How To Use framboise In A Sentence
- Because the bumps of yaws look like berries, the disease is also called frambesia from the French ‘framboise,’ meaning ‘raspberry.’
- Because the bumps of yaws look like berries, the disease is also called frambesia from the French ‘framboise,’ meaning ‘raspberry.’
- Beneath the cypress tree, I stand waving "merci" with a confidence that only framboise-sans-frogs* can give. French Word-A-Day:
- There were quite a few bottles gathering dust in the liquor cabinet - Benedictine, framboise, aquavit - and he decided he might as well try them all.
- They are great with coffee, you can serve them with compote rose, you can crumble them on top of riz au lait à la framboise, grind them to make a cheesecake crust, use them to make speculoos ice-cream…
- Sprinkle with the sugar and the framboise or rosewater.
- The vendor told me they were framboises americain.
- Raspberries I see as a sort of baking commodity, like chocolate chips or ground almonds, and I usually keep a bag of frozen framboises in the freezer: in Paris, fresh raspberries come at too high a price for too tiny a basket to drown their delicate taste in a cake, so I have taken to buying Picard's framboises brisées for my baking.
- The eau-de-vie selection now includes framboise, kirsch, and quince.
- Mark Laframboise, book buyer for Politics and Prose, recalled that he drove downtown on the September day in 1998 when independent counsel Kenneth W. Starr released his report on President Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky and bought 48 copies from the store to sell at cost. Federal bookstore rebrands itself for policy wonks in and out of Beltway