How To Use Savour In A Sentence

  • The whole lecture has a morally subversive ring, and the savour of antinomianism about it.
  • Some savoury recipes also use rhubarb, as its tanginess makes it an ideal accompaniment for fatty meats or oily fish.
  • If anything he is a decent copper and he'll usually only collar unsavoury characters. The Sun
  • Instantly a dozen knowing eyes were fixed on it, and a buzz of voices was heard; and soon Gerard saw the prior point more than once, and the monk came back, looking as proud as Punch, with a savoury crustade ryal, or game pie gravied and spiced, for Gerard, and a silver grace cup full of rich pimentum. The Cloister and the Hearth
  • The octopus was tender and tangy, with a savour of the sea.
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  • Home grown herbs would have included coriander, dill, thyme, opium poppy and summer savoury.
  • Move on to complex appetizers like pheasant ballottine, a cylinder of braised meat surrounded by a savoury sauce and tiny little apples.
  • Here, we gleefully slosh about in communal pools of thick brown gloop, pouring it over ourselves with plastic pails and savouring the eucalyptus-like aroma, before washing it off under hot jets of salty spring water.
  • Handvo" is a cherished gujarati recipe which can be called a savoury steamed vegetable cornmeal cake, and is filled with several nutritious ingredients. Handvo - Healthy Vegetable Cornmeal Cake
  • A deserved multi-award-winner that's almost savoury but never boorish. Times, Sunday Times
  • Once again we appeal to these unsavoury people to please stop this silly nonsense.
  • They want something to enjoy, to savour, to talk about. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is a hot, sweet and sour delight that you can make time and again for use with fish and chicken dishes, or as a dipping sauce for spring rolls, poppadoms and savouries.
  • For him, the competition'is still something to enjoy and savour. Times, Sunday Times
  • As diners savoured their delicious Chocolate marquise and sipped their coffee and tea, the ballroom's lights dimmed and the audience stilled as the evening's program began.
  • My wife, Jayne, enjoyed the mini savoury selection which consisted of crunchy onion bhajis, aloo tikkas, spinach pakoras and vegetable samosas all deep fried and served with two dips.
  • My poached cod with lobster sauce and brandade was bright with a savoury-citrus flavour. Times, Sunday Times
  • The drink which connects Black Russian, Screwdriver, Salty Dog and Bloody Mary is the colorless, savourless but strong vodka.
  • Rome, all noble men, whom the king did do balm and gum with many good gums aromatic, and after did do cere them in sixty fold of cered cloth of sendal, and laid them in chests of lead, because they should not chafe nor savour, and upon all these bodies their shields with their arms and banners were set, to the end they should be known of what country they were. Le Morte d'Arthur: Sir Thomas Malory's book of King Arthur and of his noble knights of the Round table
  • Booking is essential, to savour delicacies such as pumpkin cappellini and roasted wild rabbit.
  • Also in that contree, and in othere also, men fynden longe apples to selle, in hire cesoun: and men clepen hem apples of paradys; and thei ben righte swete and of gode savour. 74 And thoghe zee kutte hem in never so many gobettes or parties, overthwart or end longes, evermore zee schulle fynden in the myddes the figure of the Holy Cros of oure The Voyages and Travels of Sir John Mandeville
  • Home grown herbs would have included coriander, dill, thyme, opium poppy and summer savoury.
  • The other aspect of her conservatism which seems most unsavoury today is her hostility to feminism.
  • If the content of the pieces is somewhat lacking, then the composer's ear for the perfect registration does mean that there are some delicious sounds to be savoured and Harold Britton makes the most of them.
  • The risotto was something of a success with a delicious combination of savoury Arborio rice and caramelised onions.
  • The range of Orlando Gibbons can be savoured first in another expressive and touching pavan.
  • It was a pretty unsavoury incident. The Sun
  • My wife, Jayne, enjoyed the mini savoury selection which consisted of crunchy onion bhajis, aloo tikkas, spinach pakoras and vegetable samosas all deep fried and served with two dips.
  • The savoury smell greeted them as they went through the door.
  • Teas will be served during the afternoon and the organisers will welcome donations of food, cakes, and savouries.
  • Every day is different, but a typical spread might include soup served with chunks of wholemeal, a savoury Danish (a whorl of dough stuffed with pesto, tapenade, spinach and goats cheese), Dorset rarebit (with cider) or rustic open sandwiches (doorsteps of sourdough piled with hummus and salad) – all at £5.75. West Dorset's top 10 budget eats
  • So, without preconceptions, this is a brisk, well-balanced, fruit forward, but still avowedly savoury wine, that would be a piquant pairing with the crisp, dry snap of well grilled salmon cutlets - a texture lost in pan frying.
