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to tenderness
noun
A tendency to express warm, compassionate feelings
Exact(60)
Salting is essential to tenderness, or fatal; brief dips in boiling water tenderize, or long slow cooling, or a rubbing with grated daikon, or the addition of a wine cork to the cooking liquid.
She became tender, which shocked me because I was unaccustomed to tenderness in any form besides sirloin steak.
Leisure gives way to tension, then to wary ease, then to tenderness.
The slow cooking gently brings the meat to tenderness, guarding its juices.
She swerves from rage to tenderness, and may not even know which is which.
Most vegetables can be simmered or braised to tenderness and held at that point for quite a while.
Steaming is my favoured method: the spears cook to tenderness without trapping water in their leafy, buddy nooks and crannies.
The emotions Gibb conveys – from shame and sorrow to tenderness and hope – are delivered powerfully enough to overcome mere words.
Toasting the couscous until deeply golden, before simmering to tenderness, enhances all of its warmth and nuttiness.
He braises duck tongues to tenderness, then rolls them into small meatballs with a crunchy fried crust.
A mixture of eating and cooking apples means that the filling of these turnovers should cook to tenderness without turning to mush.
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