[
US
/ˈbɔɹʃ/
]
[ UK /bˈɔːʃ/ ]
[ UK /bˈɔːʃ/ ]
NOUN
- a Russian or Polish soup usually containing beet juice as a foundation
How To Use borsch In A Sentence
- On January 15, in Trafalgar Square there will be 500 singers and dancers (all in costume naturally), ice skaters, balalaikas, hot borsch, blini, and pirozhki.
- Rainbow may smell furniture polish, baby powder, simmering borscht.
- Within these pages you'll find recipes for cold borscht, Kung Pao chicken, Maryland crab cakes, chicken and sausage gumbo, deviled eggs, and tuna-noodle casserole.
- It opens with a borsch soup, a smooth and tangy beet broth served with a side of sour cream that melts into the bowl, marbling the intense purple colour.
- Load your tray with traditional Polish foods, such as borscht or pierogis, pay the cashier and do a double-take when you realize how little you spent. CNN.com
- Beet soup with duck is a hearty take on borscht, and while a brilliantly vermilion gazpacho could have been our favorite soup, it was, uncharacteristically, too salty.
- I think that night of borscht and vodka and all sorts of other Russian traditions made us champions.
- Start with hare in its own borsch and ravioli, followed by pink roasted squab with glacé endives, then cream of goat cheese with strawberry red wine sorbet and basil. Beat this: what's new in the Balearics
- Delicious Russian borsch and plenty of alcohol kept us going through the evening. Edward Goldman: He Sold Us Sharks, Diamonds and Spots. Brooklyn Bridge Next?
- Excellent borscht is $1.50; seven oversize, overstuffed pierogi made from scratch are $3.80.