  • The word tiff in connection with her tale had a peculiar savour, a paralysing effect. Chance
  • There's hardly a bit of a pig you can't eat, from the head boiled up in a stewy soup to the trotters with their savoury jelly and morsels of meat.
  • Doors open at 8 p.m. and wine and savouries will be served.
  • In a cinema, we can certainly savour our sublime ‘moment’ if what we see stirs feelings of panic; watching a video, we can replay the occasion and ‘pause’ it as many times as we wish.
  • The chicken livers were compelling, with a moreish, umami savoury flavour. Times, Sunday Times
  • Even pain is transfigured into a sort of pleasure which can be savoured aesthetically.
  • He always savoured the chance to quash interviewers with one of his favourite put-downs: ‘Please desist from your perfervid questioning.’
  • Rome, all noble men, whom the king did do balm and gum with many good gums aromatic, and after did do cere them in sixty fold of cered cloth of sendal, and laid them in chests of lead, because they should not chafe nor savour, and upon all these bodies their shields with their arms and banners were set, to the end they should be known of what country they were. Le Morte d'Arthur: Sir Thomas Malory's book of King Arthur and of his noble knights of the Round table
  • It was an unsavoury situation for us and I am very disappointed in it.
  • Toast with toppings became very popular as ‘savoury toast’, beloved of the Victorians and Edwardians.
  • Do you prefer sweet or savoury food?
  • They are best used for cocktail savouries, but the cheaper mussels make a very tasty pasta sauce.
  • They last 14 days in the bag and can flavour drinks, chocolate, savouries and cakes. The Sun
  • Do you prefer sweet or savoury food?
  • This path dependency has created a foreign policy where the U.S. props up unsavoury governments which they destruct only years later.
  • Race over the rugged terrain on a 4x4 tour or savour a more relaxed view from the back of a camel. Times, Sunday Times
  • With lush visuals and beautiful colours to savour, gamers were introduced to the two tiered system.
  • It was at this point that we decided to cut our losses and have a meal in York to savour the atmosphere.
  • You've got to savour the taste. The Sun
  • Research suggests that for men savoury foods are more likely to trigger an almost uncontrollable urge to indulge. Times, Sunday Times
  • Another dish is scrapple, a sort of savoury ‘loaf’ made with pork, cornmeal, and other ingredients, to be chilled and sliced, the slices then to be fried and served very hot.
  • He merely savours his secret and waits until he can return, taking the boy water and food.
  • This savour is communicated insensibly, for our life is hid; but inseparably, for grace is a good part that shall never be taken away from those who have it. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume V (Matthew to John)
  • He seemed to be savouring every last moment that he had in this place.
  • Today we must savour the victory. Times, Sunday Times
  • As a big fan of fruit as part of the main savoury dish of the meal I thoroughly enjoyed this.
  • When you savour your morning coffee, you're sipping on the second most traded commodity after oil.
  • It was composed of turtle soup made of the most delicate hawks bills, of a surmullet served with puff paste (the liver of which, prepared by itself, was most delicious), and fillets of the emperor-holocanthus, the savour of which seemed to me superior even to salmon. Twenty-Thousand Leagues Under the Sea
  • These are savoury reds to be enjoyed with rich food. Times, Sunday Times
  • Race over the rugged terrain on a 4x4 tour or savour a more relaxed view from the back of a camel. Times, Sunday Times
  • It's an accessible depiction of a lonely cyborg and his dog and Oshii allows you to savour every detail.
  • The savoury pancake is also pretty special. Times, Sunday Times
  • I'll take some freshly baked savouries for the chancellor. Times, Sunday Times
  • Coriander features in just about everything, save a dish of satay with a nicely savoury sauce.
  • Walking the Imperial Alps is definitely something to savour - mountains, meadows, fruits, cheese, beer, schnapps, wine, flowers, clanging cowbells - what more could you want from a holiday?
  • Savouring her 1,440-vote capture of the Tory marginal, the double Oscar winner said yesterday her acting career was over.
  • I cannot accept these submissions which I have to say on occasions seemed to me to savour of semantics.
