How To Use Bonbon In A Sentence

  • Located in a 15th-century wine merchant's house, the Choco Story museum www.choco-story.be traces the history of chocolate from its origins as the sacred drink of the Mayas and Aztecs to Belgium's emergence as a cocoa-superpower after the Neuhaus family—Swiss immigrants in Brussels—confected the first chocolate-filled bonbons in the first years of the 20th century. Turning Chocolate on Its Head
  • It's all part of a push by specialty chocolatiers to make candy more manly, and to get men to reach for a stout caramel or India Pale Ale bonbon as eagerly as they might grab a nice cold one. Hoppy Holidays: Sweet Makers Try to Tap Market for Beer Candy
  • As I was leaving, I glimpsed a familiar face at one of the tables, sitting alone in front of a giant chocolate bonbon. Deadly
  • She dumped the contents of the box into a bonbon dish that stood upon the hall table and picking out the chocolate piece, ate it daintily while she examined her purchases.
  • Its Chef Sessions compilation celebrates seven top West Coast talents with forward-looking creations such as an enrobed agro-dolce brittle by San Francisco's Chris Cosentino, a bonbon filled with pine resin ganache by Seattle's Jonathan Sundstrom and a divine carrot-caramel-centered tile by Portland's Gabriel Rucker. $37, theochocolate.com News You Can Eat
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  • Plant Nomenclature • Family Cucurbitaceae - Genus Cucurbita • species pepo - summer squash, pumpkin, acorn squash maxima - hubbard, buttercup, kabocha moschata - butternut, Long Island Cheese mixta - variety or cultivar Zephyr, Howden, Tiptop Blue Ballet, bonbon Waltham butternut Green striped cushaw - Also in the Cucurbitaceae family: Cucumis melo Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • I can remember when many ladies -- most ladies, carried a box -- nay, two boxes -- tabatiere and bonbonniere. The Lock and Key Library Classic Mystery and Detective Stories: Old Time English
  • Ben also paid £1.89 for a pack of lemon bonbons that turned out to be so hard in the centre that they were practically inedible.
  • ‘You don't want them to think you've been eating bonbons and watching TV for five years,’ he said.
  • Lord Arthur put the capsule into a pretty little silver bonbonniere that he saw in a shop window in Bond Street, threw away Pestle and Humbey's ugly pill-box, and drove off at once to Lady Clementina's. Lord Arthur Savile's Crime
  • her street name is Bonbon
  • If you love to hate the superrich, The Valet, a delectable comedy in which the great French actor Daniel Auteuil portrays a piggy billionaire industrialist facing his comeuppance, is a sinfully delicious bonbon," writes Stephen Holden in the New York Times. GreenCine Daily: Interview. Francis Veber.
  • The giving of the bonbonnière marks an ancient and heartfelt tradition.
  • On top stood a tiny covered, glass candy dish, which held a ‘bonbon’ made from stacked spools of thread.
  • In 18th-century France, this custom became a fine art, with small highly decorated boxes called bonbonnières made of precious materials given as presents and tokens of regard.
  • The Cheese Princess chose some of the exquisite bonbons to degust, while you can see there are many other delectable treats... Beth Arnold: Letter From Paris: Chocolate and Jacques Genin
  • At a christening party all the favors savor of the nursery -- splendid cradles of flowers, a bassinet of brilliante trimmed with ribbons for a _bonbonniere_, powder-boxes, puffs, little socks filled with sugar instead of little feet, an infant's cloak standing on end Manners and Social Usages
  • ‘I heard you are presently engaged with a certain Iruka,’ Yoroi started out of the blue, as he arranged the sweets and bonbons nonchalantly.
  • He enters it as a pepper-caster, a feathered _bonbonniere_, a pickle - holder (in china), and is drawn, painted, and photographed in every style. Manners and Social Usages
  • They bet bonbons and other goodies instead of the usual shillings, for no one wanted to lose money during Christmastime.
  • Queen Elizabeth I loved bonbons, and aristocratic Tudor households would pride themselves on presenting elaborate sugar artifices.
  • Ces bonbons me font baver d’envie devant mon écran. Foodbeam » Des bonbons salés? – Caramelle à la ricotta, au basilic et aux olives noires
  • On another occasion, Maggie is chatting to a Conservative MP when Judy gives them both a bonbon.
  • She commonly brought a beautiful agate bonbonniere full of gold pieces, when she played. The Newcomes
  • I wished I'd had a box of bonbons to offer her, or a slice of pecan pie. GALILEE
  • And if this bonbon is even less substantial than her customary fare, well, Valentine's Day isn't really such a major holiday, is it? Plum Lovin' by Janet Evanovich: Book summary
  • Twentieth-century bonbons and sweets made in France include numerous skilfully marketed regional specialities, traditional or modern, unobtainable anywhere else.
