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veal

/veel/US // vil //UK // (viːl) //

小牛肉,小牛,羊肉,鲜肉

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : Also veal·er [vee-ler]. /ˈvi lər/. a calf raised for its meat, usually a milk-fed animal less than three months old.
    • : the flesh of the calf as used for food.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Marzelli takes the time to air-dry the chop before curing it with salt and eventually placing it in a marinade that imbues the veal with the flavor of orange and herbs.

  • Parmesan filings and a reduction of veal stock kissed with butter finish the dish, a singular sensation that I enjoy most in winter but would have no problem dispatching in summer.

  • When it comes to meat, my preference is for thin slices of veal paved with country ham and finished with sweet crab.

  • It’s a lightly breaded thin piece of veal with two fried eggs and anchovies on top — delicious.

  • Cookbooks as late as 1950 contain instructions for making "mock chicken" dishes using . . . veal.

  • Mrs. Buller cooked a braised saddle of veal and delicious it was too served with a rich gravy flavored with claret.

  • He created an elaborate dish of veal steak with morille mushrooms.

  • Allora, is an upmarket Italian with chef favorites veal marsala, tonno (fresh tuna) or an array of pizza from a woodburning oven.

  • Take the case of Randall Lineback veal, an heirloom breed much-prized by some East Coast chefs.

  • The priest opposite looked up from his cold veal and potato salad and smiled.

  • Mrs. Veal had been, subject to fits, and she asks if Mrs. Bargrave does not think she is "mightily impaired by her fits?"

  • Piso says, it is as good as veal; and Charlevoix, and others, have compared it to mutton.

  • The fat is white, and two or three inches thick; the flesh is of a pale red colour, and more delicate than veal.

  • There were eggs and ham and veal, dark-colored bread, and coffee, sufficient for about a dozen people.