Keep them in wide-mouthed bottles, corked and sealed up tight.
Keep them in glass jars, or wide-mouthed bottles--cork and seal them tight.
Scrape or grind, cover with vinegar, and keep in wide-mouthed bottles.
Dry them on a sieve, and put them in long wide-mouthed bottles.
Top and tail them, and put them into wide-mouthed bottles as far up as the beginning of the neck.
Let them stand till they are cold; then drain them on a sieve, wipe them, stick a clove in the top of each and put them into wide-mouthed bottles; dispersing among them some blades of mace and slices of ginger or nutmeg.
Put it into wide-mouthed bottles, and on the top of each lay a dessert-spoonful of whole pepper.
If sealed tight while hot, in large-mouthed bottles, it will keep good for years.
Scald them in salt and water until tender, then take them up, put them into wide-mouthed bottles, and pour over them hot spiced vinegar; when cold cork them close.
In dry weather pick some full grown but unripe gooseberries, top and tail them, and put them into wide-mouthed bottles.
Keep the mixture in small wide-mouthed bottles, well corked, and in a cool dry place.
Fill some jars or wide-mouthed bottles, put the corks loosely in, and set the bottles up to the neck in a kettle of water.
To keep damsons for winter pies, put them in small stone jars, or wide-mouthed bottles; set them up to their necks in a boiler of cold water, and scald them.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "mouthed bottles" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.