: any of a breed of heavy-coated sturdy muscular dogs of Chinese origin having a broad head and muzzle, a distinctive blue-black tongue and black-lined mouth, and either a long dense coat with a full ruff or a short smooth coat
called alsochow
Illustration of chow chow
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Noun
On each table sat jars of homemade preserves, pickles, and jewel-toned chowchow, the sweet and tangy relish made from what some people call garden orphans, a ragtag assortment of cabbage, peppers, and unripe tomatoes gathered before the year's first hard freeze.—Sheri Castle, Travel + Leisure, 4 Sep. 2021 Hearty dishes include cabbage stuffed with beef from nearby Wolf Hills Farm and served with Milton's version of chowchow, the ubiquitous Southern relish.—Kristin Braswell, Travel + Leisure, 22 Aug. 2021 Panzer’s pickles, sauerkraut and chowchow were brined in Fells Point.—Jacques Kelly, baltimoresun.com, 3 Apr. 2021 Pinckney was at the dinner that night, trying to acknowledge and refute history over watermelon brandy, chowchow, shrimp pie, chapon chasseur, and truffled squab served with silver ewers of walnut ketchup.—Lauren Collins, The New Yorker, 14 Apr. 2017
Word History
Etymology
Noun (1)
Chinese Pidgin English chowchow food
Noun (2)
perhaps from chow-chow Chinese person, from Chinese Pidgin English chowchow food
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