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pigeon breastの例文

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  • Then he squared his shoulders and his pouter-pigeon breast swelled.
  • The menu is kept secret until the guests walk in _ this year it included salmon, lobster and pigeon breast.
  • Terrine of young grouse, pigeon breast with honey and ginger, and partridges with cabbage are going to be pretty hard going.
  • One hypothesis involving succinate, fumarate, and malate proved to be useful because all these molecules increased oxygen consumption in the pigeon breast muscle.
  • The way the models'heads looked, small and bobbing above these enormous inflated pigeon breast, it was almost the reverse effect of seeing a pumped-up bodybuilder in a pair of tiny briefs.
  • The birds of prey, trained for hunting ducks and small game, are used to frighten, not kill, with flung pigeon breasts _ bought from a Queens poultry supplier _ acting as a lure.
  • Some of this is thrilling, like the smoky roast pepper, with a sauce of anchovies, chickpeas and soy, or the ruby-colored pigeon breast mired in a gooey plum-peanut sauce and surrounded by kumquats.
  • Two-star chef Dieter Kaufmann prepared a parfait of sturgeon with beluga caviar, turbot in a potato crust with chanterelle mushrooms, pigeon breast on white cabbage with black truffles in a foam of potato, and a fruit dessert.
  • Then a parade of dishes would begin, like a puree of broccoli soup with tiny bay scallops or an ethereal mousseline of lobster with leeks, tender baby greens with wild mushrooms, and slivers of rare pigeon breast.
  • Riesling, for example, calls for lemon-balm-infused Dungeness crab consomme with crab-stuffed squash blossoms, white asparagus and ramps; with pinot noir, he suggests a ragout of small Thai lobster, pigeon breast and black trumpet mushrooms, with pigeon jus and chervil.
  • Blouses and dresses were full in front and puffed into a " pigeon breast " shape of the early 20th century that looked over the narrow waist, which sloped from back to front and was often accented with a sash or belt.
  • Somewhat tamer, and among the best dishes I tried, were powerfully gamy pigeon breasts, served with white-bean gnocchi and an aromatic pea veloute, and lamb cutlets with a ballotine of offal, a gelatinous package not for the faint of heart but bliss for the rest of us.
  • Transamination, or the transfer of an amine ( or NH 2 ) group from an amino acid to a keto acid by an aminotransferase ( also known as a " transaminase " ), was first noted in 1930 by D . M . Needham, after observing the disappearance of glutamic acid added to pigeon breast muscle.
  • Frederic Chopin may have had cystic fibrosis, Vincent van Gogh may have had a metabolic disorder called acute intermittent porphyria, King George III almost certainly had acute intermittent porphyria ( which occasionally turned him mad and into a fit subject for a movie ) and Abraham Lincoln is thought to have had Marfan syndrome, another connective disease that results in great height, puffed out, pigeon breast and enlarged extremities.