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How To Use Larder In A Sentence

  • In the past, noble lords and rich men - when they could get a licence from the Crown - built themselves a living larder in the shape of a deer park with high fences and walls.
  • Borates are the most effective treatment for many crawling insects including, roaches, silverfish, larder beetles, carpenter ants, and other woodborers, as well as wood decay organisms.
  • But most of all, they want a larder, stocked with jellies and jams, pickles and preserves.
  • But the fact remains: Corn is an inherent ingredient in our traditional larder.
  • In a blaze of dazzling light and gayety, White City, the new pleasure resort on the South side, which was given over to the public today, opened its doors last night and showed some few thousands of its friends the completeness of its larder of entertainment and innocent, as well as interesting, diversion.
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  • In real terms, compared to the cost of other foods, the larder is the bargain basement. Food Watch
  • There's good food in the larder, and in the fridge, and we have a movie to watch if we get bored.
  • She recalled that when the larder was empty the family knelt in prayer. Times, Sunday Times
  • So, a couple of hours and $200 later, the larder is well stocked once again. And So This Is Christmas
  • And to honey badgers, cobras and large-eyed tree snakes called boomslangs, the nest is a dependable larder.
  • Once a larder was a chilly food storage room. Times, Sunday Times
  • Well what did I do I here you all eagerly asking well what do you do in this situation good old pasta after all don't we all tend to have some lying around somewhere in the depths of our larders or cupboards.
  • The Larder is basically a renovated two-storey barn, with warm stone flags, aged wooden beams and a collection of nicely lived-in old furniture.
  • His larder is well supplied with poultry and wild fowl, his cellar contains "lashings," not only of "Parliament and pot," or "John Jamieson" and illicit "potheen," but of port and sherry, claret and champagne. Disturbed Ireland Being the Letters Written During the Winter of 1880-81.
  • On the other hand, civilization, house-building, warm apartments and kitchen fires, well-stored larders, and especially exemption from rude toil, abolish these extreme caricatures; and keeping appetite down to a middling level by the rote of meals, and thus taking away the incentives to ravenous haste, they allow the mind to tutor and variegate the tongue, and to substitute the harmonies and melodies of deliberate gustation for such unseemly bolting. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 17, No. 101, March, 1866
  • This occurred because individuals with relatively low rates of loss of larder-hoarded items were able to build up large defensible stores in their larders and, therefore, had very high reproductive success.
  • Among other things I've done in the past two hours: housing works (found book 3 of a trilogy my mother had started but I don't think she ever found books 2 or 3 yet), The Strand (a mere 11 books, $18 and change), and 12th Steet Books ($16 and change for 7 books, mostly Robert Barnard mysteries, but I also got a Colin Dexter Inspector Morse to try and an old non-series Lawrence Block, etc.), and a quick visit to the Westside Market since, obviously, the larder is bare. Breakfast in Bed
  • On the ground floor there four reception rooms, a kitchen with fitted units, a separate utility room and two larders with traditional stone shelves.
  • Apparently, Leap had overestimated the amount of fresh food left in her larder and the chain on Archie's bicycle had come off as he set off for the grocer's.
  • She sleeps under the porch and steals food from the larder.
  • The coach purported to give you ample time to breakfast and dine at certain capital hostels, but by a private arrangement between mine host and the guard and driver, the meals used to be abruptly closured in order to save the landlord's larder. The Reminiscences of an Irish Land Agent
  • Instead of heading toward the bedroom, Al poked around in the kitchen, defrosting some bread and sausages for breakfast, checking out how Gus had supplied the larder this time.
  • We tied the white headsquare around her head and locked her in the larder until the inspecting officer arrived.
  • Traditional garrons are used for bringing beasts off the hill to what is reputedly one of the finest Victorian deer larders in Scotland.
  • While many of us do not have cool larders, we all have cupboards that can be filled with packets and jars of food ready simply to be opened and then quickly cooked for a more personalised - and certainly more tasty - meal.
  • Sancho had recourse to the larder of his alforjas and took out of them what he called the prog; Don Quixote rinsed his mouth and bathed his face, by which cooling process his flagging energies were revived. Don Quixote
  • The list can be tallied at your local grocery store and your larder restocked with a regular weekly delivery.
