Search for crossword answers and clues
Rabbi visiting Italy stirred oil into dish
Answer for the clue "Rabbi visiting Italy stirred oil into dish ", 7 letters:
ravioli
Alternative clues for the word ravioli
- Dumpling relative
- Trattoria dish
- Italian pasta squares filled with meat or cheese
- Pasta envelopes with savoury filling
- Dumplings often filled with ricotta or beef
- Dish whose name means "little turnips"
- Pasta dish
- Recipe with mayonnaise - very little in that Italian food
- Dish of filled pasta
- Trattoria offering
Usage examples of ravioli.
Moore, dumping his ashes on top of the ravioli, his voice rising in anger.
He would have never thought the word masturbation would have a life-altering effect on him, but here he was gasping for air because a ravioli noodle went down the wrong pipe.
No message there but a can of ravioli in a pot on the stove, with the can-opener propped up beside it.
Lambrusco, and they settled on a starter each and followed it with another, rather than a main, choosing a clear soup, followed by spinach and feta ravioli served with mushrooms.
The waiter came by and put down a steaming plate of ravioli, taking away the soup bowl.
And I was really looking forward to the butternut-squash ravioli, so you have to have it for me.
I was thinking about a can of ravioli and a twenty-minute nap, but when I walked into my room there was Jim, sitting on the bed, leaning against the wall, a half-empty bottle of vodka resting against his thigh.
She had doused the ravioli in very expensive olive oil and freshly grated Parmesan.
Leaning across the table, she speared two ravioli and simultaneously craned her head to read his notes.
Bobby brought out plates of ravioli with tomato sauce, and mixed vegetables.
I fetched something like kale ravioli or turnip jam, and some eggs and cheese when I brought them a maccherone, and even good meat when I could sneak a bit of mortadella or pork jelly.
Tupperware containers heaped with ravioli, baked ziti, eggplant parmigiana, fried zucchini, and other things with unpronounceable names.
We had frutti di mare, ravioli, lobster salad and zabaione with Lacrima Cristi.
We had narbe di San Paolo which is a kind of ravioli filled with sugar and ricotta cheese and fried and cannolo, prob-ably the most famous sweet in Sicily, consisting of a tube of flour and egg filled with cream.
Rom was so startled, he misentered the last digit of the tribble-pie code and then cringed as a hundred-count of brain-stuffed ravioli sprayed out from the mouth of the replicator.