Gratinating vs Broiling - What's the difference?
gratinating | broiling |
An instance of something being broiled.
* {{quote-news, year=2008, date=June 1, author=Sam Sifton, title=Cooking, work=New York Times
, passage=Amid them, he offers definitive, simple and deadly effective recipes for brisket and cholent; crispy, sweet mandelbrot; Romanian broilings of various sorts; chopped liver and borscht; even fantastic if anti-kosher crossover meals like the Chinese roast pork sandwich on buttery garlic bread that came down from the Catskills in the 1950s to take up residence on the menus of family restaurants across the southern tier of this city. }}
As verbs the difference between gratinating and broiling
is that gratinating is present participle of gratinate while broiling is present participle of lang=en.As a noun broiling is
an instance of something being broiled.broiling
English
Verb
(head)Noun
(en noun)citation