A cooking technique which employs moistening the meat with melted fats, pan drippings, or a sauce during cooking This method will impart flavor and prevent drying out while roasting
Moistening meat or poultry with pan juices during roasting by using a spoon or bulb baster
Temporarily securing the three layers of the quilt sandwich Traditionally done with long running stitches, currently quilters' also use safety pins, plastic quilt tacks and spray adhesive
large stitches made to hold fabric layers or seams in place temporarily, before final seams or quilting is done One may also use safety pins or straight pins to baste
Preparation method which moistens meat or poultry with pan juices or drippings during roasting by using a spoon or bulb baster as a tool The bulb on the baster is squeezed while in the liquid, then slowly released to draw the liquid into the tube
This cooking technique is used to keep meat moist, tender and flavourful The recipe for the basting sauce usually includes butter, fat, drippings, stock or oil and is applied or drizzled over the meat using a brush, spoon or bulb baster
The technique to hold your fabric temporarily in place Basting can be accomplished by using straight pins, safety pins or hand/machine sewing, using very large stiches that can be easily removed later
The sewing technique for joining by hand layers of fabric or the layers of a quilt with large stitches The stitching is temporary and is removed after permanent stitching
{s} pertaining to a type of loose stitch which holds material in place until the final sewing
Long stitches made by hand or machine used to temporarily hold fabric layers or seams together, usually removed after final sewing The three layers of a quilt are usually basted together to stabilize them for quilting Pin basting is an alternative method of basting with safety pins
A means of temporarily holding together the quilt top, batting, and quilt backing Basting can be done with safety pins, special adhesive basting sprays, plastic quilt tacks which resemble those used by stores to hold tags onto clothing, or with needle and thread using a large running stitch
If you baste meat, you pour hot fat and the juices from the meat itself over it while it is cooking. Pam was in the middle of basting the turkey Bake for 15-20 minutes, basting occasionally
Verb: To temporarily affix one piece of fabric to another, usually with long, easily removed stitches Basting is often used to make a test seam so that you may examine the appearance of the seam to ensure that it appears correct before sewing a permanent seam, or for holding the fabric in place while a seam is sewn elsewhere
To moisten (meat or other foods) while cooking to prevent drying and to add flavor The liquid may be pan drippings, melted fat, margarine, butter, fruit juice, oil, sauce, sea salt water, or Taste Maker Beer Batters (just add beer to our BBQ spices)