  • This artisan bakery and café serves organic breads, cakes, savouries, wheat and yeast free products. Times, Sunday Times
  • Ever so slightly and slowly, they lent in and kissed each other on the lips softly, savouring the moment in each other's arms.
  • Similarly, the chicken wings come in Thai jelly, a sticky slick of savoury honey coating some very ruddy wings.
  • The curdy but creamy, savoury flavour is a fusion of all three layers: rind, paste and centre. Both a Blessing and a Curse
  • Drinking in the sozzled aftermath of the intoxicating wrestle with Ghana, there were reasons to savour the morning after. England's Andy Carroll is not the first with a thirst for success | Barney Ronay
  • It was thought," says Nashe, in his Quaternio, "a kind of solecism, and to savour of effeminacy, for a young gentleman in the flourishing time of his age to creep into a coach, and to shroud himself from wind and weather: our great delight was to out-brave the blustering boreas upon a great horse; to arm and prepare ourselves to go with Mars and Bellona into the field was our sport and pastime; coaches and caroches we left unto them for whom they were first invented, for ladies and gentlemen, and decrepit age and impotent people. Bracebridge Hall
  • I am lucky to have been able to savour the antiquity of the town in its relatively pristine state.
  • An intimate, art deco space, with a polished mahogany counter and wood-panelled walls, offers visitors with sophisticated tastes an elegant, cool ambience in which to savour whisky sours, white Russians, black Russians, daiquiris and gimlets PI Philip Marlowe's favoured tipple. 10 of the best barrio bars in Barcelona
  • But there is something unsettling about the menacing threats which have accompanied the protests, a taste of which was unveiled in the unsavoury scenes outside Parliament.
  • It was velvety, intensely savoury, beautifully rich and beefy. Times, Sunday Times
  • Anthony had written that life without Anna had no savour, was tedious, insupportable. IN LOVE AND WAR
  • There is a less savoury aspect to all this, too. Times, Sunday Times
  • The man adores me for goodness sake… how can I taint the way he feels about me by making such unsavoury noises and smells in his company?
  • Some of his commissions have some pretty unsavoury characters with shady pasts.
  • It was used in sweet dishes more than as a savoury vegetable, but it soon palled and lost favour.
  • To my shame a reputation bent or maimed defamed the image staid, and disrepute disgraced my case, plagued with infamy and ill repute, a name ablaze by imputation as a most unsavoury reputation won or lost or never claimed. Reputation Never Claimed
  • The most savoury of the paintings (if I can use that word without coming across as prudish) are a series of nudes done from life in South Africa.
  • They can be bought either whole or ground and are used in both savoury and sweet dishes. The Sun
  • From this pungently unpromising substance we have made a variety of savoury stews and fritters, and saltfish is one of the Caribbean's unexpectedly characteristic flavours.
  • The whole thing is a little bit unsavoury but is the least-worst outcome.
  • Delightful Kitchen Diva Ann Browne served up cold platters all during the day that were a joy to savour.
  • A long-handled spoon helps to savour the foodstuff in small and leisurely mouthfuls, in true connoisseur's style.
  • BRIGHTON must have almost forgotten the unsavoury taste of defeat. Times, Sunday Times
  • There are also two rather unsavoury technical details that must be considered. Times, Sunday Times
  • In a labial dawn I savoured salty draughts of liquor springing from your tumid lips, luxuriated in a magnanimity your primal crouch expressed, heard half-suppressed love-cries tell the tumult in your loins. When I Close My Eyes (rev)
  • I would immerse myself in the clear turquoise waters and savour the soothing feel of the warm ocean.
  • The best smell is bread, the best savour salt, the best love that of children. 
  • Next came reports of unsavoury incidents involving flight attendants and other staff. Times, Sunday Times
  • Hot hors d’œuvres could be miniature savoury pastries or tiny fritters or other similar titbits; but these do not belong to the mainstream hors d’œuvres tradition.
  • Within was a frumenty of beans rich with shreds of dried pig, and made savoury with turnips, cabbages, and onion.
  • Make sure you savour food - cooking shouldn't be a hassle or a trial.
  • We savour it,not sadistically, but becauseit represents the ultimateescapism: seeing the rules and restrictionsof our own society wrecked, inverted andremoved. 2008 July 04 « shattersnipe: malcontent & rainbows
  • It adds a characteristic flavour to a range of savoury dishes, from pizza to pork chops.
  • ‘Some of the people visiting the house are very unsavoury characters,’ she said, speaking in 2003 when the Evening Press first exposed the brothel.
