Which preposition to use with cooked
They have few equals, cooked in that way, but as a pan fish, they are not to be compared with the genuine brook trout.
Pour over a cup of water; cover and let cook for one hour until tender but not broken.
Season a trout and let cook with 1 sliced onion, 1 sliced lemon, 2 tablespoonfuls of vinegar, a few cloves and a pinch of pepper.
It was mixed with the pomegranate or the quince that Eve had sliced and cooked on the day before.
Add a tablespoonful of butter and let cook until tender.
What sings the cook at the galley-fire in doleful unison with the bubble of his coppers?
Or perhaps you recall the cook of the Nancy Bell and his grievous end.
The quartering of the House of Hohenzollern wears a baldric in praise of "Subgum Noodle Warmein," which it seems they cook to an unusual delicacy.
A kettle of wild greens was cooking over the fire, and everything was spotlessly clean.
I would most certainly decline to eat food cooked from the same plate with my son or to drink water out of a cup which his lips have touched and which has not been washed.
"How do you cook without pans, Joe?" "A pot and a wokwhat more do you need?" "Really, Joe."
It consists of half a dozen great stones under yonder shed, where as good meals are cooked as in any London kitchen.
Mother, as she "used to do," cooks by rule of thumb; in fact, how could she do otherwise, since she must keep one eye on her approving Adam while the other eye glances at the oven.
For a plain little cook like that, with such small wages, and no kitchenmaid, she does quite well.'
In Enniskillen two boys under twelve years of age were convicted of stealing one pint of Indian-meal cooked into "stirabout," and Chief Justice Blackburn vindicated the outraged law by transporting them for seven years.
The warm room, the excellent food, better cooked than any they had had for seven months, produced a gentle somnolence.
Two collapsible tables had been brought along, and these were placed under the raised fly of one of the tents, so that the warmth of the open fire could be enjoyed; but the whole supper had not been cooked after the old fashion, for Frank had a little outfit that burned kerosene, making its own blue flame, and which the other boys declared to be the finest thing of the kind they had ever seen.
For this, and for the fact that he could cook under water, and would turn out hot meals when other chefs were committing suicide, much was forgiven him, but he was prone to look upon the vin when it was rouge and was habitually coated an inch thick with a varnish of soot and pot-black.
We had left our provisions there, calculating to return in the afternoon, not having taken with us even pepper or salt, wherewith to season the food which, upon constraint, we might cook during our absence.
They should be soaked all night and nearly cooked before using.
Rosie told the cook about it afterwards.
Poise, indeed, for a cook among sailors and packers.
At about one both William and Robert Bolton came upon the scene, and were admitted by the gardener and cook through the kitchen-door into the house.
So when she got home she did as she had been directed and when she came to take the herbs which she had cooked out of the pot, she found that they had turned into rice, and she and her children ate it with joy.
It was estimated at about seven-eighths of the diameter of the planet, and was visible to Cook throughout the whole Transit.