释义 |
Definition of forcemeat in English: forcemeatnounˈfɔːsmiːtˈfɔrsˌmit mass nounA mixture of meat or vegetables chopped and seasoned for use as a stuffing or garnish. (作馅或配菜的)加料碎肉 pheasant sandwiched between a forcemeat of venison and wild boar mass noun fill the terrine with layers of forcemeat Example sentencesExamples - Cut the onion into small parts and fry it until it becomes golden and then add it to the forcemeat.
- Charge three crowns a pound for forcemeat that costs five crowns to make.
- Push the forcemeat down and into the sausage casings, tying them off at 4-inch intervals.
- Put the forcemeat inside the turkey; if you have too much, put the leftover into buttered ramekins.
- Prepared potato mass turn in the form of flat cakes, spread them on frying pan, put forcemeat on it, from above again potato mass fry from both sides up to formation of a ruddy crust.
- Not a pistachio in sight, unless they had been pulverised into the porridgey forcemeat around the chunks of chicken.
- Incorporate five eggs and continue mixing well to have a good forcemeat which you may thin with broth.
- A fish bisque is made from a forcemeat of carp, carp eggs, carp milk, and shrimp.
- Preheat the oven to 200°C. Spread a portion of forcemeat over the base of a 500 ml copper pan or soufflé dish.
- Secondly, savoury mutton pies, usually filled with cutlets and forcemeat, or with caudles of eggs, or ragoos of oysters added after cooking, were also made.
- Now beat and strain the eggs, work these up with the other ingredients, and the forcemeat will be ready for use.
- Put the forcemeat into the body cavity and cover the stuffing with a piece of bread.
OriginLate 17th century: from obsolete force 'to stuff', alteration (influenced by the force1 (verb)) of farce, from French farcir (see farce). Definition of forcemeat in US English: forcemeatnounˈfɔrsˌmitˈfôrsˌmēt A mixture of meat or vegetables chopped and seasoned for use as a stuffing or garnish. (作馅或配菜的)加料碎肉 pheasant sandwiched between a forcemeat of venison and wild boar mass noun fill the terrine with layers of forcemeat Example sentencesExamples - Charge three crowns a pound for forcemeat that costs five crowns to make.
- Not a pistachio in sight, unless they had been pulverised into the porridgey forcemeat around the chunks of chicken.
- Secondly, savoury mutton pies, usually filled with cutlets and forcemeat, or with caudles of eggs, or ragoos of oysters added after cooking, were also made.
- A fish bisque is made from a forcemeat of carp, carp eggs, carp milk, and shrimp.
- Put the forcemeat inside the turkey; if you have too much, put the leftover into buttered ramekins.
- Put the forcemeat into the body cavity and cover the stuffing with a piece of bread.
- Cut the onion into small parts and fry it until it becomes golden and then add it to the forcemeat.
- Prepared potato mass turn in the form of flat cakes, spread them on frying pan, put forcemeat on it, from above again potato mass fry from both sides up to formation of a ruddy crust.
- Incorporate five eggs and continue mixing well to have a good forcemeat which you may thin with broth.
- Push the forcemeat down and into the sausage casings, tying them off at 4-inch intervals.
- Preheat the oven to 200°C. Spread a portion of forcemeat over the base of a 500 ml copper pan or soufflé dish.
- Now beat and strain the eggs, work these up with the other ingredients, and the forcemeat will be ready for use.
OriginLate 17th century: from obsolete force ‘to stuff’, alteration (influenced by the force (verb)) of farce, from French farcir (see farce). |