Synonymer & Information om | Engelska ordet PUNGENCY


PUNGENCY

3

Antal bokstäver

8

Är palindrom

Nej

15
CY
EN
ENC
GE
GEN
NC
NG
NGE

224
CE
CEN
CEP
CEU
CG
CGN
CGY
CN


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Exempel på hur man kan använda PUNGENCY i en mening

  • It has bold flavours, particularly the pungency and spiciness resulting from liberal use of garlic and chili peppers, as well as the unique flavour of Sichuan pepper.
  • The Scoville scale is a measurement of pungency (spiciness or "heat") of chili peppers and other substances, recorded in Scoville heat units (SHU).
  • Once exposed to air or heat, horseradish loses its pungency, darkens in color, and develops a bitter flavor.
  • Although its physical properties imply that anaesthesia can be induced more rapidly than with halothane, its pungency can irritate the respiratory system, negating any possible advantage conferred by its physical properties.
  • The pungency of jalapeño peppers varies, but is usually between 4,000 and 8,500 units on the Scoville scale.
  • Piperine, possibly along with its isomer chavicine, is the compound responsible for the pungency of black pepper and long pepper.
  • Raw, it has a resinous, medicinal pungency, similar to oregano, anise, fennel, or even tarragon, but stronger.
  • Nordihydrocapsaicin accounts for about 7% of the total capsaicinoids mixture and has about half the pungency of capsaicin.
  • Homodihydrocapsaicin accounts for about 1% of the total capsaicinoids mixture and has about half the pungency of capsaicin.
  • Homocapsaicin accounts for about 1% of the total capsaicinoids mixture and has about half the pungency of capsaicin.
  • This fruit's volatile and essential (oleoresin) oils, which make up a significant portion of its composition, give it flavor, aroma, and pungency.
  • In Eurasia, this species of dodder would often attach itself to the Conehead thyme (Thymus capitatus), taking on the plant's pungency.
  • Like its predecessors, the film is not entirely successful in combining knockabout farce with more sophisticated lampooning: many of the gags are pressed too hard and there is a tendency to mistake facetiousness for pungency.
  • ; temperature, detected by temperature receptors; and "coolness" (such as of menthol) and "hotness" (pungency), by chemesthesis.
  • In other words, pungency always refers to a very strong taste whereas piquancy refers to any spices and foods that are "agreeably stimulating to the palate", in other words to food that is spicy in the general sense of "well-spiced".
  • According to the story which he himself sent in a letter to his brother three weeks later, his men came within twenty or thirty paces of the enemy, whereupon he advanced in front of the regiment, drank to the health of the French, bantered them with more spirit than pungency on their defeat at Dettingen, and then turned and called on his own men to huzzah, which they did.
  • Although its close relatives Persicaria hydropiper and Persicaria punctata are known to possess a hot or pungent quality when consumed, swamp smartweed is said to lack the same pungency by at least one author.
  • chinense showed that capsaicinoids are produced only in the epidermal cells of the interlocular septa of pungent fruits, that blister formation only occurs as a result of capsaicinoid accumulation, and that pungency and blister formation are controlled by a single locus, Pun1, for which there exist at least two recessive alleles that result in non-pungency of C.
  • Brevibacteria also give such cheeses as Limburger, Bel Paese, Port Salut, Pálpusztai and Munster their characteristic pungency.
  • In modern times, Kasundi is popularly served with Bangladeshi snacks like cutlets and chops, and deep-fried spicy treats, as it brings tartness and pungency to the flavours.


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