- cured in smoke
- копченый
English-Russian dictionary of culinary. 2014.
English-Russian dictionary of culinary. 2014.
smoke — n. & v. n. 1 a visible suspension of carbon etc. in air, emitted from a burning substance. 2 an act or period of smoking tobacco (had a quiet smoke). 3 colloq. a cigarette or cigar (got a smoke?). 4 (the Smoke) Brit. & Austral. colloq. a big city … Useful english dictionary
Smoke (disambiguation) — Smoke is a cloud of particles suspended in the air.Smoke may also refer to:* Smoke, the 44th chapter of the Qur an * Smoke (song), a 1998 single by Australian singer Natalie Imbruglia * The Smoke, a 1960s band from York, England. * The Smoke is… … Wikipedia
Smoke flaps — Smoke fl Commercially a smoke flap can take the form of a metal, tin, or other alloy and can be manipulatable by hand or lever, and appears in home chimneys, stoves, or boilers. The more common use of a smoke flap is on the Native American Plains … Wikipedia
smoke — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ dense, heavy, thick ▪ black, blue, grey/gray, white, etc. ▪ … Collocations dictionary
smoke-cured — adjective (used especially of meats and fish) dried and cured by hanging in wood smoke • Syn: ↑smoked, ↑smoke dried • Similar to: ↑preserved … Useful english dictionary
smoke-dried — adjective (used especially of meats and fish) dried and cured by hanging in wood smoke • Syn: ↑smoked, ↑smoke cured • Similar to: ↑preserved … Useful english dictionary
smoke-cured — копченый … English-Russian travelling dictionary
flue-cured — flueˈ cured adjective • • • Main Entry: ↑flue * * * flue cured «FLOO KYURD», adjective. cured by hanging for several days in a barn heated through flues, without smoke: »flue cured tobacco … Useful english dictionary
flue-cured — adjective Date: 1905 cured with heat transmitted through a flue without exposure to smoke or fumes < flue cured tobacco > … New Collegiate Dictionary
smokehouse — smoke•house [[t]ˈsmoʊkˌhaʊs[/t]] n. pl. hous•es [[t] ˌhaʊ zɪz[/t]] a building or place in which meat, fish, etc., are cured with smoke • Etymology: 1665–75 … From formal English to slang
Tobacco — For the plant genus, see Nicotiana. For the American electronic musician, see Tobacco (musician). Not to be confused with Tabacco. Part of a series on … Wikipedia