Sentences with phrase «piquancy in»

There is piquancy in the fact — central, somehow, to the feel of Rafelson's film, and part of its curiously suggestive symbolism — that the different districts of Atlantic City, including Marvin Gardens, are known to the American public as squares in the game of Monopoly.
«The new website showcases innovation within the category and highlights our different ingredient formats as well as how we recommend utilizing them to best draw out the flavors and piquancy in whatever food or beverage is being developed.»

Not exact matches

You don't notice the spiciness with the first bite, but after you swallow, there is a definite piquancy that that hits you right in the back of the throat.
In Italian, Piccata translates to piquant or piquancy, which means tart or zesty.
At home, I love to macerate shallots in vinegar, to add piquancy to salad dressings; and, in winter, I am often to be found slowly sweating onions into a brown, sticky mass, for use in pissaladière, French onion soup and a host of other mouth - watering dishes.
A piece of bread soaked in it is exquisite; Stirred into a soup, it gives a delightful piquancy.
Fruit compressed, more or less ribbed, about two inches and three - quarters in diameter, and two inches in depth; skin smooth and glossy, when ripe, of a brilliant coral - red; flesh thick, mild and pleasant to the taste, though possessing more piquancy than the Large Bell or Sweet Spanish.
It is remarkable for its intense piquancy; exceeding in this respect nearly all the annual varieties.
As someone who believes in the cooking and physiological merits of garlic, this frontline aroma is heavenly in its authentic garlic depiction, but it's the combination of the garlic and chili pepper that creates an ideal flavored vodka bouquet right from the start; as time wears on, it's the chili pepper piquancy that comes to rule the aromatic day as the crushed garlic aspect becomes the underlying support player; a brilliantly conceived and executed bouquet.
It requires a taste test in order to judge its piquancy as it can vary from warm to moderately hot.
Nonetheless, there are moments of piquancy as children play in the detritus of a wasteful world, and others of sheer oddity as we see plastic morph by the ton into unrecognizable shapes (like giant tubes of toothpaste - like goo) whose processing appears an open invitation to cancer.
The work had piquancy, as Haw's protest, begun in 2001, was largely dismantled on May 23 2006, following the passing of the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act forbidding unauthorised demonstrations within a kilometre of Parliament Square.
Apart from the sum of money involved (one painting alone, his 1955 masterpiece Interchange sold for a $ 20.6 million in 1989), the case was given added piquancy by the apparently helpless state of the artist, who had Alzheimer's disease and had been legally declared a mental incompetent.
The work had particular piquancy as Haw's protest, which had begun in June 2001, was largely dismantled on May 23 2006, following the passing by parliament of the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act that forbade unauthorised demonstrations within a kilometre of Parliament Square.
What adds to the piquancy of this moment in the political sphere is that it coincides with a breakthrough in the scientific one: namely, findings on the rapidretreat of glaciers in the high - altitude tropics, notably the Andes.
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