Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
She opened it to him with her mouth full of Bath bun.
He wants to know if Victoria sponge with a Bath bun and Malvern water is of interest.
Robert had been waiting for that; he launched into a glowing account of his Miriam which lasted through coffee and Bath buns.
References to Bath buns date from 1763, and they are still produced in the Bath area of England.
Bath buns, Cheddar cheese, York ham, Brussels sprouts would have to be made or produced in these places.
'Perhaps a Bath bun.
It is more likely that the Bath bun is descended from the 18th century 'Bath cake'.
I would be willing to bet that Charlie puts on a full High Tea, complete with cream-cakes and Bath buns.
The faculty of divinity at that moment was dominated by a hard intelligence, Professor Bethune-Baker, known to all behind his back as the Bath Bun.
The closest similar yeast bread is probably a Bath bun or a Sally Lunn bun.
The Bath bun is a rich, round sweet roll that has a lump of sugar baked in the bottom and more crushed sugar sprinkled on top after baking.
The story is that of a lemon eclair (K.Zond) who falls in love with a Bath bun (L. Voskhod).
They are made with fruit and fruit peel and are similar to bath buns, which are sprinkled and cooked with sugar nibs.
These are sometimes confused with Bath buns which are smaller, round, very sweet, very rich buns that were associated with the city following The Great Exhibition.
Manchets are little made today with the traditional Bath bun and Sally Lunn bun amongst the best known contemporary styles still made commercially.
Sir Timothy Bun, Lady Bun, and their large family of "adopted" daughters, "the twelve Bath Buns", are part of the crowd.
Sometime later, the croissant has to go away on a business trip, while the Bath bun happens to drop in for tea, ostensibly to ask the lemon eclair's advice about some legal matter.
Hagrid poured them tea and offered them a plate of Bath buns but they knew better than to accept; they had had too much experience with Hagrid's cooking.
Its nearest still popular equivalent is the Bath bun, however the finger bun variant--often with pink icing--is a popular lunchtime staple amongst Australian school children.
The platform's motion was easily carried, as amended, though no one knew what the amendment was, and the bulk of the hall filed patiently out in search of cups of tea and a Bath bun.
It has been claimed that William Oliver, inventor of the Bath Oliver dry biscuit, also invented the Bath bun, but that it proved too fattening for his rheumatic patients.
Jacob was eating his pie by large mouthfuls, and looking round at the other good things in the shop, while he embraced his pitchfork with his left arm, and laid his left hand on some Bath buns.
It is sold only at a shop and restaurant called the Sally Lunn House; most other tearooms in the city serve the Bath Bun, basically a variation, distinguishable by the sugar topping and some currents.