Search references for SUCKET. Phrases containing SUCKET
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Medieval English sweet
Sucket or succat was a kind of confectionary or dessert popular in early modern England, frequently served at banquets with other confectionary. The word
Sucket
Eating utensil
knife Spork: A utensil combining characteristics of a spoon and a fork. Sucket fork: A utensil with tines at one end of the stem and a spoon at the other
Fork
Medieval confection
gingerbread, containing dates, etc." Wolley, Hannah. The_Queen-Like_Closet. Retrieved 4 July 2018. The dictionary definition of sucket at Wiktionary v t e
Leach_(food)
Historical gift-giving tradition
gift, in 1562 Lady Yorke gave Elizabeth three sugar loaves and a barrel of sucket. A bible, bound in crimson velvet embroidered with pearls, given to Elizabeth
New Year's Day gift (royal courts)
New_Year's_Day_gift_(royal_courts)
Hard candy
wedding feast included sugar plums, which were probably fruit preserves or suckets.[page needed] A cookbook from 1609, Delights for Ladies, describes boiling
Sugar_plum
English noblewoman
inventories, may have been used for fruit or ginger syrup desserts known as sucket. Ambrose Dudley suffered for decades from the effects of a leg injury sustained
Anne Russell, Countess of Warwick
Anne_Russell,_Countess_of_Warwick
"Edeth Brydeman" took delivery of a gift of sweetmeats, figs, sugar loaves, sucket and orange water for Mary, and she may have been in charge of such foodstuffs
Edith_Brediman
Dutch aristocrat (1547-1614)
banquet including baked rabbit, fish, and swan, a barrel of London beer, sucket, and sugar confectionaries, to the accompaniment of music by the town waits
Walraven_III_van_Brederode
Culinary history
served in banquets included fruits preserved in sugar syrup (known as "suckets"), marmalades, moulded fruit pastes, comfits, conserves, and biscuits.
Confectionery in the English Renaissance
Confectionery_in_the_English_Renaissance
Expenses made to feed the Scottish royal household
and dotterel. Spices include pepper, saffron and mace, with marmalade, sucket, and comfits. The provisions are similar to diet enjoyed in Scotland. Some
Food and the Scottish royal household
Food_and_the_Scottish_royal_household
Sweet potato preparation
putting on them Butter, Verjuice beat together, and stick it full of green Sucket or Orrengado, or some such Liquid sweet-meat; sippit it and scrape Sugar
Candied_sweet_potatoes
SUCKET
SUCKET
SUCKET
SUCKET
Girl/Female
Bengali, Indian
Beautiful Girl
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname for an incomer, a newcomer to an area, from Middle English strange ‘foreign’ (a reduced form of Old French estrange, Latin extraneus, from extra ‘outside’).
Girl/Female
British, English
Peaceful Home
Boy/Male
Indian, Marathi
Smiling Sun
Boy/Male
French, German, Italian
Peaceful Ruler
Girl/Female
Hebrew Swedish
Praised.
Biblical
memory of the Lord,remembered by Jehovah,remembered by the Lord
Boy/Male
Hindu
The Moon
Boy/Male
Tamil
Gangamaindan | காநà¯à®•மைநà¯à®¤à®¨
Lord Murugan
Boy/Male
Tamil
Subrahmanya | ஸà¯à®ªà¯à®°à®¹à®®à®¾à®¨à¯à®¯
The God of war
SUCKET
SUCKET
SUCKET
SUCKET
SUCKET
v. t.
A sweetmeat; a dainty morsel.