raviolo造句
例句与造句
- I remember only that you can't eat one ravioli; it's a raviolo.
- One course was a single large raviolo filled with ricotta, spinach and a raw egg that poached while the pasta cooked.
- So our noodles are plural, but our spaghetti is construed as a singular, and we never give a thought to a raviolo or a gnocco.
- For the more sophisticated youthful palate, they offer gossamer-thin raviolo wrapped around spinach or eggplant ( $ 14 ) or shrimp ( $ 15 ).
- The raviolo, called uovo raviolo, is filled with ricotta, spinach and a quail egg, and the finished dish is showered with white truffle shavings.
- It's difficult to find raviolo in a sentence. 用raviolo造句挺难的
- The raviolo, called uovo raviolo, is filled with ricotta, spinach and a quail egg, and the finished dish is showered with white truffle shavings.
- Vic Raviolo, previously responsible for the Lincolns that raced in the Carrera Panamericana during the 1950s was involved with engineering AMC's new sports-car-type coupe.
- Its mild, rich heat is in the pan-roasted lobster glazed with Goan curry and in the tomato curry sauce served with a raviolo of spinach and sheep's milk ricotta.
- "' Ravioli "'( plural form; singular : " raviolo " ) are a type of dumpling composed of a filling sealed between two layers of thin pasta dough.
- The chef, Angel Palacios, favors odd, seemingly unrelated pairings, like a half-dozen tiny lollipops of fried frog leg, each with a gauzy little raviolo filled with herring eggs, a stirring contrast of flavors and textures.
- You can almost sense the great man's ghost looking over Michel Troisgros'shoulder in certain dishes, like a translucent raviolo of sugar peas, in which almonds enhance the sweetness of the peas, or an exquisite tenderloin of lamb, unexpectedly enlivened with a shower of grated orange zest, or a simple roasted cherry tomato, perfectly peeled and bursting with candy-sweet flavor.
- American Motors'group vice president, Vic Raviolo, described the AMX as " the Walter Mitty Ferrari . " The AMX was designed to " appeal to both muscle car and sports car enthusiasts, two camps that rarely acknowledged each other's existences . " The problem was the " tire-melting " acceleration of the two-seater made it " a quick car that handled like a sports car, confusing the buying public . " Automotive journalist Tom McCahill summed up, " the AMX is the hottest thing to ever come out of Wisconsin and . . . you can whip through corners and real hard bends better than with many out-and-out sports cars ."