  • ‘We often use containers made of Bakelite, or a kindred substance, to store various perishable food-stuffs in the larder,’ he explained.
  • Especially the world would cease to be the unclean slaughter-house of peaceful creatures, a grewsome larder set forth for the gratification of gluttony, and would become a fair garden, sacred to hygiene and the pleasure of the eye. The End of Books
  • When the larder is dry, there may be also bacon racks fixed to the ceiling; but, if the situation should be damp, these will be better in the kitchen. The Lady's Country Companion: or, How to Enjoy a Country Life Rationally
  • The word "larder" is a nice one, because it means both a place where food is stored, and a supply of food, especially for a household. Toast:
  • The latest must-have fridge is not really a fridge at all but a walk-in cold room - basically, the equivalent of an old-fashioned larder or pantry.
  • We had ventured into this vacant house, as I have said: its larders were well plenished; its vaults were full of marshalled brigades of bottles and battaglia of casks. John Splendid The Tale of a Poor Gentleman, and the Little Wars of Lorn
  • stock the larder with meat
  • He comes home from school and raids the larder.
  • Napoleon was a gourmet with several famous dishes attributed to his chef, and his countrymen spend a great deal of time and energy holing up for winter with a larder of epicurean proportions.
  • Having partly roasted the remainder of the birds, as well as the frogs and lizards, to assist in preserving them we hung them up in a shady place which we called our larder, under a thick branch, where we hoped they would keep sweet till they were required for food. The Wanderers Adventures in the Wilds of Trinidad and Orinoco
  • It's similar to the English word larder, where perishable food and drink were stored before we all had refrigerators. Rss news feed for Morning Advertiser
  • A well-made and well-designed larder or pantry is the pride and joy of the kitchen. Times, Sunday Times
  • Having inspected the larder, Mary decided to prepare a steak pudding and when Bertha's monosyllabic husband, Davy, took a second helping her fate was sealed.
  • Wardrobes or linen presses can serve in a kitchen as a larder or anything you fancy.
  • And I don't know anyone who would say they have a "larder"-probably because what would have been in a larder, is in a fridge now. Basic Kitchen Part IV: Pantry
  • With an abundance of firewood and water, with the sea always near to be bathed in, awninged bivvies and a well-stocked larder, they lived in undreamed-of luxury. The Tale of a Trooper
  • There is no way that anyone can pretend that food in the larder, or detergent under the sink, has a value that will increase over time. Times, Sunday Times
  • The shelves were half empty: Trevor remembered Chris saying, ` Gawd help him, we've got more in our larder at home. PROSPECT HILL
  • Leaves should be cut to about 10 cm from the shoulder of the bulb, then tied with raffia and hung in bunches in a dry room such as a larder.
  • It made me realise that most of the chaos in my own larder is down to faddiness. Times, Sunday Times
  • The day after the funeral, Wesley and Chad filled their saddlebags with food stolen from their home larders and set off on a long ride.
  • Their larders would have been stocked well with milk, flour, potatoes, vegetables, eggs, wheatmeal, wholemeal etc. and there would have even been some meat hanging on crooks from the ceiling.
  • We are willing to eat garbage for lunch because the larder is always empty of foods we actually want.
  • Packets of rice, pasta, couscous, lentils and bulgar wheat are all larder essentials, as are tins of tomatoes, tuna and anchovies.
  • She looked smart in her Napoleon-shaped hat, and a silk rose-coloured scarf pinned with a cameo brooch, when we went to the town for provisions to stock the larder.
  • She looked smart in her Napoleon-shaped hat, and a silk rose-coloured scarf pinned with a cameo brooch, when we went to the town for provisions to stock the larder.
  • They fitted locks on the fridge and larder. The Sun
  • There was a wonderful ice-cold larder with big hooks for hanging game.
