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Definition of Pastry dough
1. Noun. A dough of flour and water and shortening.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Pastry Dough
Literary usage of Pastry dough
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Cyrano de Bergerac by Edmond Rostand, Gertrude Hall Brownell (1898)
"With fine pastry dough, rolled flat, After that, Line each little scallopped
mold; Round the sides, light-fingered, spread Marmalade; Pour the liquid eggy ..."
2. Chief Contemporary Dramatists, Second Series: Eighteen Plays from the Recent by Thomas Herbert Dickinson (1921)
"... beat — Nicely strained for this same use, — Lemon-juice, Adding milk of almonds,
sweet. With fine pastry dough, rolled flat, After that, ..."
3. A Manual of Pharmacology and Its Applications to Therapeutics and Toxicology by Torald Hermann Sollmann (1922)
"BAKING POWDERS These are chemicals which serve as substitutes for yeast-fermentation,
aerating bread and pastry dough by evolving carbonic acid. ..."
4. An Introduction to Science by Bertha May Clark (1915)
"Since baking powder in some form is used in almost all homes for the raising of
cake and pastry dough, it is essential that its helpful and harmful ..."