Dough is a slang term for money. Someone who is rolling in dough has a lot of money.
The idiom rolling in dough, refers to having a very large amount of money. It basically means that if you had enough dough that you would very likely roll around in it just for fun.
"Dough" is slang for money, so you are making money as though you were raking it in from a large pile.
Dough is slang for money. If you "fork out enough dough," you pull money out of your pocket until you have enough and then hand it over to whoever you are buying something from - "fork out" refers to using a manure fork to clear out used straw in a horse or cow stall.
It is not an idiom, it means your nose is itching.
idiom means expression like a page in a book
Simply its mean a bully.
I think it means that that person agrees with that others persons idiom and that it fit that question that the teacher or whoever asked that question.
For rolling dough and pastry
rich affluent well-off well-to-do rolling-in-dough
Your rolling pin is a vital tool and should not be used for any other purpose than rolling dough
no
A rolling pin is a simple kitchen tool used for ages to flatten dough for biscuits, rolling out cookie dough so it can be cut with cookie cutters, and to mash nuts and other cooking products into pieces.
A floured rolling pin.
A pastry cloth is just a piece of heavy weight cotton for rolling dough on and a rolling pin cover is a sock tube that goes over the rolling pin.
The idiom "happy as a pig in a wallow" means being extremely content and comfortable, like a pig rolling around in mud or water. It suggests a sense of total bliss or satisfaction in one's current situation.
to flatten the dough so u can make cookie shapes. But you can use a rolling pin to knead the dough but I do it by hand.
For flattening and spreading dough.
Rolling pin
If your pie dough splits and is not cohesive more shortening or water will bind it for rolling pie dough.