释义 |
Definition of brine in English: brinenoun brʌɪnbraɪn mass noun1Water strongly impregnated with salt. the olives have been stored in brine Example sentencesExamples - Hulking guys serve up platters of prawns, steamed crabs, and just-shucked oysters glistening in brine.
- We stepped inside the store, that familiar smell of spices, cloth, and pork brine meeting my nose at once.
- Stir in 2 tablespoons drained green peppercorns in brine and salt to taste.
- The blocks are then salted in brine for 20 days and aged for two years.
- In preparation for this operation, hundreds of pipes filled with circulating, frigid brine are driven into the ground.
- Kumamoto oysters are enhanced by just enough brine in their mignonette.
- Can you imagine how dry your thanksgiving turkey would be if there wasn't at least a 6% brine added to the turkey?
- Discard this water and use fresh water for your brine.
- These catalysts could be water, brine, wine, beer or other similar liquids.
- They should be on the bone, and laid dry in salt rather than in brine.
- You will find preserved vine leaves in good supermarkets and specialist stores in cans or jars, either in brine or salt.
- The block forms are also placed in a cooling bed of brine.
- Avoid eating foods prepared in brine, like pickles, olives, and sauerkraut.
- He doesn't just look well-preserved, he looks like he's been pickled in brine.
- His rough, callused hands felt like they'd been soaked overnight in brine.
- To remove glucoside oleuropein, one either puts the picked olives in lye, salt, brine, or repeated baths of water.
- The corpse is quickly stripped and butchered, salted in curing brine, and left to dry in a smoke hut overnight.
- Quickly follow the vermouth with a splash of olive brine, a squeeze of lime and three dashes of bitters.
- The resulting liquid brine helps break down the ice for easier plowing and removal.
- We don't add brine so you're not buying water, so there is a value for money advantage too.
- 1.1 Seawater.
dolphins and whales can't help taking in the odd gulp of brine as they swallow a fish Example sentencesExamples - Ashore a spume of brine water rains from an overhanging crag and sluices back through the beach.
- You are still just treading water, gulping brine into your empty heart and lungs.
- Men ran to the rail with torches and peered down at the brine, hoping to catch sight of her.
- The brine tank lay on the port side of the compartment.
- His hands gripped pallidly upon the rail, and they were white with more than just the chill brine of the sea.
- Despite the numbing cold, he was aware of intense pain as the brine bit into his wounds.
- He'll just swim way out and start gargling brine.
- In England, the relative lack of sunshine meant that salt was usually made by heating brine artificially.
- The water's crawling with the larvae of brine flies and midges these waterfowl love.
- They framed the vast expanse of brine and muddy flats where Hunt set up shop.
- Who's willing to put themselves on the line for these mysterious little creatures of the murky brine?
- A few stones were dislodged by the movement and tumbled into the brine with their earlier neighbours.
- The brine dries white on our dark faces and arms.
- A trace of an ocean breeze, brine and seaweed, lingered in the air for just an instant, and was gone.
- I was wrenched back into the frigid brine, unconscious, and helpless.
- 1.2 A solution of salt and water in which food is preserved.
the classic dirty martini includes a few drops of olive brine Example sentencesExamples - Make a Dirty Martini cocktail by increasing the vermouth and adding olive brine.
- The salmon they carried from Berwick was boiled, pickled in brine and delivered in barrels known as kitts.
- Quickly follow the vermouth with a splash of olive brine, a squeeze of lime and three dashes of bitters.
- We purchase Spanish chorizo and Roquefort cheese and gherkins in brine and red chillies in olive oil.
- Jimenez was treating the cut with anti-bacterial ointment and pickle brine.
- Whether it is canned in oil, brine, or spring water, canned tuna is low in omega 3 essential fats.
- My Uncle Phil taught me how to make this dill pickle brine.
- The three best known varieties are; tangy cracked green olives soaked in a salt brine, delicate tan or violet olives, and sharp, dry-cured, black olives.
- Halloumi is creamy white with a fibrous texture, and is firmer, less brittle and generally less salty than Feta, even though it is also soaked in brine during manufacture.
- Black olives are picked when ripe and are pickled in brine and sometimes then in oil.
