释义 |
verb brɔɪlbrɔɪl [with object]North American 1Cook (meat or fish) by exposure to direct heat. 〈主北美〉烤(肉,鱼) he lightly broiled a wedge of sea bass Example sentencesExamples - When cooked - you can bake, broil, grill, sauté or even microwave it - the flesh becomes tender and richly sweet.
- When finding a restaurant, the thrill is in finding out the range of skill and mastery each chef has of several techniques - Can they broil a steak and create a perfect, matching sauce?
- Rice eventually came into play another night, as a sticky bed for a Japanese-inspired special of sweetly glazed broiled eel.
- Some lean meat morsels you may want to munch include skinless cuts of roasted, baked or broiled poultry and seafood.
- They ordered broiled Haddock filet and Caesar salad.
- Grill, broil or cook patties in a nonstick fry pan, about 5 minutes per side until done.
- When you grill, fry, or broil meat, it forms carcinogenic compounds.
- A waitress stands at every table to broil the meat and then cut it into small pieces with scissors to serve diners.
- Dips and combinations of condiments for sauces, such as hot bean paste, vinegar, and soy, accompany such dishes as barbecued or broiled meats, deep-fried vegetables, etc.
- Even the lemon wedge could not perk it up, nor could the minute bowl of rice and broiled tomato au gratin that accompanied it.
- Every piece of meat I encountered here was impeccably broiled and seasoned.
- Trim away skin and fat before cooking, then broil, grill, roast or poach instead of frying.
- A standard meal consists of rice, soup, kimchi (a spicy Korean pickle), vegetables, and broiled or grilled meat or fish.
- Although many of her recipes are still secrets, dishes like broiled tilapia with turmeric and dill, Vietnamese chicken salad, and a saucy eggplant-tofu ragout let you replicate An's signature blend of the familiar and the exotic.
- Bake for 10 minutes; then turn on the broiler and broil the gratin 3 or 4 inches from the heat source for 2 or 3 minutes, just to brown the top.
- Choose grilled, baked or broiled foods instead of fried.
- Eat lean meat, roast or broil foods rather than fry them and replace high-fat dairy products with skim milk and low-fat yogurt and cheeses.
- If you told me that my fish was broiled, I used to think that meant it was thrown directly on a flame or cooked in an ancient Mayan crockpot.
- You're going to have to learn to broil a steak; that's what you're going to have to learn.
- Grill and broil your meats, which melts the fat.
Synonyms grill, toast, barbecue, cook, fry, bake - 1.1no object Become very hot, especially from the sun.
(尤指被太阳)烤热 the countryside lay broiling in the sun 乡村在太阳的炙烤之下。 Example sentencesExamples - At the only Home Depot in this coastal town, 75 people broiled under a cloudless sky in temperatures that approached 90 as they waited for tarps, gas cans and other supplies to begin repairs.
- Young Tess and her neighborhood friends are broiling in the hot sun, their inner city block having been deprived of moisture for a long time.
- In the afternoon everyone's broiling in the pit; at rush hour it's dense and frenetic.
- Frequently dragging the sleeves of our flight suits across our brows during the start. and runup sequences, we broiled in the aircraft and stopped sweating only at Flight Level 290.
- And if you're not broiling in the sun and wearing enough sunscreen, you're safe, right?
Synonyms hot, scorching, roasting, baking, boiling (hot), blistering, sweltering, parching, searing, blazing, sizzling, burning (hot), sultry, torrid, tropical, like an oven, like a furnace
OriginLate Middle English (also in the sense 'burn, char'): from Old French bruler 'to burn', of unknown origin. Rhymesboil, Boyle, coil, Dáil, Doyle, embroil, Fianna Fáil, foil, Hoyle, moil, noil, oil, roil, Royle, soil, spoil, toil, voile noun brɔɪlbrɔɪl archaic A quarrel or commotion. 〈古〉争辩;骚动 the dark interior was a broil of fighting men Example sentencesExamples - The recent broil over Baraka's recital of the poem ‘Somebody Blew Up America’ has only served to intensify the poet's controversial status.
- An ensuing exchange with the woman's male partner, and Dix quickly gets into a broil.
- When Cleopatra speaks for the first time, she too wants to assert her own role as an evil woman in this broil, but her serving women, Charmion and Eras, refuse to allow her an easy passage to her proposed death.