  • The market in Gérardmer has several stands selling those bonbons, in piles of little bags (one flavor or mixed flavors) stacked along the stand.
  • Having abolished X-ray browse, the annihilative applicant on the canvas ate the abandoned candles in the bonbon can.
  • I can remember when many ladies — most ladies, carried a box — nay, two boxes — tabatiere, and bonbonniere. Roundabout Papers
  • Nestled in terra cotta, thick, gutsy prosciutto barely girdles hunks of luxuriantly gooey mozzarella bocconcini that have been roasted into a delicious taffy, the perfect bonbon to chomp on during a film by the Taviani brothers.
  • Twentieth-century bonbons and sweets made in France include numerous regional specialities, traditional or modern, unobtainable anywhere else.
  • Staffordshire Enamels boxes, bonbonnières, music boxes, cufflinks, paperweights and clocks are shipped all over the world to discerning collectors.
  • That's why last year's Latin rock poster boy Ricky Martin is working extra hard to establish himself as more than just a bonbon shaking phenom with his second English language album, " Sound Loaded.
  • ‘The kids just love these,’ I say, while waving a bag of strawberry bonbons over my head.
  • Eat your grasshoppers – bonbon bilobate, cert cerus. Archive 2008-08-01
  • The syrup is produced in Nemours, a city to the South-East of Paris, where they've had a specialty of bonbons au coquelicot (red poppy candy) since the 1870's.
  • That evening, at the Villa Aioussa, there gathered a courtly assembly, of much higher rank than Algiers can commonly afford, because many of station as lofty as her own had been drawn thither to follow her to what the Princesse Corona called her banishment -- an endurable banishment enough under those azure skies, in that clear, elastic air, and with that charming "bonbonniere" in which to dwell, yet still a banishment to the reigning beauty of Paris, to one who had the habits and the commands of a wholly undisputed sovereignty in the royal splendor of her womanhood. Under Two Flags
  • Other desserts include tiramisu and a bonbon liqueur, which looked as if it came from the Viennetta school of dessert design.
  • And the nearest I come to a bonbon is the occasional after dinner mint, which I usually end up eating after breakfast, after lunch, after a mid-afternoon snack ... McCook Daily Gazette Headlines
  • Vorosmarty is home to the city's most famous confectionery shop, Gerbeaud patisserie, where the cognac cherry bonbon was invented.
  • A bonbonnière makes a wonderful way of saying ‘Thank you’ for sharing the joy of your day.
  • I can remember when many ladies — most ladies, carried a box — nay, two boxes — tabatiere, and bonbonniere. Roundabout Papers
  • So much passes for good that is really not passable at all - air bubbles in the molded bonbons, bottoms with dipping fork marks or filling peeking out, thick layers of "enrobed" chocolate overwhelming the delicate ganache inside. Flora Lazar: Pastry Outside of Paris: Museum and 'Mets' in Metz
  • In the early 2000s, bonbon makers bumped up the dare element by introducing hot chilis to chocolate. Hoppy Holidays: Sweet Makers Try to Tap Market for Beer Candy
  • Other desserts include tiramisu and a bonbon liqueur, which looked as if it came from the Viennetta school of dessert design.
  • Rob was at the finish with two bags full of cookies and bonbons from a local patisserie.
  • Some ironies are sweet little bonbons, consumed quickly and effortlessly.
  • It recalled the neat, mouth-watering display of bonbons with which his father, a chocolatier, tempted the passers-by.
  • Just at her elbow was the gay _bonbonniere_ containing the brown, cream-encrusted walnuts. Seven Little Australians
  • Like the bonbons that line the gilded boxes of Godiva chocolates, their names adorn one storefront after another above displays of leather coats, designer purses and gold bracelets.
  • We are never too old to admire a pretty favor or a tasteful _bonbonniere_; and, looking back over the season, we remember, as among the most charming of the favors, those with flowers painted upon silken banners, with the owner's name intertwined. Manners and Social Usages
  • He picked up the bonbon dish that lay on the table beside him and ate the pink confection.
  • South African companies specialising in bonbonnières are always willing to offer creative and unusual options.
  • They screamed and were consoled with bonbons and cuddles.
  • ... then Sugar Plum pushed the raspberry bonbon away with her nose and picked a lemon one instead. THIS HEART OF MINE
  • The _bonbonniere_ can cost anything, from five to five hundred dollars; fifty dollars for a satin box filled with candy is not an uncommon price. Manners and Social Usages
  • A pair of bellows is a pretty and inexpensive _bonbonniere_. Manners and Social Usages

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