veal
IPA: vˈiɫ
noun
- The flesh of a calf (i.e. a young bovine) used for food.
- (slang, vulgar) The female genitalia.
- A surname.
verb
- To raise a calf for meat production.
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Examples of "veal" in Sentences
- I ordered veal at the restaurant.
- In some cases, veal Schnitzel is on the menu.
- The Basque food often uses fish and meat, especially veal.
- Mullingar is renowned for the high quality of its beef and veal.
- At least a brief mention of veal in the beef topic is appropriate.
- The calf later was sold presumably for veal or rodeo entertainment.
- The main livestock products in Panama are beef, veal, chicken, and pork.
- Alternatively, veal, chicken, or fish may be used in place of the eggplant.
- In St. Louis and the midwest, toasted ravioli typically contains beef or veal.
- In some regions, bacon will be added between the flank steak and the veal grind.
- For a main I have veal, which is well cooked and tender without being overexciting.
- They even ate the cow's baby's -- called veal -- because they liked the taste tender flesh.
- The meat - beef is fine, but I used ground pork and veal from the Italian butchers in Sydney Road.
- These hydromorphic savannas, called veal in the French literature, are commonly saturated for at least six months of the year.
- The same monstrous depravity appears in their veal, which is bleached by repeated bleedings, and other villainous arts, till there is not
- Although I know some Chefs do it, I’m always a little suspicious when I read a menu that describes an Entrée that has been slowly simmered in veal or game stock.
- Perhaps a man hitched to the cart of a Martian or roasted on the spit by inhabitants of the Milky Way will recall the veal cutlet he used to slice on his dinner plate and apologize (belatedly!) to the cow.
- As we are all discovering, however, the sickening truth is that these things are done to hundreds of thousands of male calves every year throughout the United States to produce the meat known as veal, or more specifically "white veal".
- As the goats, taking refuge in the more inaccessible parts of the country, could with difficulty be killed, the crews subsisted on the flesh of the young seals, which they called veal, and on that of the sea-lions, which was denominated beef.
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