Since the less precise pestle and mortar method to prepare medicines was still widely used in the UK, the compressed drugs were an immediate success.
12.
In the apex of each light is a symbol of healing : on the left a pestle and mortar, and on the right a cadeucus.
13.
Cassava, yams are ubiquitous in the local diet, and they are usually boiled and then pounded with a pestle and mortar into a thick starchy paste called fufu.
14.
If you were only grinding a tablespoon or two, I'd use a pestle and mortar . talk ) 23 : 22, 22 December 2009 ( UTC)
15.
The traditional Chinese method of making the ink was to grind a mixture of bone black pigment with a pestle and mortar, then pouring it into a ceramic dish where it could dry.
16.
A 1997 album, " A Prescription for the Blues, " pictured the pianist wearing a doctor's lab coat on the cover, his hands holding a pestle and mortar.
17.
The fine dough-like paste in its final form is achieved only after meticulous pounding of the ingredients, for at least 30 minutes, done with the use of the traditional pestle and mortar.
18.
No datable remains were found, only slingstones, querns and stone pestles and mortars, which suggests that, unlike many hillforts in north Wales, this site was not reoccupied in the late Roman period.
19.
The spice mixture is commonly made by slicing, chopping, grounding, beating, bruising, or sometimes burning the spices, using traditional cooking tools such as stone pestle and mortar, or a modern blender or food processor.
20.
Medicinal or culinary herbs, known as ( weeds ), may be crushed with a pestle and mortar, and added to the water for taste or medicinal reasons . is most popular in Paraguay, Brazil, and the Litoral ( northeast Argentina ).