32 adjectives to describe cherry

A person who is always on the alert to make use of opportunities, and never allows a good thing to escape his grasp, is said to "have a ready mouth for a ripe cherry."

Remove the oranges to a glass dish; pour over the syrup and garnish with candied cherries.

Sweet fruits are best, as sweet cherries, plums, sweet apples, pearmains, and pippins, which Laurentius extols, as having a peculiar property against this disease, and Plater magnifies, omnibus modis appropriata conveniunt, but they must be corrected for their windiness: ripe grapes are good, and raisins of the sun, musk-melons well corrected, and sparingly used.

"I got hold of a sour cherry this time.

Serve in cocktail glasses, garnishing each glass with a Maraschino cherry.

His first diplomatic mission was in 1665, to Christopher Bernard von Glialen, the prince-bishop of Munster, who grew the northern cherries (see page 228).

MACAROON ISLAND Fill a glass bowl with alternate layers of macaroons and lady fingers, sprinkle a layer of finely-chopped nuts over the cake, then a layer of crystallized cherries.

Have ready a white apple marmalade, made by recipe No. 1395; cover the bottom of the dish with this, level it, and lay the apples in a sieve to drain, pile them neatly on the marmalade, making them high in the centre, and place a preserved cherry in the middle of each.

Stoned cherries or peaches may be used instead of the apple.

There were several things that he had rescued from her broom,one of those beautiful red balls, cracked on one side it is true, but gleaming like a mammoth red cherry on the other.

Molds may be decorated with Pistachio nuts and Candied cherries, before filling with mixture.

The benches of polished cherry, the length of all of them together being about three-quarters of a mile, are ranged along the sides of the rooms, from the windows in which the prospect is rural and peaceful.

When it came time for dessert Mrs. Gorman bore the tray in on which it was served, a cherry roly-poly, covered with a steaming sauce.

" III "Anna," said Professor Hardage that same morning, coming out of his library into the side porch where Miss Anna, sitting in a green chair and wearing a pink apron and holding a yellow bowl with a blue border, was seeding scarlet cherries for a brown roll, "see what somebody has sent me."

Seeded cherries may be used in place of the apples and raisins.

"Yer've no sich cherries nor taters nor raspberries as dem in de Norf, I'll bet!"

Wellthey are not bad; no, indeed, they are splendid cherries.

Past the thrifty husbandman himself, as he guides the two milch-kine in his tiny plough, and stops at the furrow's end, to greet you with the hearty German smile and bow; while the little fair-haired maiden, walking beneath the shade of standard cherries, walnuts, and pears, all grey with fruit, fills the cows' mouths with chicory, and wild carnations, and pink saintfoin, and many a fragrant weed which richer England wastes.

We found some superb cherries, and plenty of snow, which is brought down from the mountain.

Where are they gone?" "Well, there hasn't but two died; the rest'll live," said Fly, swinging one of them around by its tail, as if it had been a tame cherry.

In all essential characteristics they are "twin cherries growing on one stalk.

The interior was of unpainted cherry, and through a want of skill in the mechanics, had a cold and raw look, little suited to the objects of the structure.

Myself am of low stature, and of shape nothing like so slender; indeed one hath told me I am dark and round as a blackheart cherry; so I could well think that at Mrs. Golding's years I should be very like her, though perhaps less comely.

The most wholesome cherries have a tender and delicate skin; those with a hard skin should be very carefully masticated.

Rows of different colored cherries, arranged in pyramidal form, make also a handsome dish.

32 adjectives to describe  cherry