1. casserole - Noun
2. casserole - Verb
A small round dish with a handle, usually of porcelain.
A mold (in the shape of a hollow vessel or incasement) of boiled rice, mashed potato or paste, baked, and afterwards filled with vegetables or meat.
Source: Webster's dictionaryTaste my tuna casserole - tell me if I put in too much hot fudge. Woody Allen
I refuse to believe that trading recipes is silly. Tuna-fish casserole is at least as real as corporate stock. Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
I'm particularly fond of boned chicken breasts with a little garlic under the flesh and cooked in a casserole for 40 minutes with a jar of olives, some cherry tomatoes and a spoonful of olive oil. Maeve Binchy
A hunk of beef raised on Scottish moorland has a very different ecological footprint from one created in an intensive feedlot using concentrated cereal feed, and a wild venison or rabbit casserole is arguably greener than a vegetable curry. Tristram Stuart
I've always loved my red wine, and when I'm not working I can open a bottle too many. I love to cook, so it's one for me and one for the casserole. I would consume a bottle of wine on my own of an evening and then literally pass out. Amanda Donohoe
Film is like a casserole. Everybody is thrown into a pot, and we're all in it together. Jon Ronson