- Molly explained: "We thought a few olive trees would be a good idea so that we could have our own olives in brine and enough oil for the year."
- The beef is soaked in brine, brown sugar, juniper berries, and spices for any time between three weeks and three months.
- Red herring are fish which have been first soaked in brine with saltpetre added, then hung up to dry before being subjected to a heavy smoking - ideally over oak, beech, and turf.
- Pickling in brine had already been done for centuries.
- Fish sauce is what you get when you leave anchovies or similar small fish to pickle in brine until nearly dissolved, and then filter the resulting liquid.
- One principal difference is whether the meat is dry salted or soaked in brine.
- Also very different from anything found in this part of the world are small dishes called turshi (vegetables soaked in spicy brine).
- 1.3technical A strong solution of a salt or salts.
these brines percolated downwards Example sentencesExamples - The resin then must be ‘regenerated’ with a salt (sodium chloride) brine solution before further treatment can occur.
- Although not commonly used, potassium chloride can be used to create the salt brine.
- It is full of brine at a terrific density, about two-and-a-half pounds of salt to the gallon.
- The brine solution cools the product down while at the same time, adds salt to the cheese.
- Chlorine is a basic industrial chemical, prepared in immense quantities by electrolysis of brine.
verb brʌɪnbraɪn [with object]often as adjective brinedSoak or preserve in salty water. Example sentencesExamples - You might have tried brining a turkey, but other meats benefit from a soak in a salt-sugar liquid too.
- I brined the scallops and hazelnuts in water, salt, sugar, and liquid smoke.
- Some 120,000 pounds of cheese - about a third of the day's production - can be brined at one time.
- We did brine some turkeys last week and they were ultra juicy.
- Fresh-pack or quick-process pickles are not fermented; some are brined several hours or overnight.
Synonyms marinade, marinate, soak, souse, macerate
Origin Old English brīne, of unknown origin. Rhymes align, assign, benign, chine, cline, combine, condign, confine, consign, dine, divine, dyne, enshrine, entwine, fine, frontline, hardline, interline, intertwine, kine, Klein, line, Main, malign, mine, moline, nine, on-line, opine, outshine, pine, Rhein, Rhine, shine, shrine, sign, sine, spine, spline, stein, Strine, swine, syne, thine, tine, trine, twine, Tyne, underline, undermine, vine, whine, wine Definition of brine in US English: brinenounbrīnbraɪn 1Water strongly impregnated with salt. other vegetables would be pickled in brine Example sentencesExamples - Stir in 2 tablespoons drained green peppercorns in brine and salt to taste.
- You will find preserved vine leaves in good supermarkets and specialist stores in cans or jars, either in brine or salt.
- Quickly follow the vermouth with a splash of olive brine, a squeeze of lime and three dashes of bitters.
- His rough, callused hands felt like they'd been soaked overnight in brine.
- He doesn't just look well-preserved, he looks like he's been pickled in brine.
- The blocks are then salted in brine for 20 days and aged for two years.
- In preparation for this operation, hundreds of pipes filled with circulating, frigid brine are driven into the ground.
- Avoid eating foods prepared in brine, like pickles, olives, and sauerkraut.
- To remove glucoside oleuropein, one either puts the picked olives in lye, salt, brine, or repeated baths of water.
- These catalysts could be water, brine, wine, beer or other similar liquids.
- Discard this water and use fresh water for your brine.
- The corpse is quickly stripped and butchered, salted in curing brine, and left to dry in a smoke hut overnight.
- We stepped inside the store, that familiar smell of spices, cloth, and pork brine meeting my nose at once.
- The resulting liquid brine helps break down the ice for easier plowing and removal.
- The block forms are also placed in a cooling bed of brine.
- Kumamoto oysters are enhanced by just enough brine in their mignonette.
- Hulking guys serve up platters of prawns, steamed crabs, and just-shucked oysters glistening in brine.
- Can you imagine how dry your thanksgiving turkey would be if there wasn't at least a 6% brine added to the turkey?
- They should be on the bone, and laid dry in salt rather than in brine.
- We don't add brine so you're not buying water, so there is a value for money advantage too.
