Place all perishable food in the refrigerator as soon as possible after purchase. |
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Shall we go sate my appetite for perishable victuals, my ever-loving husband? |
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For the first time we have a glimpse of the perishable artefacts which played such a major role in Aztec rituals, pomp and ceremony. |
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Don't leave perishable food items to overheat in the boot of your car while you do other shopping. |
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Staff have organised two trolley loads of perishable food for the hospice and Santa will be picking up the presents. |
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If perishable meat, sheep, and dairy products were sitting in ships for long periods of time, that could hurt our economy. |
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Also, the loss of perishable foods may skew data on restaurant sales and grocery store receipts. |
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Soon many of you will be going away to school and will have to, for the first, brave the world of perishable food items. |
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The first mate was in charge on deck, and Devlin, the cook, was cooking up a meal of all the perishable food. |
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Edgar handed his visitor a mug while he put the perishable food away in the fridge. |
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Check use-by dates on packaging and pay particular attention to perishable foods, such as vacuum packed smoked salmon or ham and dairy products. |
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All the perishable food would have to be eaten the first day since the fridge had no electricity. |
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Second, the performing arts are also perishable products that cannot be returned or resold. |
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Nobody can predict future opinions on so perishable an art as that of the motion picture. |
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The Army needs these linguists trained and mission ready, maintaining their perishable language skills. |
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In that case it was suggested that the punctation may have been the point of insertion for a tail made of perishable organic material. |
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In its solid form, known as dry ice, it is used to chill perishable food during transport. |
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Command and control involves perishable skills that atrophy in the absence of training. |
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If the room temperature is above 90 F, refrigerate perishable foods within one hour. |
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Cut flowers are probably the most perishable of farm products, having a one day window for saleability. |
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You can't sell perishable fresh and frozen foods unless households have refrigerators. |
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First of all newspapers are rather flimsy by nature and thus quite perishable and this fragility tends to limit value. |
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Keep salads, cheeses, dips and other perishable food in the fridge until the last minute. |
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Every year, thousands of tonnes of perishable goods, from cellophane-wrapped chickens to cardboard-encased ready-made pizzas, end up in the bin. |
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Here, too, there was a tendency to remodel ruined buildings and convert them into more modest structures, often using perishable materials. |
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A former shopkeeper has been fined for having perishable food on sale past its use-by date. |
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For example, the transport of perishable goods could be limited to reefer containers or include transport in conventional reefer vessels. |
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The produced mincemeat doner are perishable 6 months and sliced doner 12 months. |
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I thought that the only thing that could destroy my serenity was being hungry, so I went back to the supermarket and started loading up carts with non perishable food. |
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Since fish is very perishable, retail and wholesale markups are very high. |
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The arrival in 1849 of the North Kent railway line meant that perishable produce such as soft fruits could be transported to the London markets a great deal more quickly. |
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Nestlé transforms perishable goods into safe, high-quality food products that meet the needs of consumers. |
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Coveting the perishable goods of this life: with Allah are profits and spoils abundant. |
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Because they are perishable and require special handling and merchandising, fresh turkeys are slightly more expensive than frozen turkeys. |
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Pack just the amount of perishable food that can be eaten at lunch. |
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The Pot-in-pot system allows perishable food to be kept for long periods. |
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A successful composition became a certain idealisation of the material world, and as such presented a harmonious relationship between the perishable and imperishable realms. |
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Ground beef is extremely perishable and to be safe should be cooked within 48 hours of thawing. |
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Inside were all of the perishable food items along with a flagon of milk. |
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The care required for perishable food also raises the costs. |
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For Plato himself, a study of mathematics and geometry leads the mind away from the corruptible and perishable to the contemplation of true Being and eternal order. |
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It had a cosy deal with the union, exempting perishable products from strikes. |
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The route is Russia's shortest one to the West, and so is favoured by people trading in expensive and perishable goods. |
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Each time a perishable food like a pork roast is frozen, defrosted and reheated, the risk of contamination with harmful bacteria increases. |
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Secondly, farmers themselves do not set prices, all the more so since production is a live or perishable commodity. |
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Another factor to keep in mind is that ground beef is highly perishable. |
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These were the effective dates of the rate reduction for shipping priority perishable foods. |
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Modern technology makes it possible to safely store milk and other perishable foods. |
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If books are not the most perishable products of human civilization, they have, throughout recorded history, attracted the homicidal attentions of every conquering army. |
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This enhances the yield, colour, flavour, appearance and shelf life of many perishable items. |
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Studying the debacle of the spoiled shipment, he surmised that other companies shipping perishable goods to Asia must have had similar experiences. |
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These milk trains must have seemed slow as they moved from town to town, picking up hundreds of milk cans, but milk was a valuable and perishable item. |
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You have been born anew, not of perishable seed but of imperishable, through the living and abiding word of God. |
