See also: concassé

English edit

Noun edit

concasse (countable and uncountable, plural concasses)

  1. Alternative form of concassé
    • 1994, Christina Tree, Best Places to Stay in New England, page 299:
      [] with truffled Madeira sauce, haricots verts and fresh tomato concasses, and chocolate raspberry shortcake. The a la carte menu offered the rest of the week features light and informal foods. Guests eat on the garden terrace []
    • 2001 February, Cincinnati Magazine, page 132:
      Now the new executive chef, Tsvika (Vik) Silberberg, has swung far the other way with a menu full of trendy ingredients: fingerling potatoes, day-boat scallops, root vegetables, jasmine rice. There are reductions and concasses and infused oils.

Verb edit

concasse (third-person singular simple present concasses, present participle concassing, simple past and past participle concassed)

  1. Alternative form of concassé
    • 2016, Dun Jipping, Army Chef's Handbook of Cookery, →ISBN, page 14:
      Concasse the tomatoes, roughly chop the tarragon then remove the dish from the heat. Add the concasse and tarragon, adjust the seasoning and serve, garnished with chopped parsley in a warm entree dish.

Anagrams edit

French edit

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

concasse

  1. inflection of concasser:
    1. first/third-person singular present indicative/subjunctive
    2. second-person singular imperative