20 Verbs to Use for the Word pastries

[Illustration: She made some Tarts] The Queen here by the King's commands, Who does not like Cook's dirty hands, Makes the court-pastry all herself.

The top crust may be made lattice fashion by cutting the pastry in strips, but it will not be as good as between two closed crusts.

For persons who dislike pastry, the following is an excellent way of preparing fruit.

Your eldest girl, Angelina, aged ten, one of those premature little grown women who have learned from the cradle that man is born to eat pastry and woman to make it, postponed her small repast till an indefinite future, and sat meekly ready to attend upon our wants.

We were just finishing a nondescript pastry which François found at a baker's, and which, for want of a better name, he called méringues à la Khorassan, when there was a loud knock at the street door.

He gives up pastry, and takes to cereals; he abandons his cigarettes and takes to fresh air; he gives up late hours at night, and substitutes early hours in the morning.

To glaze pastry, which is the usual method adopted for meat or raised pies, break an egg, separate the yolk from the white, and beat the former for a short time.

The fashion of having pastry is, however, of very ancient date, for in the book of the "Proverbs" of the thirteenth century, we find that the pies of Dourlens and the pastry of Chartres were then in great celebrity.

They should have a certain number of the gentlemen's daughters to receive their education in the family, to learn pastry and such things from the housekeeper, and manners from my lady.

Delicacies were needed for the invalid soldiers, and were not to be bought for money; the educated woman, side by side with her uneducated sister, bared her white arms above the elbow, and molded delicate pastry, and sealed and pickled and preserved as diligently and as deftly as if she had never demonstrated a problem in Euclid or heard of Sophocles.

The only person in Barnbury who has not ordered either pastry, cakes, or sweetmeats; or fowls or meat to be baked.

It is very certain that the most natural tastes are the most simple: our first aliment is milk, and it is only by degrees we bring ourselves to relish strong food; one speaking proof that such stimulating diet is not natural to the human palate, is the indifference children have for such food, and they evidently prefer pastry, fruit, &c., until the digestive organs become more depraved.

Parmesan Puff Pie. Prepare some cheese pastry, as for "Straws No. 1," and with it line a round shallow tin or tart ring.

It is the indigestibility of fat, and this property of delaying the digestion of other foods, chiefly that render pastry and cakes so deleterious to health.

Pat with rolling pin and roll the pastry to fit a large pie plate.

'Gor, I never seen as much pastries in a' ma born daysno but what I'm ready to dae ma bit.'

He was requested to serve some pastry, and, using a knife, as it was evidently rather hard, the knife penetrated the d'oyley beneathand his consternation was extreme when he saw the slice of linen and lace he served as an addition to the tart!"

What between this sudden arrival of six feet of khaki-clad humanity and the innuendoes which had been recently thrown out, touching a subject on which she felt strongly (the possibility of Dick's marrying again), she actually set the pastry on the table in the place of the beef, and helped the two soldiers to a cake each instead of a piece of bread.

At which point she came upon a pastry-shop window and she went in and bought a half-dozen French pastries.

Thieves! holla, you knavish Jack, Cannot the good Queen turn her back, But you must be so nimble hasty To come and steal away her pastry You think you're safe, there's one fees all, And understands, though he's but small

20 Verbs to Use for the Word  pastries