Sentences with phrase «little moisture there»

Not exact matches

I tried adding one banana to the Paleo recipe and it seemed really brown on the outside and a little undercooked on the top in the middle... maybe there was too much moisture?
Perhaps you could add a little more oil to ensure there is enough moisture?
There are made with a majority of oat flour, and a little olive oil for fat and moisture.
I've never tried making my own puree, but I have friends that have and it tends to make recipes a little more wet since there is so much moisture in the pumpkin.
There may be a little moisture on the top but not much.
It's also used under the chin because my little one has folds of chin and moisture seems to get trapped under there.
These specially formulated tiny logs burn very efficiently and almost completely — largely because there is little moisture content — so there are fewer pollutants to escape into the air inside or out.
Inside a landfill, there is little oxygen and little moisture.
But even under ideal temperature and moisture conditions, productivity gains will be dependent on local site conditions, such as where there are sufficient soil nutrients or where stand density is low and little competition exists for available resources (Ford et al. 2016).
There is enough moisture in the vegetables to create a stuffing you can mold easily, but if you find yours is a little dry, feel free to add a tablespoon or two of stock to get it to the right consistency.
Gently pat your face with a towel until there's just a little moisture left on your skin.
I live in Northern Nevada and there is very little moisture in the air.
The moisture also makes the mask heavy, so there was a second when I inhaled and pulled up the little bit of mask around my nose and I couldn't breathe through it.
There have been the rare moments when my skin felt a little dry after usage and then I add shea butter to retain moisture from this product..
There is so much fiber and so little moisture in the diet that the colon can't keep things moving along properly.
But I believe there is little doubt that the record - breaking scale and potential destructiveness of Sandy is due in large part to the amplifying effects of warmer ocean temperatures, higher atmospheric moisture content, and unusual Arctic weather patterns.
There also seems to be little understanding of how most heat is conducted from surface to top of atmosphere, or of the significance of moisture content with respect to enthalpy.
There is little evidence for a human influence on precipitation deficits, but a lot of evidence for a human fingerprint on surface soil moisture deficits — starting with increased evapotranspiration caused by higher temperatures.
The recovering forest (particularly if soil moisture is high) will be a significant CO2 sink because there will be little decay and the plants will be photosynthesizing as fast as they can.
On the other hand, it would mean that there would be a little less moisture in the air that moves away from the wind farm into other areas.
From the Southwest to the Great Lakes, temperatures have been so high and rainfall so low that the drying effect of warmer air temperatures far exceeded what little precipitation there's been, resulting in moisture being drawn out of soils.
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