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Definition of Kedgeree
1. Noun. A dish of rice and hard-boiled eggs and cooked flaked fish.
Geographical relationships: Britain, Great Britain, U.k., Uk, United Kingdom, United Kingdom Of Great Britain And Northern Ireland
Definition of Kedgeree
1. Noun. A dish of flaked, smoked haddock, eggs and rice ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Kedgeree
1. a food in India [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Kedgeree
Literary usage of Kedgeree
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Memoir of Mrs. Henrietta Shuck: The First American Female Missionary to China by Jeremiah Bell Jeter (1850)
"'Hie Embarkation — Parting Scene described by Dr. Malcom — Extracts from Mrs-
Shuck's Journal and Letters during her Voyage— Ship touches at kedgeree — at ..."
2. Good Things to Eat, as Suggested by Rufus: A Collection of Practical Recipes by Rufus Estes (1911)
"kedgeree—For this take equal quantities of boiled fish and boiled rice. For a
cupful each use two hard boiled eggs, a teaspoonful curry powder, ..."
3. Travels in South-eastern Asia, Embracing Hindustan, Malaya, Siam, and China by Howard Malcolm (1839)
"... Thrasher — " Doubling Cape of Good Hope" — Day of Fasting — Enormous Shark —
Nicobar Islands — First Sight of Idolaters—kedgeree — Heavy Dews — Andaman ..."
4. Travels in South-eastern Asia: Embracing Hindustan, Malaya, Siam, and China by Howard Malcom (1839)
"... Cape of Good Hope " — Day of Fasting — Enormous Shark — Nicobar Islands —
First Sight of Idolaters — kedgeree — Heavy Dews — Andaman Islands — Preparis ..."
5. The Invalid's Own Book: A Collection of Recipes from Various Books and by Mary Anne Boode Cust (1853)
"... FISH AND RICE, OR kedgeree. Boil a breakfast cup of whole rice till soft; chop
a boiled haddock, or any other white fish, into pieces; take out all the ..."
6. The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany (1822)
"We regret to state that letters from kedgeree, which came up yesterday after.
... They arrived safely at kedgeree, when, from the fineness of the weather, ..."