34 Verbs to Use for the Word saucepan

Have ready a delicately-clean saucepan, into which put the stock, which should be well flavoured with vegetables, and rather savoury; mix the flour smoothly with the cream, add it to the stock, season with a little salt, and boil all these ingredients very gently for about 10 minutes, keeping them well stirred the whole time, as this sauce is very liable to burn.

"It was something like taking a tin saucepan with the bottom out and using it as a scabbard for a broad sword," remarked one who knew him.

She spread a coarse cloth on the wooden table, and when all was ready, lifted a large black saucepan from the stove and turned out a smoking, savoury-looking stew.

Cut off the shank-bone, trim the knuckle, and wash and wipe it very clean; plunge it into sufficient boiling water to cover it; let it boil up, then draw the saucepan to the side of the fire, where it should remain till the finger can be borne in the water.

Return to clean saucepan with stock or water, and two tablespoonfuls of tapioca, previously soaked for at least an hour.

There she found by the half-extinguished fire an iron saucepan filled with cold boiled potatoes, which she put upon a broken chair with a pint-cup of ale.

It may be made into Custard Whip Sauce by putting in saucepan and whisking over the fire till light and frothy.

When thoroughly cleansed, fill the saucepan half full with them, and just cover the potatoes with cold water, salted in the above proportion: they are more quickly boiled with a small quantity of water, and, besides, are more savoury than when drowned in it.

Don't forget the saucepan!"

Then put them into fast-boiling water, with the addition of salt in the above proportion, and let them boil briskly over a good fire, keeping the saucepan uncovered.

They left a little saucepan and the extra kettle at that camp.

And in the morning he began to make saucepans, and he was making them there, and the shopkeeper that owned the house was mad at him to be doing that, and making saucepans in so grand a house, and he wanted to get him out of it, and he gave him a good sum of money to go out.

The younger men of this interesting community were elsewhereperhaps mending saucepans, or reassuring ducks alarmed by the thunderstorm.

"It's only the infants that we can use in this affair," declared Dorothy after she had replenished the saucepan from another in which she had been heating water for the purpose, over a second alcohol stove that her mother had lent them.

On this plate are set the various saucepans, stewpans, &c.; and, by this convenient and economical method, a number of dishes may be prepared at one time.

Keep stirring till it boils up; then shut the saucepan closely, and let it stew gently for 1-1/2 or 2 hours.

He went towards the fire, and spread out his hands to catch the heat of the glowing embers, on which sat a saucepan.

While he was straightening the things, Father Wills appeared at the flap, smoking saucepan in hand.

Put the asbestos mat over this and stand the saucepan upon it.

They had brought an alcohol stove that consisted of a small tripod which held a tin of solid alcohol and supported a saucepan.

He's Farmer Green, and he's an awful angry man; he gave Sam such a thrashing for tying an old saucepan to one of his pigs' tails.

Ascertain when they are done by probing them with a fork; then pour off the water, uncover the saucepan, and let the potatoes dry by the side of the fire, taking care not to let them burn.

They added to their cooking utensils a few flat saucepans in which water would boil quickly and they made many experiments in cooking vegetables.

'I'm washing a saucepan,' I said.

I question whether they represent more than the amounts of tin we periodically wear off tin saucepans in preparing fooda month ago I found a trace of tin in water which had been boiled in a tin kettleor the silver we wear off our forks and spoons.

34 Verbs to Use for the Word  saucepan