Sentences with phrase «throw out the water»

Meaning, when you drain the can of chickpeas don't throw out the water (or aquafaba).
(source 1, source 2) If you want to consume yellow dock leaves, your safest bet is to boil them, throw out the water, and then boil them again before eating them.
«They can throw out water vapor and ice, which sets the humidity of the stratosphere, and that has an impact both because water vapor is greenhouse gas and also because water vapor, through a sequence of events, has an effect on the ozone hole,» Romps said.

Not exact matches

«We hope they don't throw the baby out with the bath water
The product, DisposeRX, mixes with drugs and warm water to form a solid that can be safely thrown out in the trash.
When mixed with warm water and prescription medication in a pill bottle, DisposeRX creates a solid that can then be thrown out safely in the trash, without the risk of contaminating groundwater, its maker says.
Huge cargo ships were thrown out of the water and into rocks.
American businesses flush more than a billion gallons of fresh water down the toilet every working day and throw out 15 million plastic toner cartridges every year.
It's the most popular Facebook Live video so far — yep, easily beating out that goofy Buzzfeed watermelon video — and it's throwing cold water on the idea that social / viral marketing can't drive e-commerce sales.
Are there significant refinements that can be made to SR&ED which do not «throw the baby out with the bath water»?
Thanks for sharing the data to help inform these kinds of decisions while not suggesting we throw the baby out with the bath water
A handy number to throw around at the water cooler: Facebook stock has dropped about 18 percent since the Cambridge Analytica scandal broke, «wiping out almost $ 100 billion of market value,» Bloomberg News writes.
---------- That is the problem with so many folks ---- throw the baby out with the bath water.
Before you throw the «Baby out with the bath water», you might want to consider that while not compelled to belief in a Creator, you have been a benefactor of such principles that were relied on (with great wisdom) to create our form of government.
A patient's bedside is NOT the place to preach or to wag a sanctimonious finger, and if you encounter one who does, ask him / her to leave, but don't throw them all out with the bath water (or holy water, as it were)...
Many of us share your frustration and outrage, but there's no need to throw out the baby with the bath water.
Becoming more tolerant to gays, more left leaning, hipper, modern, or whatever else you want to throw out there still doesn't change the fact that Christianity is based on a lie about a man who supposedly walked on water, reincarnated, was born from a woman who claimed to a be virgin, and changed water in to wine.
It's throwing the baby out with the bath water.
So what you're saying is anything goes and we should throw what the Bible teaches out the window and go with what feels good and makes everyone happy, thereby watering down the Gospel.
You'd think that generally, all the water of the oceans would be enough to put out any fire, but throw them on the sun, and they'd evaporate faster than a drop of water on a sizzling skillet.
I think all Christians come to a point in their faith were they look at the Church and say this looks nothing like Christ and they have a choice throw the baby out with the bath water or work to make the institution Christ like.
Unfortunately they threw the baby out with the bath water, and seriously downplayed the ontological and intelligible reality of formality.
My mama remembers it and I will never forget, how every time I ventured next door to play with Nancy Leigh Craig, that little slip of a girl would pull out an empty glass mason jar, and Nancy Leigh Craig would fill it with heaps of dirt dug up from the dog run behind her house, and then she would fill that jar up with water, throw in a bunch of weed tops, and stir the whole mess up with any found stick.
Just be sure to not throw the baby out with the bath water.
Yes there are / were some terrible acts being committed by Priests, but lets not throw the baby out with the bath water.
The author of this article may be well meaning... have you heard the expression «throwing the baby out with the bath water»?
Let's just throw the baby out with the bath water... When you lump all «Christians» together you lose the very essence of those who truly love God and follow His directions.
If you throw out scientific hypotheses, you must then deny simple, everyday life experiences like knowing that when you flip a switch a light goes on or off or when you heat water, it will boil over.
However, to denounce a Christian tradition or practice as rooted in paganism simply because a similar practice appears in ancient pagan rituals is tantamount to throwing the baby out with the bath water.
I think someone can interpret a miracle any way he wants to do, and if he doesn't throw the baby out with the holy water, he is a Christian.
Today such people commonly speak of the danger of «throwing out the baby with the bath water».
I expect such intelligent people to not throw the baby out with the bath water... I suppose those expectations are too much.
The trick is to not throw out the baby with the bath water.
Taking a stand on something is fine and dandy, but that theory, (and your little answer tree) is blown clear out of the water if something unknown is thrown into the mix, which question one clearly was, to some people.
It's a «throwing the baby out with the bath water» type mentality.
More conservative theologians, on the other hand, believed that his constant criticisms of Bibelglaube (faith in the Bible rather than the one to whom the Bible witnesses), «credo - Credo» (intellectual assent to the tenets of the Creed) and faith as a bloss Fürwahrhalten etner Lehre (a mere holding of certain doctrines to be true) risked throwing the baby out with the bath water.
But we have to be careful not to throw out the baby with the bath water (what was it that Luther said about the baby...?)
In this case the baby was thrown out with the bath water because it did not have capacity for redemption and evil was increasing generationally.
He was dead but to be assured of that a roman soldier threw a spear at His body in which both water and blood poured out.
But we ended up throwing out many babies with the bath water, so to speak.
Here is a link for your reference: http://www.healthcare.gov/law/full/ Take some time and see what the positive parts are before you throw out the baby with the bath water.
But the rest of the bible and your pastor — throw them out with the bath water.
The sad thing is that many are throwing out the baby with the bath water, rather than changing from within.
I would caution against «throwing the baby out with the bath water» with regards to religion.
You basically just throw the dates and water (and salt and vanilla, if using) in a food processor and blitz the heck out of them.
I opened up all my cupboards, thought about what kind of nutrition I wanted to get out of my snack (fiber, vitamins, minerals, protein, carbs, heathy fats), chopped a dark chocolate bar in half, turned on my hob, added some water to a small pot, took out a bowl and threw in a bunch of seemingly random ingredients, rolled that dough into truffles, dipped them in what was by then melted chocolate, stuck the truffles in the freezer for 8 minutes and BAM!!!!!!!!!!!!! They were ready!
I never throw away baking powder that is out of date because it lends itself to cleaning all kinds of stains on surfaces (just mix with a little water).
I also apparently totally watered down my glaze, it was definitely more like runny juice than a glaze and I ended up throwing out more than a cup at the end... whoops.
It turns out that the slightly thick and slimy water we've all been throwing away is actually a near perfect egg substitute.
Throw all of the ingredients into your blender and mix it, adding a bit of water (about 1/4 cup) until it comes out smooth.
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