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Definition of Parbake
1. Verb. (transitive rare cookery) To bake (bread or dough) partially so it can be rapidly frozen for storage. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Parbake
1. to bake partially [v -BAKED, -BAKING, -BAKES]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Parbake
Literary usage of Parbake
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Fifty Years in a Maryland Kitchen by B. C. Howard, Jane Grant Gilmore Howard, James B. Herndon, Herndon/Vehling Collection (1881)
"After letting it remain for four hours, make it into loaves and parbake them.
Then take them out of the oven and cover them immediately to keep the heat in. ..."
2. The Military Annals of Greece from the Earliest Time to the Beginning of the by William Lamartine Snyder (1915)
"He became interested, accosted their leader, and bade them parbake of his hospitality.
The strangers then disclosed their mission, repeated what the oracle ..."
3. A Move for Better Roads: Essays on Roadmaking and Maintenance and Road Laws by Lewis Muhlenberg Haupt, Henry Irwin, David Hendricks Bergey, James Bradford Olcott, Edwin Satterthwait, Charles Punchard, George B. Fleece, Frank Cawley, Francis Fuller McKenzie (1891)
"... long furnaces or troughs, having fires in them, to parbake the earth, which
should have been previously thoroughly rolled by fifteen to twenty-ton ..."
4. A Move for Better Roads: Essays on Roadmaking and Maintenance and Road Laws by Lewis Muhlenberg Haupt, Henry Irwin, David Hendricks Bergey, James Bradford Olcott, Edwin Satterthwait, Charles Punchard, George B. Fleece, Frank Cawley, Francis Fuller McKenzie (1891)
"... long furnaces or troughs, having fires in them, to parbake the earth, which
should have been previously thoroughly rolled by fifteen to twenty-ton ..."
5. A Move for Better Roads: Essays on Roadmaking and Maintenance and Road Laws by Lewis Muhlenberg Haupt, Henry Irwin, David Hendricks Bergey, James Bradford Olcott, Edwin Satterthwait, Charles Punchard, George B. Fleece, Frank Cawley, Francis Fuller McKenzie (1891)
"... long furnaces or troughs, having fires in them, to parbake the earth, which
should have been previously thoroughly rolled by fifteen to twenty-ton ..."