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Slice potatoes very thinly (less than 1/8-inch thick).
Slice ricotta salata thinly, less than a quarter-inch thick, and it crumbles into shards that deliver a suave dose of salt to each mouthful.
It is more usual, in my experience, to roll the dough somewhat thinner: Lawrence goes for 5mm and MacClure "very thinly, less than an eighth of an inch", or 3mm, like Grierson.
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Novels in which Byron appears more or less thinly disguised began during his own lifetime with Lady Caroline Lamb's Glenarvon of 1816.
TARVER: They were less thinly veiled than you might think.
What happens is the ships are spread more thinly, they have less time to do the unit-level training the blocking and tackling, if you will into which safe navigation fits very neatly.
None of this pre-cut, thinly sliced nonsense, much less sad wafer-thin slices of plastic, reformed meat.
Ever one to husband his motifs, Davis based "The Paris Bit" on "Place Pasdeloup," a more thinly lined and much less abstracted view of a hotel and other buildings painted during his 1928 trip to Paris, which hangs on the same wall here.
It says: shale gas deposits are spread very thinly, and wells are less efficient and dry out more quickly, making their exploitation more costly than conventional gas. the geology of shale deposits is complex and varies enormously from one place to another, meaning it may take a long time to develop drilling technology.
Softer cheeses (like Blue cheese) may have more fat, but if spread thinly, can add overall less fat than slices of hard cheese.
That price was roughly double the market value of the thinly traded shares, but 45percentt less than their net asset value.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com