What's the difference between cuisine and viennese?

Cuisine


Definition:

  • (n.) The kitchen or cooking department.
  • (n.) Manner or style of cooking.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Both groups are served by about 17,000 restaurants, most of them proud of their contribution to what the city believes is the highest-quality and most diverse cuisine on the planet.
  • (2) Is haggis good?” he asked, curious about British cuisine.
  • (3) While breads might abound in the world's cuisine, whether they are employed as a means of making a reasonably tidy portable meal limns the sandwich classification.
  • (4) São Paulo restaurants creating a new Brazilian cuisine Read more Music matches each course on a playful menu that varies not just with the seasons, but with lunar cycles and Vidolin’s spiritual state, so we’re told.
  • (5) Nordestinos brought their hearty, meaty peasant cuisine with them, and one former factory worker, Jose Oliveira de Almeid, called simply Seu Ze, opened a small restaurant called Mocotó in the working-class suburb of Villa Medeiros.
  • (6) There are few undisputed champions in the restaurant business but I would argue that Vasco & Piero's Pavilion , a traditional osteria-style restaurant specialising in Umbrian cuisine, makes the best bowl of pasta in London.
  • (7) The lodge’s stylish restaurant, The Tree House, offers cuisine that blends the best of Peruvian, Asian, Italian and Latin American flavours.
  • (8) It’s more hard-wired than that; it’s crap but comforting cuisine, your first Meccano set, moral certainties, safety.
  • (9) He cooked it in his attic flat for a friend, an editor for the gourmands' bible Cuisine et Vins de France .
  • (10) The "fry" – or, as Café Conor call it, the "big breakfast" – is one of the foundations of Northern Irish cuisine.
  • (11) Jacques Cuisin, head of restoration at the museum, said the 3kg tusk did not have a great monetary worth, but it had major historical and scientific value and would be repaired.
  • (12) But I make choices about restaurants all the time, based on price, location, hours, parking, cuisine, quality, ambience etc.
  • (13) The meeting participants, having been warmed by the New Mexico sun and the chile-laden cuisine, now return to their laboratories determined to pursue not only the details of RNA biochemistry and molecular biology, but also the evolutionary implications of their work.
  • (14) And so if we were to say to them ‘you’ve got to change your diet’, they’d say ‘no, I can’t handle any more changes’.” This matters since food portions are no exception to the “everything’s bigger in Texas” cliche, while Houston’s location near Mexico and the deep south, its embrace of the Lone Star state’s love of barbecued red meat and its enormous variety of restaurants serving international cuisine combine to unhealthy effect.
  • (15) The typhoon shelter was famous for its restaurants' cuisine – including Under Bridge Spicy Crab – and it was a nightlife hub, alive with mahjong games and hired singers.
  • (16) Open daily 10am-2am Must-sees Marché Saint Quentin Facebook Twitter Pinterest Photograph: Alamy This historic covered food market, which opened in 1866, is the largest of its kind in Paris, with over 30 shops selling meat, fish and cheese alongside stands selling fresh dishes of Moroccan, African, Portuguese, and Italian cuisine that can be eaten at the tables in the centre.
  • (17) They flew in on a private Boeing 777 airliner complete with customised "Panda Express" livery; a bespoke cuisine of bamboo, apples, carrots and specially prepared "panda cake"; and private suites of Perspex and steel.
  • (18) Depending on your taste buds, you can’t go wrong with Cantonese food; Shanghainese fare tends to be sweeter; Yunnan and Xinjiang cuisine is heavier and well-spiced – the list is endless.
  • (19) He opened his restaurant La Tupiña , now an institution in the city for its classic south-western cuisine, in 1968, and has steadily been making additions ever since.
  • (20) Atala says his lightbulb moment came when he realised that, despite training in France and Italy, he would never, as a Brazilian, be able to cook those countries' cuisines (which dominate the fine-dining scene in São Paulo) as well as a native chef.

