doorstep vs rasher

doorstep

noun
  • A thick slice, especially of bread. 

  • An outside step leading up to the door of a building, usually a home. 

  • One's immediate neighbourhood or locality. 

verb
  • To visit one household after another to solicit sales, charitable donations, political support, etc. 

  • To corner somebody for an unexpected interview. 

rasher

noun
  • A strip, a piece (of something, such as ham, bacon, etc). 

  • A strip of bacon; a piece of bacon. 

verb
  • To cut into rashers. 

How often have the words doorstep and rasher occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )