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Crossword clues for potpie

The Collaborative International Dictionary
Potpie

Potpie \Pot"pie`\, n. A meat pie which is boiled instead of being baked.

Wiktionary
potpie

n. 1 (context US English) A pie, having pastry sides and bottom, and filled with meat etc 2 (context US English) A dish of meat and vegetable stew with dumplings

WordNet
potpie

n. deep-dish meat and vegetable pie or a meat stew with dumplings

Wikipedia
Potpie (musician)

Occasionally known as DJ Potpie, the sound artist potpie from New Orleans is a prolific solo musician who records and produces his own material, and releases it on the Backporch Revolution label. Often performing with a sine wave generator, he has also used turntables, low-fi samplers, guitars, theremin, toy organs and other noisemakers running through three or more delay pedals to create his signature sound.

He performs regularly in the New Orleans area, and also with many side projects, including Murmur, Archipelago, King Ghidorah, and numerous others.

His last full release, "Waterline", was released after he returned to New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina, and was critically well received.

Usage examples of "potpie".

Frightful took care of the small game supply, and now that she was an expert hunter, we had rabbit stew, pheasant potpie, and an occasional sparrow, which I generously gave to Frightful.

His brown hair was cropped to the skull and his face was a potpie that had been nibbled at the edges.

I tell him the potpie was fine but there was way too much tomatillo sauce.

Only thing I did before calling you is stick a chicken potpie in the oven.

Warming up a potpie and eating alone had all the appeal of pulling the skin off my shins.

The freezer, full of the potpies, also held vanilla-chocolate, vanilla-strawberry swirled ice cream in little plastic cups.

For the next five minutes, chicken potpies are two for a dollar in the frozen food section.

Naturalists went half-mad with stunned ecstasy on discovering that the pigeons favored by the Notch folk for stews and potpies were passenger pigeons, survivors of the birds which had once been cloud-thick in American skies.