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Definition of New England boiled dinner
1. Noun. Corned beef simmered with onions and cabbage and usually other vegetables.
Lexicographical Neighbors of New England Boiled Dinner
Literary usage of New England boiled dinner
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Things Mother Used to Make: A Collection of Old Time Recipes, Some Nearly by Lydia Maria Gurney (1913)
"New England boiled dinner This consists of corned beef, white and sweet potatoes,
cabbage, beets, turnips, squash, parsnips and carrots. ..."
2. Diet in Health and Disease by Julius Friedenwald, John Ruhräh (1919)
"Dinner: Soup, New England boiled dinner, date pudding. Supper: Cold meat, prune
sauce, tea. Breakfast: Oatmeal and milk, broiled steak, potato, rolls, ..."
3. The Chicago Herald Cooking School: A Professional Cook's Book for Household by Jessup Whitehead (1883)
"This hungry man's delight which we have before us is the New England boiled dinner.
I* U much more pleasant to treat of a thing as the very ..."
4. Recollections of a New England Educator, 1838-1908: Reminiscences by William Augustus Mowry (1908)
"The dinner on Sunday was usually the well-known New England boiled dinner, which
consisted of boiled salt beef and salt pork, potatoes, cabbage, turnips, ..."
5. Hotel Meat Cooking: Comprising Hotel and Restaurant Fish and Oyster Cooking by Jessup Whitehead (1901)
"New England boiled dinner. One of the first favorites in restaurants where ...
The New England boiled dinner ia generally disfavored by hotel keepers as a ..."
6. Folio (1882)
"It is not customary to feed babies on ¡ a New-England boiled dinner, and we might
as well expect an infant to survive a meal of | t his character as to ..."
7. The Bookman (1910)
"We found a sort of inn, where we consumed what is known as "a New England boiled
dinner," during which Brooke asked some further questions of the landlord, ..."