Citations:unconcocted

Adjective: "(archaic) undigested"

 * 1804 — Thomas Garnett, Popular Lectures on Zoonomia, or the Laws of Animal Life, in Health and Disease:
 * It may arise also from the stomach being overloaded with unconcocted aliment, or from a suppressed or diminished secretion of the salivary liquors in the mouth, which may arise from fever, spasm, or affections of the mind;

Adjective: "(archaic) crude"

 * 1802 — Charles Lamb, John Woodvil, Act IV:
 * A weight of wine lies heavy on my head,
 * The unconcocted follies of last night.
 * 1846 — William Hazlitt, The Spirit of the Age: Or Contemporary Portraits, Wiley and Putnam (1846), page 112:
 * His inquiries are partial and hasty: his conclusions raw and unconcocted, and with considerable infusion of whim and humour and a monkish spleen.