The soothing and refreshing lavender essential oil, the fragrant lemon, the sweet thyme, all combined with classic ingredients including fresh eggs, home - ground flour, and
bright yellow butter.
Traditional societies always consumed their milk, cheese and butter raw and often cultured them, and they valued
the bright yellow butter from grass - fed animals.
The soothing and refreshing lavender essential oil, the fragrant lemon, the sweet thyme, all combined with classic ingredients including fresh eggs, home - ground flour, and
bright yellow butter.
I can not imagine a better Irish treat than a piece of soda bread fresh out of the oven, studded with plump raisins and slathered with
bright yellow butter.
Not exact matches
Warm from the oven, break one apart and savor the rich, flaky texture from the buttermilk and
bright,
yellow butter.
The
bright yellow color of melted
butter and garlic, combined with the complementary dark green of fresh parsley, this is one snack which never fails to whet my appetite or cheer up my day.
Bright yellow organic
butter is a good indicator of
butter made with milk from grass - fed cows.
This
butter was
bright yellow and very rich in flavor.
It doesn't use any cream or milk, but it does begin with some
yellow onions sweated in
butter, and once everything is pureed together it has the same satisfying richness as a creamy root vegetable soup with the benefit of a much lighter finish and
brighter flavor.
This alt - grain bread gets swiped through
bright -
yellow local
butter and tangy buttermilk.
At first you'll see nothing but clear,
bright yellow clarified
butter.
A volatile liquid, it is such a
bright, intense fluorescent
yellow that you can easily see where real
butter gets its color.
But, as always, there are caveats - I would personally stick to one
bright color that wears well with other colors and neutrals (like cobalt blue, baby pink, or
butter yellow, above) and more conservative patterns, like florals, geometrics, or painterly abstracts.
Johnson has often used shea
butter, the
bright yellow gunk sold on the streets of Harlem and used in Africa for anything from cosmetics to foodstuffs.