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Definition of Chicken and rice
1. Noun. Rice and chicken cooked together with or without other ingredients and variously seasoned.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Chicken And Rice
Literary usage of Chicken and rice
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. School and Home Cooking by Carlotta Cherryholmes Greer (1920)
"LESSON C chicken and rice Poultry. — Poultry includes chicken (or common fowl),
turkey, duck, and goose — domestic birds suitable for food. ..."
2. The Mendelssohn Club Cook Book by Mendelssohn Club (Rockford, Ill.) (1909)
"Cover with a cream sauce and bake 20 minutes. Use chicken gravy, if possible,
instead of cream sauce. Chicken and Rice Loaf. ..."
3. A Trip Up the Volga to the Fair of Nijni-Novgorod by Henry Alexander Munro-Butler-Johnstone (1876)
"I don't know whether the Persians ever eat anything besides chicken and rice:
but at any rate, there were there being prepared for them dish after dish of ..."
4. The Picayune Creole Cook Book (1922)
"... exactly the same manner as in the above recipe, only add a half can of truffles
instead of the mushrooms. This is an expensive dish. Chicken and Rice. ..."
5. Foods of the Foreign-born in Relation to Health by Bertha M. Wood (1922)
"Baked Chicken and Rice Make as Chicken Soup, adding chicken, cut in dice, to rice
drained from soup. Brown in oven. ..."