concasse

noun

con·​cas·​se ˈkäŋ-kə-ˌsā How to pronounce concasse (audio)
variants or less commonly concassé
: food that has been roughly chopped
Dessert was warm chocolate souffle torte with strawberry-mint concasse, toasted macadamia nut dust and malted Kahlua crema.Scott A. Johnson
… Thai sweet potato boats topped with avocado and tofu concasse.Mark Taylor
especially : vegetables (such as tomatoes) that have been peeled, seeded, and diced
The chicken is tender, the tomato concasse with basil is hearty, and the rice is rich. Jennifer McLaine
This quick summer soup is as versatile as minestrone. Finely diced green peppers, minced leeks, minced green beans and a fresh tomato concasse are all delicious additions. Perla Meyers

Word History

Etymology

borrowed from French concassé, noun derivative from past participle of concasser "to crush," going back to Middle French conquasser, altered from Old French conquaisser, going back to Latin conquassāre "to shake violently, break, shatter," from con- con- + quassāre "to shake repeatedly, make tremble" — more at quash entry 1

First Known Use

1911, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of concasse was in 1911

Dictionary Entries Near concasse

Cite this Entry

“Concasse.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/concasse. Accessed 24 Apr. 2024.

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