Apedia

Unbolted Adjective Recipe Bread March Un Bohl Tud Flours Meals

Unbolted means not sifted, typically referring to flour or meal that has not been filtered.

Unbolted significa não peneirado, geralmente se referindo a farinha ou grãos que não foram sidos filtrados.

Word unbolted
Date March 20, 2012
Type adjective
Syllables un-BOHL-tud
Etymology Flours and meals of the unbolted variety are no longer a staple of most pantries, but the occasional recipe does call for them. The adjective "unbolted" comes from a somewhat obscure verb "bolt," meaning "to sift (as flour) usually through fine-meshed cloth." This "bolt" - which dates to the 13th century - comes from Anglo-French "buleter," itself of Germanic origin. "Unbolted" was once common enough to have been employed in figurative use as well as literal. In Shakespeare's King Lear a character is described as an "unbolted villain."
Examples The restaurant is famous for its cornbread, which is the product of a generations-old recipe that calls for unbolted cornmeal and buttermilk.

"[Sylvester] Graham advised everyone to eat bread made of coarse, stone-ground, unbolted flour, and he believed that bread should be baked at home." - From Andew F. Smith's 2009 book Eating History: Thirty Turning Points in the Making of American Cuisine
Definition : not sifted

Tags: wordoftheday::adjective

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