  • They also have the most topping I have ever seen, by a long shot - the poppy and sesame seeds are in a thick layer, the multigrain always sheds oats, and the cheese and onion (available fresh on Saturdays) is savoury and rich.
  • Dinner or supper consists of three courses; soup, a savoury snack with wholemeal bread and a choice of flavoured desserts.
  • Since she was a child, Elliott has loved the outdoors, so she's used to braving unsavoury weather conditions.
  • Can you savour the South American experience without clocking up monstrous mileage?
  • Over a low to moderate heat this will take a good 25 minutes, during which time a savoury golden sediment will attach itself to the pan.
  • As it plays out in the context of the film, this metaphorical scenario leads Alex into troublesome emotional territory with friends, colleagues and more unsavoury characters.
  • Wine connoisseurs demonstrate how to savour the true taste of wine without depending on the nose.
  • Manufacturers regularly added chalk to bread and more unsavoury unnatural ingredients to other foodstuffs.
  • We lay for a while before starting breakfast, warm in our bags, savouring the view and at the same time listening to the donging reverberations of a bellbird calling his good-morning song.
  • When Mount does take time to savour an idea he combines personal observations with considered research. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Both routes of feeding were physically unnatural and all I wanted was that exhilarating feeling of smelling, tasting and savouring food in my mouth again.
  • Sit back and savour the antics and battle of wits unleashed by the team of buffoons, hold your breath at the breath-stopping show of trapeze artistes and the exciting fare dished out by acrobats on bicycles.
  • He deserves to be a finalist but it is doubtful that he will savour the experience on the other side of the net from Nadal. Times, Sunday Times
  • Today we must savour the victory. Times, Sunday Times
  • To savour that undefinable feeling and sense of satisfaction when the final whistle blew almost makes the trials and tribulation of recent days worthwhile.
  • They probably also savour the flavour of fresh peach, dress brightly and crave company. Times, Sunday Times
  • The soup has a savour of onion.
  • - a big pastry flan, a big open pie in the shape of a heart, with a delectable savoury filling. UNTO THE GRAVE
  • Those who like to savour exotic dishes from around the globe have never had it so good, what with increasing numbers of speciality restaurants opening their doors to discerning gourmets.
  • Their salted and smoked meat was useful to give savour to otherwise stodgy dishes, and was especially important for the poor.
  • The notes of nut and marmalade add great savour to rashers and crispy black pudding.
  • I would've usually been keen, but given a less than ideal stomach, and no toilet on the bus, I didn't really savour the idea of pigging out on the food. TravelPod.com TravelStream™ — Recent Entries at TravelPod.com
  • Lunch may be expanded to include a savoury dish with the salad or a baked jacket potato. The Hayfever Handbook - a summer survival guide
  • I'll wager these sort of items will not be bought by the kind of man who expects a savoury after his treacle pudding. Times, Sunday Times
  • His recent comments savour of hypocrisy.
  • The assortment was rounded out by a savoury lamb meatball loaded with parsley, and small chunks of grilled lamb brochette.
  • Women would find a world without men flat and savourless; it is men who dream of a world without women.
  • It was tasty enough, but I suspect the chef's talent lies with the savoury dishes.
  • We lay for a while before starting breakfast, warm in our bags, savouring the view and at the same time listening to the donging reverberations of a bellbird calling his good-morning song.
  • Home grown herbs would have included coriander, dill, thyme, opium poppy and summer savoury.
  • _Harry_ was not to be fobb'd off so; the Pudding was good, it sat very well on his Stomach, and he eat very savourly, without the least Remorse of Conscience. A Learned Dissertation on Dumpling (1726) [and] Pudding and Dumpling Burnt to Pot. Or a Compleat Key to the Dissertation on Dumpling (1727)
  • The Prince sent away the cheese savoury and almost did the same with the beef. King Edward VIII - The Official Biography
  • They were called chat, Indian street snacks, and "savouries," which are familiar things like pakora, samosa, naan filled with lamb or chicken, and uttapam. Bombay Cafe - Frankie Goes to Bollywood
  • These are used as required, mixed with liquids and flavourings, to ‘set’ savoury aspic, desserts such as jelly and mousse, and stabilize commercially made ice cream and other foods.
  • That hotel doesn't have a very savoury reputation.
  • This time needs to be savoured, rolled around the palate and gums as though tasting a wine, extracting every last drop of flavour from it, every tiny hint of summer.