  • The appliances have already been taken out, so we turn to the cupboards and larder. Macrosociology: An Introduction to Human Societies
  • Behind the kitchen are a utility room, a laundry chute and a walk-in larder. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is to the Spaniards that we are indebted, if "indebted" be a suitable term, for the wide-topped falling boot of the sixteenth century; that inconvenient, no-service thing -- good for the stage-players, fancy-ball men, and fellows like old Hudibras, who crammed a portable larder and wardrobe into its unfathomable recesses; but for the rough-riding horseman or the active hunter, a nuisance beyond all description. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 57, No. 357, June, 1845
  • Our larder is not too much encumbered with provision. Act II
  • I never did get a big cast-iron cooking range for this house but I have my larder stocked with good food and that's a large part of my comfort blanket mentality taken care of.
  • The kitchen has a double drainer sink unit and a shelved larder.
  • The woodlands were a reservoir of fuel; they were a larder of delicacies; a medicine chest of simples and cures.
  • Partly blocking the door of the larder there was a shapeless sofa upon which Mrs. Brooker, our landlady, lay permanently ill, festooned in grimy blankets. The Road to Wigan Pier
  • The ingredients in a dish don't come just from the larder. Times, Sunday Times
  • Behind the kitchen are a utility room, a laundry chute and a walk-in larder. Times, Sunday Times
  • The little bird sang out again, and I rose and gave it a crumb of bread from the larder chest.
  • Behind the kitchen are a utility room, a laundry chute and a walk-in larder. Times, Sunday Times
  • I am very fond of second courses, and devoutly believe that the whole gallinaceous family was made to enrich our larders and to deck our tables. The physiology of taste; or Transcendental gastronomy. Illustrated by anecdotes of distinguished artists and statesmen of both continents by Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin. Translated from the last Paris edition by Fayette Robinson.
  • A well-made and well-designed larder or pantry is the pride and joy of the kitchen. Times, Sunday Times
  • Their larders would have been stocked well with milk, flour, potatoes, vegetables, eggs, wheatmeal, wholemeal etc. and there would have even been some meat hanging on crooks from the ceiling.
  • While the Cologne fossil is the oldest food store yet discovered, two other ancient larders have been found in slightly more recent deposits in Nebraska.
  • He pointed to the devoted band of Smyrna fire-fighters, who were joyously gathering in with varying luck a supply of tomcod and haddock to furnish the larder inshore. The Skipper and the Skipped Being the Shore Log of Cap'n Aaron Sproul
  • And a larder is a place where meat etc is kept from O Fr 'lardier' - a bacon tub. Basic Kitchen Part IV: Pantry
  • My kitchen doesn't have a larder or pantry, rather a series of cupboards and shelves. Times, Sunday Times
  • In the early clays her function was to train airmen, to provide naval escort for shipping in addition to being the larder for British food and the manufacturer of all kinds of military equipment. The Approaching Climax
  • We have the finest larder in the world: think of our fabulous game, beef, lamb, seafood, oats, barley and soft fruits.
  • If by any chance these animals are suffered to accompany the meat to the safe or larder, in the course of twenty-four hours the small white mawks increase to the length of one-eighth of an inch, and are found crawling in hundreds and moving about, as you have observed the yellow flies buzzing over the old and rotten carcass of a horse that has been exposed for weeks. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 55, No. 340, February, 1844
  • An agouti and a cabiai, not to mention a dozen partridges, enriched the larder after this fortunate excursion. Eight Hundred Leagues on the Amazon
  • Which I didn't like," pursued Mrs. Treacher, stonily, "to insult the lady's stomach with the kind of eatables I found in the larder. Major Vigoureux
  • She stored food in a walk-in larder, which was a heck of a lot colder than the fridge.
  • Larders are stocked up for the winter months ahead and feasting is taken seriously in a country of committed gastronomes.
  • The cat somehow insinuated itself into the larder.
  • This plan would have succeeded admirably had not the evil star under which I was born, been in the ascendant during that month, and cast its malign influences even into my "'umble" larder; for the rats had their dessert off my cheese, the bugs set up housekeeping in my cracker bag, and the apples like all worldly riches, took to themselves wings and flew away; whither no man could tell, though certain black imps might have thrown light upon the matter, had not the plaintiff in the case been loth to add another to the many trials of long-suffering. Hospital Sketches
  • Cellars and larders are treasure troves here and, inland at least, supermarkets are unheard of.
