:One you put in your mouth to get food in, one you put in your mouth to get food out . . . More accurately, a cocktail stick is a long cylinder pointed at both ends; it's about three, four inches long-about the size of a cotton swab.
22.
Fanny suggested that Mrs Troake use a small pastry boat filled with fruit sorbet and covered with spun sugar, decorated with an orange slice and a cherry through a cocktail stick to give the dish the look of a small boat, suitable, Fanny thought, for the naval guests.
23.
You might also find that the contact is maintained by the springiness of the metal-if so, VERY gently bend them outwards-use something like a wooden toothpick or cocktail stick to get behind them ( nothing metal-nothing fat ! ) . . . I can't over-emphasise how gentle you need to be.
24.
She suggested that Mrs Troake use a small pastry boat filled with a fruit sorbet and covered with spun sugar, decorated with an orange slice and a cherry through a cocktail stick, giving the dish the look of a small boat, which Fanny thought would be suitable for the naval guests.
25.
The best way to visualise this is to get a tennis ball, stick in a couple of cocktail sticks ( for the axis ) and then move it around a lightbulb ( keeping the axis at a fixed angle ) while all the time spinning it feverishly around by twidling the cocktail sticks.
26.
The best way to visualise this is to get a tennis ball, stick in a couple of cocktail sticks ( for the axis ) and then move it around a lightbulb ( keeping the axis at a fixed angle ) while all the time spinning it feverishly around by twidling the cocktail sticks.