  • Later as German leader he sealed off the hamlet, creating an exclusive retreat where he and other top Nazis could wine and dine, savour the crisp Alpine air, and plan the most barbarous acts of the Third Reich.
  • The servings are generous and the food is tasty, although it could be more savoury.
  • For is not that which is a savour of life to some, that is, to those that are within the purpose of God's love, and whom he intends effectually to call, and to convert to himself; I say, is not the same termed a savour of death to others? that is, to the obstinate and impenitent, and such as God leaves to themselves. Sermons Preached Upon Several Occasions. Vol. VI.
  • They were dressed with some overtly sweet vinaigrette (I suspect raspberry) that jarred with the savouriness of the crêpes.
  • While it runs long at over three hours, every moment is to be savoured.
  • Medium bodied, elegant, savoury with concentrated dark fruit flavors, subtle oak complexity and great length.
  • Sometimes you get drawn into food and silence falls as each mouthful is savoured.
  • What is more it not only lifts your spirits but also can be used to add flavour to meals - to moisten breads and puddings, marinate meats and make savoury sauces.
  • The light deprivation leads to a sweeter rhubarb than the summer variety and it has become the connoisseurs' choice for sweet and savoury dishes.
  • Sharon could feel something in the room, something malevolent, something watching her, savouring the smell of her fear. I.O.U. - SOMEONE HAS TO PAY
  • Jack took a sip of the dark liquid, savouring its rich, burning taste.
  • This is why it is added to foods such as bacon, smoked fish, canned vegetables, margarine, bread and savoury snacks.
  • The eye-catching poster, memorable title and unsavoury reputation of this nasty little flick have kept it alive in the minds of movie goers for decades.
  • When Mount does take time to savour an idea he combines personal observations with considered research. The Times Literary Supplement
  • What most cheese - be it blue, hard, soft, or crawling off the cheeseboard - really likes is a mature soft, savoury, spicy, gently oaked red with few tannins and restrained fruit.
  • Urgent as matters seem, pause for long enough to savour these. Times, Sunday Times
  • That would savour of something like treachery, a kind of anti-supporting of your own team.
  • The sport has long been associated with illegal wagers and unsavoury characters.
  • Go all out with the chef's couscous special, presented in a peaked ceramic dish containing five simmered meats, including a tender lamb chop, succulent chicken, merguez sausage, a savoury meatball and a grilled lamb brochette.
  • Serve it in place of rice, or in light, savoury pancakes. Times, Sunday Times
  • Carrey savours every flowery speech and villainous smirk in a performance that is more disciplined than one might have imagined.
  • Pudding was good, it sate very well on his Stomach, and he eat very savourly, without the least Remorse of A Learned Dissertation on Dumpling (1726) [and] Pudding and Dumpling Burnt to Pot. Or a Compleat Key to the Dissertation on Dumpling (1727)
  • If that's the case, try jazzing up your remaining sticky rice after the toppings have been savoured with the hot sauce from your entrée or, even better, slather some kimchi over top.
  • It has an attractive nose of raspberry, with a long savoury finish.
  • I could have sat there all day, savouring a pasta salad and watching the people coming out.
  • The cask savours of the first fill. 
  • i am definitely a savourer (savouress?), i talk too much and by the time i'm finished the food is well cold. did you put your restaurant down for the latest series of Ultimate Ulster with frank the weatherman? British Blogs
  • In the morning when I arose, I found my hoofes shriveled together with cold, and unable to passe upon the sharpe ice, and frosty mire, neither could I fill my belly with meate, as I accustomed to doe, for my master and I supped together, and had both one fare: howbeit it was very slender since as wee had nothing else saving old and unsavoury sallets which were suffered to grow for seed, like long broomes, and that had lost all their sweet sappe and juice. The Golden Asse
  • Curwen's Act of 1809 making it illegal to sell seats in parliament was passed at a time of so-called Tory dislike of anything savouring of reform.
  • Like pieces of art in a little glass gallery, an array of spices is prominently displayed in a showcase that flanks the foyer, providing a savoury glimpse into the tastes that will find their way into your meal.
