47 collocations for salting

He said it took four days when they had loads to carry, from the head of canoe navigation on the Teslintoo to salt water on the Taku Inlet; but when they come light they take only one to two days.

They salted the meat, roasted it, and ate it.

He received in this way clothes and shoes, which were purchased in the market, and which the recipients had merely to keep in repair; a quantity of wheat monthly, which each had to grind for himself; as also salt, olives or salted fish to form a relish to their food, wine, and oil.

the singer knew, How hard the daily toil, how keen the strife, How salt the falling tear, the joys how few.

Cod, when boiled quite fresh, is watery; salting a little, renders it firmer.

of 16 degrees or thereabouts, to salt up provisions and to proceed to the East Indies, cruise off the islands of St. John, and lie in wait for the Moor ships from Mocha.

Now I can work the buttermilk out, and salt the butter, and I'm going to send your mamma home a nice pat," which she did, and very glad Mrs. Pigg was to get it.

We salted a great number of them, which proved a valuable addition to our stock of provisions during the voyage.

In every quarter people were seen busy in preparing quilted-cotton armour, making bread, and salting pork for sea stores.

Clean your fish thoroughly and salt the day previous; wrap it in a clean towel and lay it on ice until wanted.

"Even without Golconda, Ben," Moose would exclaim confidently, "I've got enough salted away from them other deals to put you through all the book learnin' you'll need t' make a reg'lar spell-bindin' lawyer o' you like Fink, er a way up Judge, mebbe in Washington.

Infusion of senna 10 drachms; Epsom salts 10 drachms; tincture of senna, compound tincture of cardamums, compound spirit of lavender, of each 1 drachm.

Salted meats, however, should never be permitted to the child; for by the process of salting the fibre of the meat is so changed, that it is less nutritive, as well as less digestible.

This was done, and the pirates salted the flesh of the cattle and stored it away for their voyage.

Take a fat Goose and bone him, but leave the brest bone, wipe him with a clean cloath, then salt him one fortnight, then hang him up for one fortnight or three weeks, then boyl him in running water very tender, and serve him with Bay-leaves.

The Jacobins pottage To salt a Goose.

There must be no salt upon the beef, only salt the gravy to your taste.

I always told poor Sarah as I did think she salted her hams too much; but, there!

red + Granade + Grapes to preserve all Winter + another Way Gruel Sagoo Plumb Rice Goofer Wafers to make H Hams or Tongues to salt Hare, to stew to pot to jugg to roast with a Pudding in the Belly Hedge Hogs Cupid, to make Almond Herrings to boil to fry to pickle to keep all the Year Hotch potch, to make J Jam Cherry to make Bullies, do.

Randall as a child delighted in stopping around the tanning yard and watching the men salt the hide.

Then knowing full well that man would not go To a Land so forlorn to behold, He salted the hillsides and some of the streams With nuggets and traces of gold.

A rich soup, composed of six trout, six tenches, white herring, freshwater eels, salted twenty-four hours, and three whiting, soaked twelve hours; almonds, ginger, saffron, cinnamon powder and sweetmeats.

They proceed in this manner till they arrive on the banks of a certain water, but whether fresh or salt my informer could not say, yet I am of opinion that it must be a river, because, if it were the sea, the inhabitants could not be in want of salt in so hot a climate.

Ted ate also dried seaweed, chopped and boiled in seal oil, which tasted very much like boiled and salted leather, but he liked it very well.

To salt a Leg of Mutton to eat like Ham.

47 collocations for  salting