- 1.1 Seawater.
dolphins and whales can't help taking in the odd gulp of brine as they swallow a fish Example sentencesExamples - You are still just treading water, gulping brine into your empty heart and lungs.
- He'll just swim way out and start gargling brine.
- The water's crawling with the larvae of brine flies and midges these waterfowl love.
- They framed the vast expanse of brine and muddy flats where Hunt set up shop.
- A trace of an ocean breeze, brine and seaweed, lingered in the air for just an instant, and was gone.
- Who's willing to put themselves on the line for these mysterious little creatures of the murky brine?
- The brine dries white on our dark faces and arms.
- Despite the numbing cold, he was aware of intense pain as the brine bit into his wounds.
- Men ran to the rail with torches and peered down at the brine, hoping to catch sight of her.
- In England, the relative lack of sunshine meant that salt was usually made by heating brine artificially.
- I was wrenched back into the frigid brine, unconscious, and helpless.
- Ashore a spume of brine water rains from an overhanging crag and sluices back through the beach.
- The brine tank lay on the port side of the compartment.
- A few stones were dislodged by the movement and tumbled into the brine with their earlier neighbours.
- His hands gripped pallidly upon the rail, and they were white with more than just the chill brine of the sea.
- 1.2with modifier Salty water that has been used to preserve a specified food.
the classic dirty martini includes a few drops of olive brine Example sentencesExamples - Halloumi is creamy white with a fibrous texture, and is firmer, less brittle and generally less salty than Feta, even though it is also soaked in brine during manufacture.
- My Uncle Phil taught me how to make this dill pickle brine.
- Make a Dirty Martini cocktail by increasing the vermouth and adding olive brine.
- The three best known varieties are; tangy cracked green olives soaked in a salt brine, delicate tan or violet olives, and sharp, dry-cured, black olives.
- Jimenez was treating the cut with anti-bacterial ointment and pickle brine.
- Fish sauce is what you get when you leave anchovies or similar small fish to pickle in brine until nearly dissolved, and then filter the resulting liquid.
- Red herring are fish which have been first soaked in brine with saltpetre added, then hung up to dry before being subjected to a heavy smoking - ideally over oak, beech, and turf.
- Quickly follow the vermouth with a splash of olive brine, a squeeze of lime and three dashes of bitters.
- Pickling in brine had already been done for centuries.
- Also very different from anything found in this part of the world are small dishes called turshi (vegetables soaked in spicy brine).
- One principal difference is whether the meat is dry salted or soaked in brine.
- Black olives are picked when ripe and are pickled in brine and sometimes then in oil.
- The salmon they carried from Berwick was boiled, pickled in brine and delivered in barrels known as kitts.
- Whether it is canned in oil, brine, or spring water, canned tuna is low in omega 3 essential fats.
- We purchase Spanish chorizo and Roquefort cheese and gherkins in brine and red chillies in olive oil.
- The beef is soaked in brine, brown sugar, juniper berries, and spices for any time between three weeks and three months.
- Molly explained: "We thought a few olive trees would be a good idea so that we could have our own olives in brine and enough oil for the year."
- 1.3technical A strong solution of a salt or salts.
Example sentencesExamples - Although not commonly used, potassium chloride can be used to create the salt brine.
- The resin then must be ‘regenerated’ with a salt (sodium chloride) brine solution before further treatment can occur.
- The brine solution cools the product down while at the same time, adds salt to the cheese.
- It is full of brine at a terrific density, about two-and-a-half pounds of salt to the gallon.
- Chlorine is a basic industrial chemical, prepared in immense quantities by electrolysis of brine.
verbbrīnbraɪn [with object]Soak or preserve in salty water. brine the chicken up to one day before grilling Example sentencesExamples - I brined the scallops and hazelnuts in water, salt, sugar, and liquid smoke.
- Fresh-pack or quick-process pickles are not fermented; some are brined several hours or overnight.
- You might have tried brining a turkey, but other meats benefit from a soak in a salt-sugar liquid too.
- We did brine some turkeys last week and they were ultra juicy.
- Some 120,000 pounds of cheese - about a third of the day's production - can be brined at one time.
Synonyms marinade, marinate, soak, souse, macerate
Origin Old English brīne, of unknown origin. |