- the inside of a bread roll. - WordReference Forums
Most naturally I would probably say "the [soft] interior of a loaf of bread" or less formally the "inside of a loaf " If you were giving directions in a recipe, for example, to scoop out the soft bit and leave the crust, I believe in American English such an instruction would say "Scoop out the soft insides of the loaf and leave the crust "
- shortening bread - WordReference Forums
Wiki è nostra amica Shortening bread is a fried batter bread, the ingredients of which include corn meal, flour, hot water, eggs, baking powder, milk and shortening (strutto?)
- What do we call the inner part of a slice of bread?
In bread-making circles it's called the 'crumb' They may talk about a loaf having an open crumb, for instance, or a chewy crumb It will vary depending on the flour used, the yeast, and the method of kneading and baking, etc This will explain in more detail
- All dialects: bread - WordReference Forums
Which is the term commonly used in your لهجه ? I know عيش is used in Egypt and رزق الله in Bahrain I think most other places say خبز can you confirm what you use? I am talking about bread خبز
- stale, rotten, sour or rancid - WordReference Forums
We say stale bread, rotten fruit vegetables meat, sour milk and rancid butter As I searched more on the internet and through some dictionary examples I saw that rancid has been used with meat and milk
- End pieces of a bread [heel, crust, end] | WordReference Forums
I've always called the first slice of bread an "end piece", but this term also applies to the last slice of bread Good point - first slice, last slice - both are heels The OED, strangely (to me), suggests that the heel of a loaf of bread is the top or bottom crust, not either end
- to put food bread on the table - WordReference Forums
Hi, What does the expression "I have to put food bread on the table " mean? To earn money? And which one is more common: the one with food or the one with bread? Thanks!
- Bread and milk is are - WordReference Forums
The answer varies with what you're trying to say [Implicitly, "the combination of] bread and milk is my favorite " This is the sense of "bread and butter", because the butter is assumed to be already spread on the bread But more frequently, I think it would be "bread and milk are my favorite s [implicitly, among the foods being discussed]"
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