OriginEarly 16th century: from obsolete broil 'to muddle'. Compare with embroil. verbbroilbrɔɪl [with object]North American 1Cook (meat or fish) by exposure to direct, intense radiant heat. 〈主北美〉烤(肉,鱼) he broiled a wedge of sea bass Example sentencesExamples - A waitress stands at every table to broil the meat and then cut it into small pieces with scissors to serve diners.
- If you told me that my fish was broiled, I used to think that meant it was thrown directly on a flame or cooked in an ancient Mayan crockpot.
- When you grill, fry, or broil meat, it forms carcinogenic compounds.
- Although many of her recipes are still secrets, dishes like broiled tilapia with turmeric and dill, Vietnamese chicken salad, and a saucy eggplant-tofu ragout let you replicate An's signature blend of the familiar and the exotic.
- Bake for 10 minutes; then turn on the broiler and broil the gratin 3 or 4 inches from the heat source for 2 or 3 minutes, just to brown the top.
- They ordered broiled Haddock filet and Caesar salad.
- Even the lemon wedge could not perk it up, nor could the minute bowl of rice and broiled tomato au gratin that accompanied it.
- Eat lean meat, roast or broil foods rather than fry them and replace high-fat dairy products with skim milk and low-fat yogurt and cheeses.
- Grill, broil or cook patties in a nonstick fry pan, about 5 minutes per side until done.
- Some lean meat morsels you may want to munch include skinless cuts of roasted, baked or broiled poultry and seafood.
- When cooked - you can bake, broil, grill, sauté or even microwave it - the flesh becomes tender and richly sweet.
- Rice eventually came into play another night, as a sticky bed for a Japanese-inspired special of sweetly glazed broiled eel.
- Dips and combinations of condiments for sauces, such as hot bean paste, vinegar, and soy, accompany such dishes as barbecued or broiled meats, deep-fried vegetables, etc.
- You're going to have to learn to broil a steak; that's what you're going to have to learn.
- When finding a restaurant, the thrill is in finding out the range of skill and mastery each chef has of several techniques - Can they broil a steak and create a perfect, matching sauce?
- Every piece of meat I encountered here was impeccably broiled and seasoned.
- Grill and broil your meats, which melts the fat.
- A standard meal consists of rice, soup, kimchi (a spicy Korean pickle), vegetables, and broiled or grilled meat or fish.
- Choose grilled, baked or broiled foods instead of fried.
- Trim away skin and fat before cooking, then broil, grill, roast or poach instead of frying.
Synonyms grill, toast, barbecue, cook, fry, bake - 1.1no object Become very hot, especially from the sun.
(尤指被太阳)烤热 the countryside lay broiling in the sun 乡村在太阳的炙烤之下。 Example sentencesExamples - Young Tess and her neighborhood friends are broiling in the hot sun, their inner city block having been deprived of moisture for a long time.
- In the afternoon everyone's broiling in the pit; at rush hour it's dense and frenetic.
- And if you're not broiling in the sun and wearing enough sunscreen, you're safe, right?
- Frequently dragging the sleeves of our flight suits across our brows during the start. and runup sequences, we broiled in the aircraft and stopped sweating only at Flight Level 290.
- At the only Home Depot in this coastal town, 75 people broiled under a cloudless sky in temperatures that approached 90 as they waited for tarps, gas cans and other supplies to begin repairs.
Synonyms hot, scorching, roasting, baking, boiling, boiling hot, blistering, sweltering, parching, searing, blazing, sizzling, burning, burning hot, sultry, torrid, tropical, like an oven, like a furnace
OriginLate Middle English (also in the sense ‘burn, char’): from Old French bruler ‘to burn’, of unknown origin. nounbrɔɪlbroil archaic A quarrel or commotion. 〈古〉争辩;骚动 the dark interior was a broil of fighting men Example sentencesExamples - An ensuing exchange with the woman's male partner, and Dix quickly gets into a broil.
- The recent broil over Baraka's recital of the poem ‘Somebody Blew Up America’ has only served to intensify the poet's controversial status.
- When Cleopatra speaks for the first time, she too wants to assert her own role as an evil woman in this broil, but her serving women, Charmion and Eras, refuse to allow her an easy passage to her proposed death.
OriginEarly 16th century: from obsolete broil ‘to muddle’. Compare with embroil. |