  • Wow! There it was, hoofing the lino by the larder door.
  • The setting is the fourth floor larder. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Crow hunters went about searching for the fatter carcasses and brought the meat home, the larders having been depleted during the heavy weather when hunting was difficult and game hard to find.
  • They fitted locks on the fridge and larder. The Sun
  • Hager turning:archenemy,larder.agglutinin McDonald … Think Progress » Brokaw: Hussein Execution ‘Resembled The Worst Kind Of Nightmare Out Of The Old American West’
  • Before the days of refrigerators, when fresh food was stored in larders, Limax species were often encountered congregating around the rim of a milk jug or slithering over the Sunday joint of beef on the larder shelf.
  • Rogers mentions that there is plenty of food in the larder, so they don't have to worry about supplies.
  • Empty out the larder, paying special attention to bags of dried fruit, rice or pulses that may have been stored for some time. Times, Sunday Times
  • Other features will include a library with a bay window, a large designer kitchen with a fully fitted walk-in larder and a separate utility room.
  • The kitchen features granite worktops, cherrywood units, a walk-in larder and integrated Neff appliances as standard.
  • The shelves were half empty: Trevor remembered Chris saying, ` Gawd help him, we've got more in our larder at home. PROSPECT HILL
  • His larder is well supplied with poultry and wild fowl, his cellar contains "lashings," not only of "Parliament and pot," or "John Jamieson" and illicit "potheen," but of port and sherry, claret and champagne. Disturbed Ireland Being the Letters Written During the Winter of 1880-81.
  • Gertie shrieked her pleasure at the well-stocked larder and demanded to know if Aunt Beatrice wanted to make her as fat as she was. THE BLACK OPAL
  • Madalene Bonvini-Hamel of the British Larder, meanwhile, advocates a rough puff, because "only the very best ingredients will do for this recipe" – implying and rightly so in my opinion that very few home cooks will have the patience or the chilliness of hand to do justice to a proper puff. How to cook perfect beef wellington
  • The loft was additionally used as a makeshift larder to store food. Times, Sunday Times
  • She looked smart in her Napoleon-shaped hat, and a silk rose-coloured scarf pinned with a cameo brooch, when we went to the town for provisions to stock the larder.
  • He comes home from school and raids the larder.
  • British soldiers were not much better off than we were, for they were limited to bully-beef and "clinkers," though they frequently supplemented their larder by stores from Boer farms, such as fowls, pigs, &c., and had salt, sugar, and coffee in abundance. My Reminiscences of the Anglo-Boer War
  • Everything is stored in the floor-to-ceiling cupboards and a larder they built themselves. Times, Sunday Times
  • In the larder stood a huge Christmas cake covered with marzipan and thick white icing, which Beth had baked several months ago.
  • I suppose you could call it original larder food. The Sun
  • The setting is the fourth floor larder. The Times Literary Supplement
  • The concept is fantastically simple: you control Caesar, making him jump about the shelves in the larder catching the mice before they eat the food.
  • My kitchen doesn't have a larder or pantry, rather a series of cupboards and shelves. Times, Sunday Times
  • But the fact remains: Corn is an inherent ingredient in our traditional larder.
  • Astrological knowledge is, of course, highly valuable, but the supply in San Francisco seems to be slightly in excess of the demand, and no matter how much Professor Chaney lectured, scattered circulars, watched the movements of the planets, and cast nativities, his exchequer continued painfully bare and his larder nearly empty. Jack London's Parentage
  • Now with a family of three, Paul having arrived in 1997, Kate wanted to keep clutter to a minimum and so chose to have two built-in floor to ceiling larders rather than cupboards over counter tops.
  • Walk in larder. Gas cooker outlet.
  • The main problem, as with so many other species, is that we tend to be fishing relatively sparsely populated lakes, which have huge natural food larders.
  • I searched every nook and cranny in the kitchen and larder, and examined the underneaths of tables and chairs in case Harry or Dolly had taken a liking to it as a rolly-toy.
  • We had opted to do grilled salmon steaks, accompanied by a salad and some tiny new potatoes I'd discovered in a larder.

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