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Highly perishable products such as chard and other greens can degrade before or shortly after arriving in the marketplace, disappointing both producers and consumers. |
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If you're having a picnic, don't take perishable food such as cheese and meat out of the fridge until the last minute, and use a cool pack to keep it cold in the picnic box. |
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For you have been born again not of seed which is perishable but imperishable, that is, through the living and enduring word of God. |
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In most countries, cut flowers are a local crop because of their perishable nature. |
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Modern technology has immeasurably enhanced its efficacy, to the extent of giving rise to novel types of preparation of highly perishable foods namely freezing and quick-freezing. |
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Under the food and drug regulations the labels of most perishable and semi-perishable prepackaged food with a shelf life of 90 days or less are required to carry a consumer friendly best-before date. |
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Scotiabank joined volunteers from Second Harvest, Toronto's largest perishable food recovery program, to make a run at the Guinness Book of World Records. |
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Given the perishable nature of the berries and the unlikelihood of mechanical picking, the fruit is generally grown near centres of consumption or processing and where sufficient labour is available. |
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Keep all perishable foods chilled until serving time. |
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After this perishable nature has put on imperishability and this mortal nature has put on immortality, then will the words of scripture come true: Death is swallowed up in victory. |
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Whilst faulty deliveries often generate costly claims and returns, in the perishable food sector, they also eat into profit margins because they can have a major impact on shelf life. |
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Canterbury Area Council President Keith Norton and his team have loaded two containers with non perishable food items, clothing and towels, kitchenware, sheets. |
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Lychees are a perishable product that must be processed quickly. |
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By subsidizing the cost of shipping nutritious perishable food and other essential items by air to Nunavut communities, the Government of Canada makes it possible for retailers to sell fresh food at lower prices. |
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It also was tacky, odorous, and perishable. |
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All types of perishable goods are transported throughout Switzerland and Great Britain, including flowers, plants, vegetables, fruit, and edibles. |
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The packaging used must allow the release of carbon dioxide gas, must be clearly marked as containing dry ice, and must show the net weight and identify the perishable item being preserved by the dry ice. |
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What should, though, be seen in a positive light, is the reference to the special case represented by the transportation of easily perishable foodstuffs such as milk, fruit or vegetables. |
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But these perishable products cannot wait a single day on the quayside. |
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As of October 3, 2010, non-food items, most non-perishable foods and some perishable foods of little nutritional value will no longer be eligible for subsidized airlift to eligible communities under the Food Mail Program. |
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Airline seats are more perishable than strawberries at Wimbledon, and a pilots' strike can shove an airline into bankruptcy in six weeks. There is thus an urgent need to reform labour negotiations. |
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Faced with a glut of cheese, European producers responded by turning milk not into cheddar or brie, but into less perishable skimmed-milk powder, prompting its wholesale price to drop by a third. |
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The Bororo also sometimes barter milk for grain, but they get cash from selling butter, which is less perishable than milk and can be sold in the weekly markets and beyond. |
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It's difficult to find people to harvest a delicate perishable food item. |
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Through plastic containers and other solutions, food processing also provides us with the means to extend the shelf life of otherwise perishable foods. |
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And transport infrastructures, which make the transport of perishable products towards towns impossible, will not be adequate for the future demands of urban populations. |
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In my judgment the Program has been allowed to evolve as a cost of living subsidy rather than its intended focus on providing for affordable access to perishable foods. |
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They're almost as nutritious as fresh vegetables, but not as perishable. |
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And, as the Algerian paper emphasises, it does not really matter that a large part of this stock was made up of medicines and perishable food products. |
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It is also known that the Germanic tribes wore perishable organic material, such as leather, and less metal. |
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Their houses were generally constructed from perishable materials, and their remains have left little trace in the archaeological record. |
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There was also a cursive style used for everyday or utilitarian writing, which was done on more perishable surfaces. |
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These early peoples lacked a writing system, and made works on perishable materials, so few records of them exist from this time. |
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Time is the most perishable good in the world, and it is not replenishable. |
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The perishable goods were placed in the large warehouses but the unperishable were covered with tarpaulin and left where unloaded. |
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Stone fruits are characteristically soft-fleshed and highly perishable and they have a limited market life potential. |
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The first goods wagons to be fitted with vacuum brakes were those that ran in passenger trains carrying perishable goods such as fish. |
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It is important to maintain the correct temperature for perishable goods in transit. |
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These early tools, however, were likely made of perishable materials such as sticks, or consisted of unmodified stones that cannot be distinguished from other stones as tools. |
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The 1880 building was retained, but extra platforms and sidings were provided to handle more perishable goods, as well as the increasing numbers of tourists. |
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From November 1, Tradewinds Cargo Handling will accept perishable imports flown into Houston from international markets for distribution throughout the United States. |
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However, the vegetable is highly perishable, since it quickly develops a senescence that deteriorates the commercial and nutritional quality of the product. |
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Soft capital, like this, is very perishable, fragile, and fluid. |
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Freeze-drying is a dehydration process typically used to preserve perishable materials or make materials lighter or more convenient for transport. |
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