A big plate of oxtail was many strong bones heaving with lean meat and dark flavour, the jus a little thinner than in a truly ideal world. |
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Whole roast grouse may still come with game chips and bread sauce but there is game jus rather than over-thickened gravy. |
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For the lamb sauce, in a medium saucepan, heat the lamb jus over medium heat. |
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Many forms of jus existed short of ownership, notably the hypothec, the civilian equivalent of the mortgage. |
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In French meat cookery, jus is roughly equivalent to honestly made thin gravy in the British tradition. |
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People are brought under our power as slaves either by the civil law or by the jus gentium. |
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He had the grilled ribeye steak with champ, red wine jus and roasted garlic, which I felt was a top-notch rendition. |
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Duck breast is pan-roasted golden as schnitzel and encircled by a cherry jus and caramelized salsify. |
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The spiced pork was flavoured only delicately, and a touch on the dry side, but that just allowed it to soak up the rich jus with more gusto. |
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One specialized field, the humanitarian laws of war, had long included rules regulating the conduct of war, the so-called jus in bello. |
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Overall, the Court's peremptory style in addressing the jus ad bellum reflects an unfortunate ipse dixit approach to judicial reasoning. |
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It's bad enough having to gnaw on the inedible beef au jus and starchy carrot sticks. |
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Herb-roasted chicken was made for this wretched weather, and the jus surrounding it is soppingly worth at least half a loaf. |
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The reduction of port jus was a little sweet for my taste, though the mash and carrots were delicious. |
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Marinades can be constructed to ensure that the product maintains juiciness and develops delicious au jus or gravy during the cooking process. |
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However, the pepper sauce was more like a red wine jus and there was neither sight nor sound of a peppercorn. |
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Red cabbage and lentils offered just the right contrast of flavours and bite, but the red wine jus was a little too rich. |
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Put half the segments, chopped, into a small heavy bottom pan with white wine and the orange jus and reduce to a demi-glaze consistency. |
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A more substantial meal is available in the guise of lamb cutlets in a plum chutney jus served with couscous and vegetables, for men who just won't eat quiche. |
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He realized that Botswana's reservation to article 7 might be viewed as touching on a matter of jus cogens. |
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My fillet of venison with a roulade of celeriac and roasted wild mushrooms in a red wine and port jus was absolutely fine apart from one key factor. |
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The same is true of a slow-cooked shoulder of lamb in a jus with a flavour so deep potholers could explore it. |
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The richly concentrated jus has a golden hue and feels satiny and silky on the skin. |
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Don't miss out on a meal of roast prime rib of beef au jus and the supreme of fresh Atlantic salmon, dishes sure to please! |
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However, that lacuna in the judicial protection available to the applicants is not in itself contrary to jus cogens. |
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Augustine saw the questions of jus ad bellum and jus in bello as intertwined and so, probably, should modern man. |
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What today's Augustinians are talking about is jus ad bellum, in other words whether it is right to be fighting at all. |
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As the preamble to new Code indicates, it establishes the new jus commune for the province of Quebec. |
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Torture is also prohibited by customary international law and ranks as jus cogens under international law. |
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Since the adoption of the Constitution in 1948, jus sanguinis had been the prevailing legal norm with regard to naturalization. |
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The Bank's services will explain and jus tify more clearly the methodology used and the assumptions made. |
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But on the e ve of the Longest Day, the In vasion o f Normandy had only jus t begun. |
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Largely due to a historic tradition of jus soli, the Americas continued to stand out as a region where statelessness rarely occurs at birth. |
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Spoon a few dots of jus around the squab and sprinkle a pinch of vadouvan spice onto the plate. |
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The crime of piracy is considered a breach of jus cogens, a conventional peremptory international norm that states must uphold. |
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And the prohibition on incitement to genocide is also part of the International Criminal Court, and that's why one speaks of it in such a jus cogens character. |
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Since 1945, there has been a new emphasis in diplomacy and jurisprudence, and in the language of human-rights lobbies, on the other big dilemma in military ethics: jus in bello literally, law in war. |
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The result of this magisterial system was the development of the jus honorarium, a new body of rules that existed alongside, and often superseded, the civil law. |
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As well, despite these attributes, a lease produces only a jus ad rem, whereas real rights, such as a lease in the common law, create a jus in re. |
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Instead, the government chose to enact a jus sanguinis system, with the naturalization restrictions listed above. |
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Hey bro. Wats up? Anthony texted back. Nothin much, jus layin in bed. You? His phone dinged again a few seconds later. Samesies man. |
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Back in his kitchen he rustles up Queen of Puddings with raspberry jam and custard and roasted confit of duck with marmalade jus and cider. |
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The Chairperson asked if, given the low level of birth registration in the State party, children born of foreign parents really could be sure of having jus soli. |
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Justice from the standpoint of the Hierarchy is jus tice for all. |
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Rules of jus cogens, or preemptory norms of general international law, describe international obligations from which derogation is not permitted under any circumstances, even in cases of emergency. |
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In sum, the court was vague about whether and to what extent the right to property constituted jus cogens, but was clear about the fact that this right had not been violated in the instant cases. |
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Counterevidence of this sort does not defeat the conclusion there is consensus that moral obligation can validate jus cogens. |
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Moreover, the prohibition of torture is part of jus cogens. |
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Today, the jus commune of Quebec is codified in the Civil Code of Quebec. |
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The Indonesian nationality law is based on jus sanguinis and jus soli. |
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With regards to the jus ad bellum, Sands and Law advised that. |
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The human rights model is based on the nonreciprocal nature of the civilian protections in AP I and the short-term nature of jus in bello proportionality analysis. |
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Jus cogens may, therefore, operate to invalidate a treaty or agreement between states to the extent of the inconsistency with any such principles or norms. |
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