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Answer for the clue "A sponge cake baked in a ring mold ", 7 letters:
savarin

Alternative clues for the word savarin

Word definitions for savarin in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. a sponge cake baked in a ring mold

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Savarin may refer to: Savarin cake , a kind of rum baba Charles Savarin (born 1943), a politician from Dominica Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin (1755–1826), a French lawyer, politician, epicure and gastronome Julian Jay Savarin , a British musician, songwriter, ...

Usage examples of savarin.

Risky returned with a pitcher of water, which she poured into clay mugs, setting one before Wolfer, one before Savarin, and one before Michael.

But he was curious what Savarin was up to, what the teacher had meant the last time, that there were people he wanted Michael to meet.

He wanted to get into Euterpe and talk with Savarin, find out what happened to the humans.

She smiled nervously and glanced at Savarin, smoothed the lower half of her blouse with her hands, and glanced at Michael.

Brecker greeted him civilly while sweeping out the small lobby and told him Savarin was indeed back in his room.

He believed it had arisen after the Sidhe returned to Earth, and that it was the proto-language out of which had arisen several of the major human language groups, the most familiar of them, for Savarin, belonging to the Indo-European branch.

Comte de la Roche had just finished dejeuner, consisting of an omelette fines herbes, an entrecote Bearnaise, and a Savarin au Rhum.

A jagged palisade of pencils bristled from an empty Savarin coffee can.

Every other day Moritz picks up Benja after her afternoon rehearsals and they eat together at Savarin in Nyhavn.

Spotting the roof of an isolated farmhouse, Paige wondered if Laurel Savarin was the next target.

A brass plate on the wooden frame identified Laurel Savarin as the 1981 Junior Jumper Champion.

Whatever Soyer or Brillat Savarin might say, it is a pleasant dish, though too rich to be partaken of copiously, and according to every hygienic principle, very apt to be difficult of digestion.

Comte de la Roche had just finished dejeuner, consisting of an omelette fines herbes, an entrecote Bearnaise, and a Savarin au Rhum.

In the enormous marble-floored, chandeliered dining room, her Savarin was even now being served and admired.

He believed it had arisen after the Sidhe returned to Earth, and that it was the proto-language out of which had arisen several of the major human language groups, the most familiar of them, for Savarin, belonging to the Indo-European branch.