释义 |
Definition of granola in English: granolanoun ɡraˈnəʊləɡrəˈnoʊlə mass nounNorth American 1A kind of breakfast cereal resembling muesli. Example sentencesExamples - Take a leak out the hut door, pick up the pot of milk I mixed from powder the night before, gulp down three bowls of granola.
- There are also breakfast standards such as fresh-squeezed juice, granola, and scones (try the ginger-lemon).
- But plain baked pistachios are great on their own as a snack food which doubles up as the ultimate luxury addition to crunchy granola or muesli.
- If you like, you can adjust the recipe to suit your preferences: For sweeter granola, stir in more brown sugar or chopped fruit at the end.
- How about almonds and dried fruit, yogurt with granola, apple with low fat cheese, vegetable soup with rye crackers, graham crackers with peanut butter?
- She then placed her yogurt, fruit, and granola in her own crumpled - excuse me, recycled bag - and handed the offending new bag back to the clerk.
- From the bakery there's wonderful wholemeal, seeded, sunflower and honey and white loaves, home-made muesli and granola.
- They still serve breakfast, of course, but it typically consists of fresh fruit, baked goods from local suppliers, and the old standby of granola or cereal.
- For breakfast, I'll eat hemp seed granola with soy milk and fresh fruit.
- Most cereals are low in fat, but some, like granola, contain as much as 14 grams of fat per 1/2-cup serving.
- The ingredient list can vary dramatically from one granola to another, so you need to read labels carefully before assuming that any brand will serve the same function as oatmeal and still be bodybuilding friendly.
- Our days started with 7 a.m. yoga, followed by herbal tea, fruit, and granola.
- I ate a light breakfast of yogurt and granola with green tea and that seemed to keep my stomach calm.
- On Thursday it was raining and we couldn't work outside, so Mike (one of the farm partners) and I decided to make some cookies and granola.
- Seriously folks, I like to eat fruit salad, creme and granola for breakfast in the summer.
- Maybe it's the homemade granola that draws them in.
- In a parfait dish or glass, layer fruit, yogurt and granola.
- We showed them how to make parfaits with yogurt, fresh fruit, and granola,’ she said.
- That is, when she has granola, banana and juice in the morning, as well as a sandwich and yogurt for lunch, she stops devouring brownies after dinner.
- ‘I wanted everyone to know that organic foods didn't have to mean bruised fruit, wilted veggies and granola,’ she says.
- 1.1derogatory as modifier Denoting people with liberal or Green political views, typified as eating health foods.
Fran wasn't a grow-your-own granola type Example sentencesExamples - If you're a tree-hugging granola fetishist, go Green.
- A high granola quotient, certainly, but I was surprised by how much I liked her.
- Instead, Fox has scheduled plain and simple reality programming that will appeal to the regular granola type dudes.
- I'm not a granola hippie or anything, I'm a business person.
- In the American media mind, we've made anti-globalization out to be a granola sort of thing, thanks to the Seattle protests.
- The actress plays a sympathetic chimp, the movie's granola type, a human rights activist who insists humans and apes can live together peacefully.
- It's easy to forget that granola society commands the numbers it does until you venture out to a concert hall or field for a general meeting.
- Its content presents more than a one-sided granola outlook on conservation - it appeals to those who really don't want to take up a vegan lifestyle or quit their job at the logging company.
- The small-winery owner looks as if he belongs on the granola side of the argument.
Origin Late 19th century (as a trademark): from gran- (representing granular or grain) + -ola (suffix chiefly in US usage). The current term dates from the 1970s. Rhymes Angola, barbola, bipolar, bowler, bronchiolar, canola, carambola, circumpolar, coaler, Coca-Cola, cola, comptroller, consoler, controller, Ebola, eidola, extoller, Finola, Gorgonzola, Hispaniola, kola, Lola, lunisolar, mandola, molar, multipolar, Ndola, patroller, payola, pianola, polar, roller, Savonarola, scagliola, scroller, sola, solar, stroller, tombola, Tortola, troller, Vignola, viola, Zola Definition of granola in US English: granolanounɡrəˈnoʊləɡrəˈnōlə North American 1A kind of breakfast cereal consisting typically of rolled oats, brown sugar or honey, dried fruit, and nuts. Example sentencesExamples - ‘I wanted everyone to know that organic foods didn't have to mean bruised fruit, wilted veggies and granola,’ she says.
- Most cereals are low in fat, but some, like granola, contain as much as 14 grams of fat per 1/2-cup serving.
- We showed them how to make parfaits with yogurt, fresh fruit, and granola,’ she said.
- But plain baked pistachios are great on their own as a snack food which doubles up as the ultimate luxury addition to crunchy granola or muesli.
- Maybe it's the homemade granola that draws them in.
- For breakfast, I'll eat hemp seed granola with soy milk and fresh fruit.
- There are also breakfast standards such as fresh-squeezed juice, granola, and scones (try the ginger-lemon).
- They still serve breakfast, of course, but it typically consists of fresh fruit, baked goods from local suppliers, and the old standby of granola or cereal.
- The ingredient list can vary dramatically from one granola to another, so you need to read labels carefully before assuming that any brand will serve the same function as oatmeal and still be bodybuilding friendly.
- That is, when she has granola, banana and juice in the morning, as well as a sandwich and yogurt for lunch, she stops devouring brownies after dinner.
- In a parfait dish or glass, layer fruit, yogurt and granola.
- She then placed her yogurt, fruit, and granola in her own crumpled - excuse me, recycled bag - and handed the offending new bag back to the clerk.
- From the bakery there's wonderful wholemeal, seeded, sunflower and honey and white loaves, home-made muesli and granola.
- Our days started with 7 a.m. yoga, followed by herbal tea, fruit, and granola.
- Take a leak out the hut door, pick up the pot of milk I mixed from powder the night before, gulp down three bowls of granola.
- I ate a light breakfast of yogurt and granola with green tea and that seemed to keep my stomach calm.
- If you like, you can adjust the recipe to suit your preferences: For sweeter granola, stir in more brown sugar or chopped fruit at the end.
- On Thursday it was raining and we couldn't work outside, so Mike (one of the farm partners) and I decided to make some cookies and granola.
- Seriously folks, I like to eat fruit salad, creme and granola for breakfast in the summer.
- How about almonds and dried fruit, yogurt with granola, apple with low fat cheese, vegetable soup with rye crackers, graham crackers with peanut butter?
- 1.1derogatory as modifier Denoting those with liberal or environmentalist political views, typified as eating health foods.
Fran wasn't a grow-your-own granola type Example sentencesExamples - Its content presents more than a one-sided granola outlook on conservation - it appeals to those who really don't want to take up a vegan lifestyle or quit their job at the logging company.
- A high granola quotient, certainly, but I was surprised by how much I liked her.
- I'm not a granola hippie or anything, I'm a business person.
- If you're a tree-hugging granola fetishist, go Green.
- In the American media mind, we've made anti-globalization out to be a granola sort of thing, thanks to the Seattle protests.
- The small-winery owner looks as if he belongs on the granola side of the argument.
- The actress plays a sympathetic chimp, the movie's granola type, a human rights activist who insists humans and apes can live together peacefully.
- Instead, Fox has scheduled plain and simple reality programming that will appeal to the regular granola type dudes.
- It's easy to forget that granola society commands the numbers it does until you venture out to a concert hall or field for a general meeting.
Origin Late 19th century (as a trademark): from gran- (representing granular or grain) + -ola (suffix chiefly in US usage). The current term dates from the 1970s. |