181 collocations for pounding

INGREDIENTS.100 crayfish; pounded mace, pepper and salt to taste, 2 oz. butter.

Blanch and pound the almonds smoothly in a mortar, with a little rose- or spring-water; stir in the eggs, which should be well beaten, and the butter, which should be warmed; add the grated lemon-peel and -juice, sweeten, and stir well until the whole is thoroughly mixed.

INGREDIENTS.1 wineglassful of brandy, 2 oz. of very fresh butter, 1 glass of Madeira, pounded sugar to taste.

Ninian laughed and pounded his soft fist on the table.

He pounded the clay floor with his ponderous old boots until the room was filled with a cloud of dust; then in his excitement he kicked over chairs, pots, kettles, and whatever came in his way, while he kept on revolving round the table in a kind of crazy fandango.

The third time, wearied by pounding his head against a human stone wall, Dave failed to gain more than half a yard.

Have I gotta starve while you pound yore ear?" Hurriedly Tom flung aside his wraps.

Now pound the meat in a mortar, with the yolks of the eggs, and the crumb of the roll previously soaked; rub it through a tammy, and gradually add it to the strained liquor, and simmer for 15 minutes.

The three listeners shouted the chorus at the top of their voices, pounding the table with their fists by way of a sort of drum accompaniment.

He was a good little boy and helped his mother grind the corn and pound the rice in the big wooden bowl, but one night he was very careless.

For very delicate forcemeat, it is advisable to pound the ingredients together before binding with the egg; but for ordinary cooking, mincing very finely answers the purpose.

you can hear the plump, plump of the metate from the alcoves of the vines where comfortable old dames, whose experience gives them the touch of art, are pounding out corn for tamales.

Procure some nice young parsley; wash it and dry it thoroughly in a cloth; pound the leaves in a mortar till all the juice is extracted, and put the juice in a teacup or small jar; place this in a saucepan of boiling water, and warm it on the bain marie principle just long enough to take off its rawness; let it drain, and it will be ready for colouring.

INGREDIENTS.1/4 lb. of rice, 1-1/2 pint of milk, 2 oz. of butter, sugar to taste, grated nutmeg or pounded cinnamon.

Whar is the bloody bark?" "Pounding her heart out on the rocks yonder," he said more civilly, "unless she's slid off, an' gone down.

The crowd yelled, and the drummer of the band pounded his instrument furiously.

For pounding things sufficiently fine, they are invaluable, and the use of them will save a good deal of time, besides increasing the excellence of the preparations.

"I stopped a-past and borried the nails and the hammer from Jeff Dawes; I mighty nigh pounded my thumb off knockin' in nails with a rock an' a sad-iron last week.

So for an hour went the fight; ships charging, the Tennessee crawling ever after her one picked antagonist, the monitors' awful guns forever pounding her iron back and sides.

" Billy Durgin, scrutinizing the newcomer in a professional way, told me afterwards that Jake Kilburn "batted his eyes" during this strange speech and replied to it, "like a man coming to""supper in twenty minutes," after which he pounded a bell furiously and then himself showed his new and puzzling guest to a roombut not a room "with a bath," be it understood, for a most excellent reason.

I pounded the keys with my fist, by way of a farewell, and told her she should have the piano for her own.

Now the pitiable thing about it was that all this enormous destruction proved to have been wrought for nothing, for the Germans, instead of throwing huge masses of infantry against the forts, as it was anticipated that they would do, and thus giving the entanglements and the mine-fields and the machine-guns a chance to get in their work, methodically pounded the forts to pieces with siege-guns stationed a dozen miles away.

She pounded the door desperately, injuring her fists with her fruitless efforts.

So the jackal ran off to a village and went to the house of a poor old woman who was pounding dried plum fruit into meal, and asked her for a light "Go into the house and take a brand from the fire yourself" said the old woman: "No" said the jackal "you go and get it; and I will pound your meal for you, while you are away."

I have seen her catch up the broom to pound potatoes in the pot.

181 collocations for  pounding