From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishpureepu‧ree, purée /ˈpjʊəreɪ $ pjʊˈreɪ/ verb [transitive] DFif you puree food, you crush it so that it is almost liquid Use a processor to puree the apricots. puréed potatoes —puree, purée noun [countable, uncountable] tomato purée→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
puree• The cake is made with cinnamon and pureed pears and served in a pool of butterscotch caramel fudge sauce.• Dice 1 mango; puree the other.• Be careful not to puree too smoothly; mixture should have some texture.Origin puree (1700-1800) French purée, from purer “to make pure”, from Latin purus; → PURE