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tomato aspic

American  

noun

  1. aspic.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Two words still strike fear into the heart of Lisa Roeper of Capon Bridge, W.Va.: tomato aspic.

From Washington Post

Since then I’ve learned from friends and cooking shows that potato soup is awesome, yellow squash is wonderful, but I will never eat tomato aspic again.”

From Washington Post

She gives the example of “Mission in the Kitchen,” from the Air Force Officers Wives Club, published in 1963, which features such recipes as tomato aspic with marinated vegetables — a bright red jiggly bundt-shaped gelatin surrounded by cold pickled vegetables.

From Los Angeles Times

Proliferating food corporations sought to woo customers by publishing cunning pamphlets in which snippets of poems and quotes from 19th-century luminaries such as Brillat-Savarin and the British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli — “The most delicious thing in the world is a banana,” he wrote to his sister in 1831 while sojourning in Cairo — appeared embedded alongside recipes for the likes of heart-shaped Wonder Bread “honeymoon” sandwiches and cocktail glasses filled with California canned asparagus tips and tomato aspic, served “very cold.”

From New York Times

A tomato aspic — one of the first recipes in the alphabetically organized box — is a throwback.

From New York Times