ppl. a. [f. prec. + -ED1. The earlier ppl. form was CONCOCT.] Prepared or brought to perfection by heat; digested; ripened, matured; planned, contrived; fabricated.
162262. Heylin, Cosmogr., III. (1673), 50/2. Fellows of such a perfect and concocted malice.
c. 1645. Howell, Lett. (1650), I. 364. The flesh that is daily dished upon our tables is but concocted grass.
1663. Gerbier, Counsel, B iij a. The most concocted and most pure [gold] from el Dorado.
1781. Cowper, Truth, 496. Maturer years shall happier stores produce, And meliorate the well concocted juice.
1818. Jas. Mill, Brit. India, I. II. vi. 219. An heterogeneous stream of the concocted juices of various trees and plants.
1840. G. S. Faber, Regen., 174. No concocted fable or mere ecclesiastical romance.