Baker is another common English name and they were baking leavened wheaten loaves in brick ovens 1200 years ago, not so different to our own. |
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His wheaten hair fell in an untamed shock across his forehead, and though it did not indicate recent trimming, his sideburns were neatly shaped. |
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I stayed the night in Dromore with Jimmy and Elise, at Sylvan Hill House, where hospitality was borne on plates of wheaten bread. |
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On Sundays he ate a bit of wheaten bread, a piece of broiled salmon and a full cup of mead or ale. |
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They sat in their carved chairs, and we ate slices of wheaten bread and toasted cheeses and drank weak ale. |
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A heavy bread made from barley flour was common, but there is evidence that at least some people had wheaten bread available to them. |
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Consumed worldwide, this wheaten staple is uniquely versatile, simple to make and always satisfying. |
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The by-product of gluten production, also called non-glutinous flour or wheaten cornstarch. |
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The glossy appearance of wheaten corn flour is from the fact that in ordinary flour the gluten remains undissolved and does not transmit light. |
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She has a beautiful even, harsh coat, dark wheaten in colour and a dear wee head with a good-shaped muzzle. |
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My goodness, what a terrifically odd and bizarre wheaten bread product you are, upon my word! |
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Although most Borders have dark ears and muzzles, their coats may be grizzle and tan, blue and tan, red or wheaten. |
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On Sundays and holidays he ate a bit of wheaten bread a piece of broiled salmon and a full cup of mead or ale. |
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There were several newly baked wheaten loaves, and some hen's eggs, broken open and boiled in broth. |
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Staple foods in Eritrea include kitcha, which is thin and unleavened and prepared from wheaten flour. |
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What came out of the darn machine this morning was wheaten but it wasn't bread. |
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Our Bakery was able to keep its homemade recipe alive for over 140 years-baked, fine wheaten flour and slightly raised cake. |
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The Highland Terrier came in several shades of colour, from a rich brown to a light wheaten bordering on white. |
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The larger terriers include the Airedale, Irish, Kerry blue, and soft-coated wheaten. |
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What wheaten people never put into words is the dog's passionate love for everybody and everything and his intense need to be loved. |
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Bread of barley and wheaten flour stood for life, wine for celebration. |
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Cream, wheaten, red, gray or nearly black. Brindle in all colors acceptable. |
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As the staple food, wheaten bread has been established since the Spanish regime, and the typical bun, called pan de sal, is the usual breakfast bread. |
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Our wheaten and soda breads are must-taste delicacies and Armagh Bramley apples have a very distinct reputation. |
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The people's clothes were poorly made as well, their clothes were similar to wheaten sacks and none but the black smith had reasonable clothes on. |
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In southern Britain, potatoes only became part of the staple diet of the poor during the early 19th cent. when the rising cost of wheaten bread obliged people to change. |
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Fawn, from golden wheaten to brick red, some black hairs dispersed over back and ears are tolerated. |
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Moreover the shift to wheaten bread, in preference to what were perceived to be inferior, darker flours, was accelerated by the onset of the French wars. |
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Any dog breed can have IBD, but German shepherds, soft-coated wheaten terriers, shar-peis and basenjis are particularly prone. |
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Any shade of reddish wheaten, never brown or chocolate. |
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At birth, the puppies may be blue, wheaten or reddish. |
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Golden wheaten, brownish yellow, stag red, black with tan markings. |
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Vitamin drinks and fruktovo-berry juice stand out instead of a sweet dish in the end of food intake, and the drink from a dogrose and wheaten bran is recommended to be accepted before meal. |
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I have a 15 month old cross between a soft-coated wheaten and a schnauzer which until now, did not find any kibbles to his liking until a collegue gave me a small sample bag to try. |
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Certainly in the wheaten products sector, African markets have become of growing significance to EU exporters as competition has intensified on traditional markets in North Africa and the Middle East. |
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Very well known for his small size and strong-legged shape as well as for his funny mustache, the Scottish terrier is a dog with a very independent character, whose hair can be black, brindle or wheaten. |
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In liquid porridges from buckwheat, ovsjanoj and other groats, mucous soups from wheaten bran contains tiamin which favorably operates on nervous system and secretory function of a stomach. |
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As a result the best quality wheaten bread called pandemain, made from the finest flour, considered to be a luxury. |
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Its range includes Irish speciality breads such as potato farls, soda farls, wheaten bread, pancakes and barmbrack. |
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In summer, oysters and clams are dipped in batter and fried, often served in a basket with french fries, or commonly on a wheaten bun as a clam roll. |
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