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Examples
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Sometimes for variety, use pistaches, pine-apple-seeds, or some blanch't almonds stew'd amongst the hash, or asparagus, or artichock boil'd & cut as big as chesnuts, & garnish the dish with scraped horse-radish, and rub the bottom of the dish in which you serve the meat, with a clove or two of garlick.
The accomplisht cook or, The art & mystery of cookery Robert May
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Sometimes you may put some stew'd oysters on them.
The accomplisht cook or, The art & mystery of cookery Robert May
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Mistah Falk, he tell stew'd he want pie and he gotta have pie, and stew'd he come and he say, 'Frank,' says he, 'dat
The Mutineers Charles Boardman Hawes
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No, sah, Ah ain't gwine tell a boy dem things 'cause Ah tell stew'd
The Mutineers Charles Boardman Hawes
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Boil it in fair water and salt, being drawn and washed clean, when the pan boils put in the fish and scum it; being well boil'd dish it, and pour on it some stew'd oysters and slic't lemon; run it over with beaten butter beat up thick with juyce of oranges, pour it over all, then cut sippets, and stick it with fryed bread.
The accomplisht cook or, The art & mystery of cookery Robert May
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Trouts stew'd: Trouts close, boyled with the calvored Trouts, all in one Kettle and the same liquor: Trouts butter'd with Egs: Trouts roasted: Trouts baked: these are for the first course, before the Salt.
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She knows no more than stew'd, bak'd, roast, and boil'd.
A Poetical Cook-Book Maria J. Moss
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Cynamon, Ginger and Sugar, a little minced meat, or rost Beef, a few stew'd Prunes, a race of green Ginger, a Flap-jack, a Kan of fresh water brewed with a little Cynamon and Sugar be not better than a little poor
On the Spanish Main Or, Some English forays on the Isthmus of Darien. John Masefield 1922
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At the other House, where our Fellow Travellers lay, they had provided a Dish, in great Fashion amongst the Indians, which was Two young Fawns, taken out of the Doe's Bellies, and boil'd in the same slimy Bags Nature had plac'd them in, and one of the Country-Hares, stew'd with the Guts in her Belly, and her Skin with the Hair on.
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Shoo did as shoo wor tell'd, an 'shoo stew'd th' heead an 'made some cauf-heead broth, an' rare an 'nice it wor.
Yorksher Puddin' A Collection of the Most Popular Dialect Stories from the Pen of John Hartley John Hartley 1877
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