What's the difference between casserole and earthenware?

Casserole


Definition:

  • (n.) A small round dish with a handle, usually of porcelain.
  • (n.) A mold (in the shape of a hollow vessel or incasement) of boiled rice, mashed potato or paste, baked, and afterwards filled with vegetables or meat.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) In a casserole over a medium heat, fry the onions in the oil and butter for 5 minutes, to soften.
  • (2) Heat the butter and 1 tbsp of oil in a large, ovenproof frying pan or shallow casserole over a medium heat.
  • (3) "It's like a casserole, like a cake," said the Palace manager afterwards, when discussing his well-documented difficulties when it comes to assembling a squad.
  • (4) For anyone cooking dinner tonight Casserole Club is an online network that enables people cooking a homemade meal to give a portion to someone in the community who is struggling to make one themselves.
  • (5) Two levels (50 and 200 kcal) of three preloads (tomato soup, melon, cheese on crackers) were given just before two different second courses (macaroni and beef casserole, grilled cheese sandwiches), allowing us to examine the effects of caloric level, energy density, and sensory-specific satiety on food intake in normal weight, non-dieting males.
  • (6) Richard Camps, Brighton yumblog.co.uk Serves 4 with other tapas 2 tbsp olive oil, plus extra to serve 500g whole squid, tentacles and all, cleaned and cut into thick rings 1 onion, thinly sliced 2 garlic cloves, sliced 2 tsp fresh rosemary, roughly chopped 2 bay leaves A pinch of chilli flakes ½ tsp fennel seeds ½ tsp sweet smoked paprika A pinch of sugar 2 tbsp red wine vinegar 200g tinned chopped tomatoes About 100ml red wine (a small glass) A small handful of fresh coriander, roughly chopped A squeeze of lemon juice 1 Heat some olive oil in a casserole and add the squid, onion and garlic.
  • (7) Plate counts for turkey or beef casserole held at temperatures in the range of 5 to 10 C for 48 hr indicated stabilization of the population or a tendency to decrease.
  • (8) They may hone policy statements and wear boring ties but the casserole or choice of herbs in the background might let slip what they really care about.
  • (9) That night, as we sat around the fire, feasting on chicken and dill casserole washed down with Bryg brown ale, and with the sea only metres away, I felt the Danish concept of hygge – roughly meaning cosy or content.
  • (10) Skim any fat from the liquid in the casserole, then set on the hob and bring to a simmer.
  • (11) Place in a large casserole dish with the garlic and tomatoes.
  • (12) Casserole Club: This enables neighbours to share a meal and be more connected.
  • (13) We heard about the power of digital service menus that customers can choose from when organising their care, budget calculators for those with personal budgets, fast and effective case management systems, and technology driven services, such as the Casserole Club – an online meals service provided by communities.
  • (14) Leaving the water that has stuck to the sheets, melt the gelatine in a casserole.
  • (15) 2 Heat the oil in a large casserole dish, add the lemongrass and cloves, curry paste and beef.
  • (16) Heat a little oil in a wide casserole dish and cook the onions, covered, until soft and golden.
  • (17) Whitehorn, of course, is such a great writer and such a cool-headed journalist that, as you read her recipes for 'shrimp wiggle' and 'lamb tomato quickie', for 'poulet Marengo' and 'Swedish sausage casserole', you might think her a stranger to such disasters.
  • (18) Canned hams, turkey rolls, and ground-beef casseroles were inoculated with a mixture of vegetative cells and spores of selected strains of Clostridium perfringens, in approximately known numbers.
  • (19) But over veal and olive casserole at Coûteaux’s antique-stuffed left bank apartment, she found him charming.
  • (20) She believes that thinking innovatively about the sharing economy and creating initiatives such as Casserole , which encourages people to cook for their elderly neighours, or Good Gym , which sees people jogging to volunteering jobs, can enable the sector to do more for service users with less resources.

Earthenware


Definition:

  • (n.) Vessels and other utensils, ornaments, or the like, made of baked clay. See Crockery, Pottery, Stoneware, and Porcelain.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) In earthenware vessels from the Moche period (200-700 A.D.) pathological findings of nasal deformities have been depicted in a realistic manner.
  • (2) As she fills the earthenware pot, she counts herself lucky not to be in a refugee camp in neighbouring Niger Republic or among the 234 girls abducted by Boko Haram insurgents from a physics exam in GGSS Chibok and taken to the Sambisa Forest reserve , leaving their parents and an entire country distraught .
  • (3) In a very large soup pot (I typically use a 11.5 litre stainless-steel stock pot or a medium-large Mexican earthenware cazuela), heat the lard or oil over medium.
  • (4) The 19th century saw the introduction of the first coloured earthenware and the manufacture of bone china.
  • (5) The results of the analysis seem to suggest differences in blood levels by sex, zone of residence, hours of transportation and eating habits, such as the consumption of canned meals and the use of "earthenware dishes" in the preparation of meals.
  • (6) aegypti breeding habitats were ant traps, earthenware jars, bowls, tanks, tin cans, and drums, ant traps being the most common indoors and earthenware jars the most common out doors.
  • (7) Deposit plates, anodized aluminium, glazed earthenware plates, and polystyren, glass, "Tergal" cloth plates were used in 8 urban sites and 1 extra-urban site during 1 to 3 months.
  • (8) The craft production of earthenware recipients that have been inadequately glazed and their improper use as containers of drings of foods could be commoner than might be thought on the basis of the sporadic reporting of such cases of lead poisoning.
  • (9) The proportion of positive stored water samples was also lower with the use of different vessels for collection and storage, with storage inside the house, and with use of a storage container other than an earthenware pot.
  • (10) Storage using earthenware pots for six weeks resulted in significant losses of vitamin C. In general, traditional methods for processing, preservation and storage of vegetables cause significant losses of nutrients, an effect that could account for poor, nutritional status in Morogoro region (Tanzania).
  • (11) It bought the pottery manufacturer Denby for £30m in 2009 and continues to run it, adding earthenware firm Burleigh in 2010 and Somerset-based Poole Pottery in 2011.
  • (12) In the production of earthenware relatively high concentrations of dust occur only temporarily, but in very few cases they may cause silicosis.
  • (13) Caravaggio leapt up, hit him with an earthenware dish and drew his ever-ready sword, but one of his friends restrained him from killing the waiter.
  • (14) The most famous artist of the moment, Ai Weiwei, imprisoned and then released by the Chinese authorities, is another YBA-influenced figure with his huge studios in China, where a team of assistants follow his instructions delivered in mobile phone calls and occasional visits, and where scores of old Chinese earthenware vases half-dipped in random primary colours are arranged in large grids as installations.
  • (15) It was found that the decoction made by means of glassware, enamel and earthenware pots had the best effect of inhibiting the colony formation of human gastric carcinoma cells, the next were the decoctions made by means of unrefined iron pots, stainless steel pots and copper pots, and the worst was that made with aluminium pots.
  • (16) Two methods-chlorination of stored water and the use of a narrow-necked earthenware vessel (called a 'sorai') for storing the water-were found to be effective in reducing the transmission of infection among the family contacts of cholera patients.
  • (17) There are tombs and cloisters and bits of earthenware crockery which might have come from the kitchen of the Casa de Mar, rather than being dropped by a butter-fingered monk 700 years ago.
  • (18) He recalls dining in the south of France with his friend and mentor, the cookery writer Richard Olney, who served tripe that had been gently cooked for a day in an earthenware container.
  • (19) aegypti and Mesocyclops, both copepod species eliminated all immatures in earthenware pots by week 3.

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