concassé

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See also: concasse

English[edit]

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

French concassé (diced; ground; reduced to small(er) pieces).

Noun[edit]

concassé (countable and uncountable, plural concassés)

  1. (cooking) Food (fish, fruit, vegetables, etc) that has been coarsely chopped or cut into large pieces.
    • 1999, The Gardeners' Community Cookbook, Workman Publishing, →ISBN, page 74:
      Spoon the concassé over the arugula, leaving a bit of green showing around the edge. Set aside.
    • 2006, Anne C. Chappell, The All-New Complete Cooking Light Cookboook: The Ultimate Guide from America's #1 Food Magazine, page 168:
      This is a great make - ahead dessert because both the crème caramel and the concassé (a coarsely chopped mixture) need to chill for at least four hours. Basil adds an interesting, fresh flavor to the concassé.
    • 2007, Anne Willan, The Country Cooking of France, Chronicle Books, →ISBN, page 260:
      [] Leave the oven on. Meanwhile, make the concassé. Put the tomatoes, garlic, bouquet garni, salt, and pepper in a saucepan. Cover and cook []
    • 2013, Mimi Spencer, Sarah Schenker, Michael Mosley, The FastDiet Cookbook: 150 Delicious, Calorie-Controlled Meals to Make Your Fasting Days Easy, Simon and Schuster, →ISBN, page 35:
      This is another showstopper, a real “come-over-to-my-place” breakfast or brunch, which means you can follow your fast without anyone else knowing about it. Make plenty of the concassé—you can double or even triple the recipe—and use it  []

Verb[edit]

concassé (third-person singular simple present concassés, present participle concassing, simple past and past participle concasséd)

  1. (cooking) To roughly chop or cut (a tomato) into pieces after removing its seeds/core and skin.
    • 2007, Gary Hunter, Terry Tinton, Patrick Carey, Stephen Walpole, Professional Chef - Level 2 - S/NVQ, Cengage Learning EMEA, →ISBN:
      Blanch, refresh, peel and concassé the tomatoes. Blanch the peas in boiling salted water and refresh quickly in iced water. []

Anagrams[edit]

French[edit]

Participle[edit]

concassé (feminine concassée, masculine plural concassés, feminine plural concassées)

  1. past participle of concasser