What's the difference between coleslaw and grater?

Coleslaw


Definition:

  • (n.) A salad made of sliced cabbage.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Davis had earlier declined the privilege of specifying his final supper, so instead was given the institution's choice of grilled cheeseburgers, oven browned potatoes, baked beans, coleslaw, cookies and a grape beverage.
  • (2) A decline in viable numbers of L. monocytogenes in coleslaw at pH 6.0 occurred at 4 degrees C and at 15 degrees C, whereas at 25 degrees C the viable count of L. monocytogenes increased initially and remained high after incubation for 25 days.
  • (3) Rice and peas, macaroni cheese, homemade coleslaw and curried goat, so legendary have the dinners become that TV producers have even approached the family about making a reality show.
  • (4) Nando's peri-peri chicken and chips with macho peas and coleslaw.
  • (5) After HhaI digestion, 29 of 32 isolates exhibited the restriction enzyme pattern of the reference coleslaw isolate.
  • (6) There is a certain quiet finesse to my 15-hour shredded brisket sandwich, with cheese, onions and coleslaw.
  • (7) You can have your chicken as a quarter, half, whole or wings, with one or two regular sides, such as corn on the cob and coleslaw, or a fino side (ratatouille – ugh!).
  • (8) In the first debate in Cleveland last month, Graham was stilted, but in California, fortified with a pre-debate meal of Chick-fil-A chicken nuggets and coleslaw, he let loose one-liners while promoting himself as a would-be warrior commander-in-chief who would confront and defeat radical Islam, and lambasting Barack Obama as a “weak, unqualified commander” who mishandled Syria.
  • (9) He's one of those CEOs who believes in rewarding his staff, who get £6.90 an hour (which buys you 30 Chicken Zingy Sliders and a tub of Reduced Fat Coleslaw), and seem to stay with the firm for years, which must mean something.
  • (10) Human isolates (n = 32) from the 1981 Canadian outbreak were compared with a strain recovered from coleslaw, which was epidemiologically incriminated as the vehicle of infection.
  • (11) co.uk Pan-fried mackerel sandwich with rhubarb coleslaw Pan-fried mackerel sandwich with rhubarb coleslaw Photograph: Yuki Sugiura for the Guardian Lightly pickling the rhubarb and radishes cuts through the richness of the fish.
  • (12) The survival and growth of Listeria monocytogenes in fresh coleslaw, pH 3.9, and in coleslaw adjusted to pH 4.0, 5.0, 6.0 or 7.0 before inoculation was studied at three temperatures (4, 15 and 25 degrees C).
  • (13) Coleslaw at pH 5.0 was also inhibitory to L. monocytogenes at all three temperatures studied.
  • (14) We report a case of facial and throat swelling in an atopic female after she ingested coleslaw on two separate occasions.
  • (15) L. monocytogenes was not detectable after 5 days incubation in fresh coleslaw nor in coleslaw adjusted to pH 4.0.
  • (16) Strangely, the actor has form when it comes to sandwiches, what with snaps of him seemingly laughing at his butties going viral on the internet, plus a bizarre appearance on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon, when he performed a song called Gonna Eat That Talkin’ Sandwich and told his host: “My favourite sandwich is a Primanti Brothers’ sandwich, it has the french fries in the sandwich and coleslaw.
  • (17) 4 Stuff the buns with the mackerel and the rhubarb coleslaw and enjoy!
  • (18) L. monocytogenes grew rapidly in coleslaw at pH 7.0 at all three temperatures studied, followed by an equally rapid decline in viable count.
  • (19) Always medium, with peri-peri chips and coleslaw on the side."
  • (20) Christopher Pyne (@cpyne) @workmanalice I like all forms of green leaf salad that I can think of - but I do particularly like a Vietnamese coleslaw January 12, 2016 Richard Di Natale (@RichardDiNatale) @workmanalice Butter lettuce, but with four growing on the farm, I’m very inclusionary when it comes to #lettuce .

Grater


Definition:

  • (a.) One who, or that which, grates; especially, an instrument or utensil with a rough, indented surface, for rubbing off small particles of any substance; as a grater for nutmegs.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) He locked horns with the architect again in 2008, using Rogers' 44-storey "cheese grater" tower in the City of London to warn that historic cities were being wrecked.
  • (2) I use the wide side of the grater or the mandolin for this, although those with better knife skills than me should be able to do a good job of it that way.
  • (3) Today, London's skyline is dominated by such sights as the Cheese-grater in Leadenhall, the Walkie-talkie in Fenchurch Street, the Gherkin in Aldgate and the Razor at Elephant and Castle.
  • (4) DL-methinionine in the diet of cows for the first months of lactation leads to grater amounts of milk of higher quality as well as to improving the health of the animals.
  • (5) The majority of the compounds showed clear antagonist activity towards BaCl2, histamine and acetylcholine contracting responses, generally grater than that of papaverine; on the contrary, their antagonist activity towards 5-HT responses was slightly lower.
  • (6) On the other hand, the patients who had undergone muscle release had, to grater or lesser extent, disturbances of the range of movement.
  • (7) Try Auctionstealer , an online tool which bids for you at the last nanosecond, meaning you can watch The Cube while simultaneously winning a grater.
  • (8) "Russia is already paying a serious price for its actions," William Hague assured the house, the extra helium in his cheese-grater voice an indication of his own gravity.
  • (9) Although the two-year-olds' extent of exploration and amount of time spent in a playroom were significantly grater when their mother was present than when an unfamiliar person was present, the grandmother's functional characteristics were on an intermediate level between those of the mother and those of the unfamiliar person.
  • (10) • Prominent in this list are kitchen implements like cheese graters and bottle openers; if you want to make it a bit more fun then you can get various novelty themed equipment .
  • (11) This paper describes a simple method of obtaining cancellous graft from femoral heads, either allograft or autograft, with "cheese grater" type acetabular reamers.
  • (12) Roughly grate the eggs on the large holes of the grater, then grate the garlic on the fine side.
  • (13) The effect of the dnaA mutation was grater on plasmid DNA synthesis than on host chromosomal DNA synthesis.
  • (14) Out of 49 cases, histologic diagnosis of chronic diffuse lymphocytic thyroiditis was established in nine patients (18%) but the frequency of the appearance of this autoimmune disease may well be grater because a relatively small number of patients underwent the operation.
  • (15) Epinephrine and insulin increased glucose uptake in Planaria, but epinephrine did so to a much grater extent.
  • (16) They were quickly alerted to the fact that the Japanese generally do not eat cheese or mashed potatoes during a presentation, leaving the potato masher and grater largely redundant - although the brand has proved particularly successful there and in the US out of the 105 countries they now sell in, mostly through third-party distributors.
  • (17) Just as the distinctively named Shard of Glass, the Helter Skelter, the Cheese- grater and the Walkie Talkie are being erected across the City, the architect who created the eye-catching Gherkin has declared the London skyscraper building boom is nearing its end.