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Discover LudwigThe phrase "mince up" is correct and usable in written English
It is typically used in cooking contexts to describe the action of cutting food into very small pieces. Example: "To prepare the dish, you need to mince up the garlic and onions before sautéing them."
Exact(4)
The downside, if you drop a spoon into the drain and you reach in, you can mince up your hand.
Precautions, it seems, have been taken; the treads have been replaced with rubber tyres so as not to mince up the pavement, and the gun turrets removed.
Simply mince up very finely some fresh cloves and add either while steaming or on the clams when steamed.
Mince up a clove of garlic into a paste, and apply it to your acne for 20 minutes.
Similar(56)
Then I minced up their tails (which are more tender than the shells) and added them back into the mix.
But you easily might not – and if you had it minced up in a burger –you probably wouldn't.
He had written a sympathetic biography of Neil Kinnock, "a personally decent man minced up in the modern world.
Her veal got minced up, yet not dumbed down, into a ragù, and she mixed her mustard greens with fresh ricotta over rigatoni.
Unless we later discover that this pleasantly plump American policeman here has actually eaten the Black Eyed Peas, minced up and deep fried into doughnuts.
After being gathered into the microbivore's "mouth", the germ would be minced up and digested into harmless molecules in just minutes.
After my arrival, she patiently fed minced up chunks of a dead chick to Sammy, her fluffy Eurasian eagle owlet, using chopsticks.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com