What's the difference between buttery and larder?

Buttery


Definition:

  • (a.) Having the qualities, consistence, or appearance, of butter.
  • (n.) An apartment in a house where butter, milk and other provisions are kept.
  • (n.) A room in some English colleges where liquors, fruit, and refreshments are kept for sale to the students.
  • (n.) A cellar in which butts of wine are kept.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Talk rarely tends this way with an actor who’s found a good slot, more inclined as a result to play safe and spray out buttery praise in all directions, at co-stars, crew, studios, cheque-signers.
  • (2) There is also an excellent – and blissfully long – section on teatime: every possible cake and bun is here in all their sugary, buttery glory.
  • (3) Lined up alongside green, paper-skinned pistachios or buttery pecans, almonds – anaemic, lozenge-shaped, creamily bland – can seem rather dull.
  • (4) We're currently planning on going to LouMalnati's for the buttery crust August 21, 2013 Helen Knox (@lebowski2020) @GuardianTravel where is best place for evening rooftop bar view of Chicago, pref for mojitos?
  • (5) These buttery potato scones glisten on my plate like Grecian tiles.
  • (6) Just lovely acid-sweet jam and an explosion of buttery pastry.
  • (7) If you're going to opine about cheese, it's best to know your washed rind (stinky) from your bloomy rind (buttery).
  • (8) "The once-great Paul Gascoigne was already so good by 1988 that he could score in north London derbies sans footwear," says Mark Buttery.
  • (9) I was really spoilt for choice, torn between a lentil and watercress salad with an unusual citrussy dressing, and buttery purple sprouting broccoli on toast, but on a sunny day, thejameskitchen's lively, punchy green soup seemed so perfectly spring-like I couldn't resist.
  • (10) The sausages were naturally top drawer, but that glossy, buttery, roughly worked mash, properly seasoned and brilliantly laced with sweet caramelised onions, was awesome.
  • (11) You can see how that works with a classic Kiwi sauvignon blanc, which has a snappy, pungent, faintly sweaty greenness to match the same character in asparagus, but also has an incisive citric crispness to cut through the almost buttery richness of avocado.
  • (12) A breakfast of wild mushrooms and spinach on good sourdough delivered a persuasive hillock of buttery, thoroughly seasoned funghi.
  • (13) I serve mine for breakfast with a runny egg on top, or for dinner with buttery cabbage and succulent chicken thighs.
  • (14) The buttery sauce is flavoured with fennel and coriander seeds, orange zest and a good slug of Marsala.
  • (15) People favour risottos now, but before there was risotto, there was pilaff: buttery rice mixed with onions, garlic and tomatoes that have first been fried in olive oil.
  • (16) Unfortunately, where the homemade stuff is rich, tender and buttery, shop‑bought tends to be pallid and disappointingly bland.
  • (17) I opt for the buttery Brazilian Agua Preta latte with a shot of agave syrup.
  • (18) Likewise, the ASA decided against banning the third most complained about ad, also by Unilever, an animated TV and online ad for Flora Buttery margarine featuring two siblings wrestling.
  • (19) A year-long investigation “When I started out I had never worked one of these cases and had no idea what to do,” says Finley, an amiable man with a buttery Georgia drawl.
  • (20) It was a cheap thing, but a pleasingly buttery colour with knobbly legs around which I used to curl my bare feet when eating breakfast.

Larder


Definition:

  • (n.) A room or place where meat and other articles of food are kept before they are cooked.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Another series on the Edwardian larder will examine products such as Marmite and Bird's custard powder, along with the social changes that created a need for them.
  • (2) British companies such as Laing O’Rourke, Balfour Beatty, and Cavendish Nuclear are in line for significant contracts, with G4S a bidder for security contracts and Somerset Larder for the catering.
  • (3) Invaders include spotted pigs and deer that trot through the thick rainforest, marooned on the island after being imported centuries ago as living larders.
  • (4) This change had previously been shown by Larder and Kemp (Science, 246:1155-1158, 1989) to correlate with partial AZT resistance of virus isolates.
  • (5) Now let me see," he said, opening the door of the larder, "We have eggs, salmon, sardines … " He snapped his fingers.
  • (6) The isolate obtained after 32 months of AZT-therapy in addition contained a third mutation at position 67 (Asp----Asn); in contrast to Larder's report, no mutation was found at position 219.
  • (7) Average price £5 The Edinburgh Larder The Edinburgh Larder Despite its situation just off the tourist-magnet Royal Mile, The Larder remains a peaceful hideaway, with six wooden tables and a few deli shelves full of locally sourced and organic produce.
  • (8) Because that's the only proper way to attack the global larder: with conviction.
  • (9) Less successfully was solved the placement of the kitchen, the dining-room and the larder on the upper deck, near the entrance to the engine-room, entailing thus the danger of steam penetration from the latter.
  • (10) Warnings of early Arctic snaps, backed by much local spotting of bumper berry crops on holly, yew and other "animal larder" trees, have failed to bear fruit as the Christmas season approaches.
  • (11) But there is an unpalatable truth to face for those of us with a bag of quinoa in the larder.
  • (12) Quinoa was, in marketing speak, the "miracle grain of the Andes", a healthy, right-on, ethical addition to the meat avoider's larder (no dead animals, just a crop that doesn't feel pain).
  • (13) But it's also supposedly a place where it's completely normal to keep cardamom, crystallised roses and harissa in your larder.
  • (14) A. Larder and S. D. Kemp, Science 246:1155-1158, 1989).
  • (15) Into our teeny house we welcomed four guests for between one- and three-month stays, and they had the run of it, complete with all my precious kitchenware, the larder of spices, the board games, the Sonos music system and the library of books that we couldn’t bring with us.
  • (16) My favourite: The Larder and The Delta from chef Stephen Jones, a sophisticated take on down-home southern cooking that can feature crispy brussels sprouts with fermented Fresno chilli vinaigrette or hauntingly fine fried chicken skin po’ boy with jalapeño apple slaw in a soft Hawaiian roll.
  • (17) "This demonstrates that people around the world are appreciating the high quality and delicious products that Scotland's larder has to offer.
  • (18) A change at residue 215 was found only for the two drug-resistant isolates, which correlated with the results obtained by Larder et al.
  • (19) Risk was elevated in subjects who, when children, had lived in houses without a larder built specifically for the storage of food.
  • (20) Only seven were found to maintain temperatures between 5 degrees C and 7 degrees C. Commercial larder type refrigerators are recommended for ward use.

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