  • Being a Scot, biscuits (what I would call a savoury scone) are a bit of a novelty for me, so I am looking forward to making some. Biscuit Bliss | Baking Bites
  • The entire day is passed in religious exercises, but anything which could in the least savour of any public cult of the martyrs is sedulously guarded against, as such anticipation of the Church's official action would seriously interfere with the cause of their canonization, which is now under consideration at Quebec. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 2: Assizes-Browne
  • Both have the chief note of Sensibility, the taking an emotion as a thing to be savoured and degusted deliberately -- to be dealt with on scientific principles and strictly according to the rules of the game. A History of the French Novel, Vol. 1 From the Beginning to 1800
  • (ALCYONARIA) has a sulphurous savour of its own, and the echini and b阠he-de-mer are also to be separately distinguished by their fumes. My Tropic Isle
  • Keep a light snack such as a savoury biscuit or cracker by your bed and eat before getting up in the morning or if you wake in the night, to help prevent sickness in the morning.
  • Raynal, the inhabitants still preserved a kind of rigorism that savours of the sombre days in which the Puritan colonies had their rise. Diderot and the Encyclopædists Volume II.
  • The taste — that savoury, vital, muscular mouthfeel — is only half of it. Times, Sunday Times
  • They are also a welcome addition to carrot cakes, fruit loaves, flapjacks and savoury grains like couscous.
  • Aubanus and Sabellicus commend Portugal beef to be the most savoury, best and easiest of digestion; we commend ours: but all is rejected, and unfit for such as lead a resty life, any ways inclined to melancholy, or dry of complexion: Tales (Galen thinks) de facile melancholicis aegritudinibus capiuntur. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • The whole thing is a little bit unsavoury but is the least-worst outcome.
  • It is a hot, sweet and sour delight that you can make time and again for use with fish and chicken dishes, or as a dipping sauce for spring rolls, poppadoms and savouries.
  • To the orthodox zoologist, phytologist and geologist, such a suggestion savoured of madness; they either took refuge in a contemptuous silence, or condescended only to reply: Had one visited the Garden of Eden during Creation, one would have found that, in the morning, man was not, while in the evening he was! — morning and evening bearing their newly established significance of geological epochs. Australia Felix
  • The pizza itself was pretty good: a substantial but not doughy malted wheat base, plenty of tomato sauce, enough cheese to be savoury and toothsome but not to make the whole thing sag.
  • Slowly he leaned forward, sweaty palms tucked into his jeans' pockets, not wanting to rush this moment, savouring this anticipatory thrill.
  • In order to savour the flashing returns and the artistic volleys, we must suffer the faltering second serve and the fallible forehand.
  • The best smell is bread, the best savour salt, the best love that of children. 
  • Research suggests that for men savoury foods are more likely to trigger an almost uncontrollable urge to indulge. Times, Sunday Times
  • There were some interjections in the second person that were not very savoury.
  • On the Friday before Diwali I went to the store at work and bought sweets and savouries all from Haldiram determined not to spend my time on the weekend making treats as I always do in Diwali season. Archive 2008-11-01
  • Most of his success in _Deirdre of the Sorrows_ is due to the fact that he has treated Deirdre as if she were just one of the peasant women whom he has known; but the ready-made plot has hampered him, and he is shut off from the use of those little "brutalities" which give savour to his modern plays. Personality in Literature
  • Mr Bloom ate his strips of sandwich, fresh clean bread, with relish of disgust pungent mustard, the feety savour of green cheese. Ulysses
  • And herewithal there was such a savour as all the spicery of the world had been there. Le Morte d'Arthur: Sir Thomas Malory's book of King Arthur and of his noble knights of the Round table
  • We do not flourish in fruitfulness, in savouriness, and profitableness, answerable to what the dispensations of God have been towards us; for the dew of God hath been upon us from time to time. The Sermons of John Owen
  • Yet, that unsavoury incident enlivened the game. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was braised, succulent, savoury, fat-free, and served in its cooking liquid - which had been only slightly reduced.
  • After the savouries came the sweetmeats; marchpane and gingerbread and little coffers of pastry filled with sugared currants and topped with yellow cream. Dearly Beloved
  • Their salted and smoked meat was useful to give savour to otherwise stodgy dishes, and was especially important for the poor.
  • This American thing of mixing sweet foods with savoury is entirely bizarre. The Spirit of the Thing « Tales from the Reading Room
  • THESE can be savoury or sweet and you can use thin plastic straws for little ones. The Sun
  • Mais il existe un havre où l'on peut toujours savourer une relation authentique: le coin du feu chez un ami auprès duquel on peut se défaire de ses petites vanités et trouver chaleur et compréhension. Jules
  • There were lardons in every savoury dish, unwelcome both on grounds of repetition and salt, which he arguably overdoes.

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