Viennese


Definition:

  • (a.) Of or pertaining to Vienna, or people of Vienna.
  • (n. sing. & pl.) An inhabitant, or the inhabitants, of Vienna.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Rather, it is a multi-ethnic mixture of immigrants and poor Viennese, many of them unemployed, making it a fertile hunting ground for the far-right Freedom party of Heinz-Christian Strache: anti-EU, anti-immigration, anti-Muslim.
  • (2) Tellingly, all of these were occupied by the business of peeling back the veneer of Austro-Hungarian culture to expose the rottenness beneath, and this might have had something to do with the fact that, when they were in their teens, another Viennese, Sigmund Freud, was putting together the framework of the new technique of psychoanalysis.
  • (3) A statistically significant relationship has been found between the age at menarche and the age of 1st birth among chronically-malnourished, lower-class Viennese women born in the late 19th century.
  • (4) Calculations on the basis of the current costs for treatment of the acute diseased and for nursing of incapacitated patients reveal that routine screening of all in- and out-patients of the Viennese municipal hospitals is completely justified from the medical and the economic point of view and should, therefore, be reinforced.
  • (5) Freud's reliance on Mussolini can be explained by traditional Viennese attitudes toward Italy, the Duce's protectiveness about Austrian independence, and the relatively benign attitude of the Fascist regime towards Jews.
  • (6) Opatija , on Istria's east coast, has some fancy places to eat, as well as posh spas and Viennese-style coffee shops, while nearby Volosko , a fishing village, is home to renowned restaurant Le Mandrac .
  • (7) Dacron prostheses for replacement of the thoracic aorta were sealed with bioadhesive following the Viennese method.
  • (8) They make a nice couple, and I think they might do quite nicely provided he doesn't start doing Tony Blair impressions mid-Viennese waltz.
  • (9) Compliance in counseling--a rather neglected field of study--was investigated in conjunction with 100 Viennese family consulting cases.
  • (10) As he ambles into the small interview room at Munich’s Säbener Strasse in a plain black T-shirt and trainers, Alaba is unassuming to the point of being shy, a little at odds with his reputation as a social-media prankster – his oeuvre contains a series of shots of the midfielder Franck Ribéry dozing and a nearly-nude double-selfie with his former team-mate Mitchell Weiser, in thongs – and as a typically Viennese lausbub (rascal) who once told the club’s former president Uli Hoeness that he had to “think about” an allegation by a concerned member of the public that he was painting the town red with Ribéry in Munich.
  • (11) In future it will be possible to compare all patients datas, methods and success of treatment of all Viennese hospitals.
  • (12) For this purpose, three criteria of shape and bc ridgecount (size) were studied in 150 male and 150 female Viennese pupils, and were each classified according to whether they could be interpreted as showing strong reduction, slight reduction or no reduction.
  • (13) But it was a crowded field, Viennese writing after the first world war: the competition were the likes of Mann, Arthur Schnitzler, Robert Musil and Joseph Roth, to name only the most stellar.
  • (14) For the moment, a large majority of Viennese are really welcoming, they are good people in their hearts.
  • (15) Within the Viennese clinical material, the staphylococcal share increased between 1984 and 1989 from 40 to 48%, with material from intensive care units from 42 to 60% and at the burn care unit up to almost 90% with S. epidermidis counting for the largest share.
  • (16) The Viennese parents in Benny's Video cover up the evidence of the murder their son has committed at home, and the German pastor in The White Ribbon indignantly refuses to recognise the horrors – including the crucifixion of a pet bird – that abound in his household.
  • (17) In 1872 the Viennese dermatologist Moritz Kaposi first described a pigment sarcoma of the skin.
  • (18) The value of angiography in the diagnosis of giant cell tumors of the bone was investigated in 12 patients listed in the Viennese bone tumor register.
  • (19) You’ve goaded this sleeping giant, the ordinary licence fee payer’s docile spirit animal, into expressing an opinion on something more controversial than Judy Murray’s Viennese Waltz?
  • (20) Kimberley's Viennese layers didn't hold up and Paul basically says I told you so.

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