lard with

lard (something) with (something)

1. To cover or coat (something) with something rich in or composed of fat. The key to crispy roasted potatoes is to lard them with duck fat before baking. Marinade the turkey crown for at least 12 hours, then lard it with strips of bacon.
2. To fill or inject something with a lot of things that are useless, unwanted, or undesirable. Usually used in reference to nontangible things. Often used in passive constructions. She larded her speech with malicious rhetoric and invective. My dad's stories are always larded with these pointless tangents that seem to drag on for an eternity.
See also: lard
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

lard with

v.
1. To cover or coat something with lard or a similar fatty substance: The cook larded the rice with pork fat.
2. To enrich or embellish something thoroughly with extra material: The performer larded the monologue with boring stories. The report was larded with unnecessary quotations.
See also: lard
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Phrasal Verbs.
See also:
  • lard
  • lard (something) with (something)
  • baby fat
  • puppy fat
  • fat and sassy
  • fat chance
  • a fat lot
  • fat lot
References in periodicals archive
In comparison to the composition of lard with 48% and 11% mono- and polyunsaturated fats, as reported by [5], the lard is anticipated with richer cis C=CH bonds.
Look for these three types for making lard: kidney fat, which has the cleanest flavor, but is hard to find; neutral-tasting back fat, which you can order from a butcher shop; and pork belly, which produces lard with a distinctly porky flavor.
Recently, when discussing rendering lard with a friend (one I met through COUNTRYSIDE, by the way), she suggested readers might appreciate some information on rendering their own lard.
The biggest antiwear efficiency was reached by modifying rapeseed oil and lard with monoglycerides (20%) and stearic acid (2%).
The modification of the lard with 20% monoglycerides and 2% oleic acid reduces the microhardness up to 5.76 GPa.
They demonstrate that modification of rapeseed oil and lard with monoglycerides (MG) and stearic acid (SA) considerably (1.5 times) reduces the average friction moment.
Mexican scientists determined what impact replacing pork lard with emulsified oil would have on the yield, texture, spreadability, color and oxidative rancidity of pate.
My daughter admitted that when singing the chorus of the carol "What Child is This?" she had always thought the words were, "Haste, haste to bring him lard." Of course the Holy Family, being Jewish, wouldn't touch lard with a 10-foot pole, it being a pork product and all.
Our primary objective was involved investigating the conditions for removal of cholesterol from lard with crosslinked [beta]-CD.
Yen and Tsai (1995) reported that tempeature was also important for removing cholesterol from lard with [beta]-CD.
About 90 to 95% cholesterol was removed from lard with 10% [beta]-CD after 30 min of mixing.
Warwick-based Silbury Marketing, a supplier of raw ingredients to the UK and Irish food industries, is now marketing a fully refined additive-free Italian lard with a low slip point of just 30[degrees] to 32[degrees]C.
For the sweetbreads, place the sweetbreads on a cutting board and, using a thin larding needle, lard with smoked bacon.