix them all well together.
Boil half an ounce of gold litharge well pounded, with a little vinegar in a brass vessel for half an hour.
The decoctions consisted of whey mixed with a little vinegar, and nitred hay.
As for the drinks, they must be cold, consisting of water with sufficient flour mixed in it to whiten it, and a little vinegar or sulphuric acid, to acidulate it.
Take currans either red or white before they are thoroughly ripe; you must not take them from the stalk, make a pickle of salt and water and a little vinegar, so keep them for use.
Fresh mackerel are cooked in water salted, and a little vinegar added; with this exception they can be served in the same way as the salt mackerel.
All kinds of poultry and meat can be cooked quicker by adding to the water in which they are boiled a little vinegar or a piece of lemon.
Put them into a stewpan with a piece of butter rolled in flour, some boiled onion and parsley chopped fine, and a little vinegar, salt and pepper.
The bags are then put into water soured with a little vinegar, kneaded till the colour is all expelled, and finally rinsed in running water.
Or, the Brazil wood may be boiled along with a little vinegar, the decoction filtered, alum and salt of tin added, and then potash-lye poured in to precipitate the lake.
The glaze of hard porcelain is a felspar rock: this being ground to a very fine powder, is worked into a paste with water mingled with a little vinegar.
IX-169] As soon as calm was re-established, the insulting vegetable was placed in the pot to boil, and afterwards eaten with oil and a little vinegar.
Add a little vinegar previously to serving; put around it sippets of toast or fried bread.
Sometimes a little vinegar is added under the idea that it increases the strength of the poultice, but this is not necessary.
Lay them in plenty of boiling water, with a little vinegar; boil them steadily, keeping them well covered with water for about one and one-half to two hours for small beets and two to three and one-half hours for large ones.
A half tea-spoonful of pearl-ash, dissolved in a little vinegar.
A half tea-spoonful of pearl-ash or salaeratus, dissolved in a little vinegar.
Having dissolved the pearl-ash in a little vinegar, stir it with the milk and molasses alternately into the other ingredients.
In all cases salt and a little vinegar, a teaspoonful each, are allowed to each quart of water.
Scrape, and throw at once into cold water with a little vinegar in it, to keep them from turning black.
It need not be too cold, but just a little under blood heat, with a little vinegar added.
If the eye is bruised, bathe with warm water, to which a little vinegar or boracic acid has been added.
To the water used a little vinegar or acetic acid should next be added, or Condy's fluid may be used when it is convenient.
In ordinary diarrhoea, injections of cold water by the enema will usually cure, especially if a little vinegar or a few drops of acetic acid be added to the water.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "little vinegar" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.