dessert

dessert
/di zerrt"/, n.
1. cake, pie, fruit, pudding, ice cream, etc., served as the final course of a meal.
2. Brit. a serving of fresh fruit after the main course of a meal.
[1780-90; < F, deriv. of desservir to clear the table. See DIS-1, SERVE]

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food
      the last course of a meal. In the United States dessert is likely to consist of pastry, cake, ice cream, pudding, or fresh or cooked fruit. British meals traditionally end with nuts, fruits, and port or other dessert wine, while French practice is to end with fruit, cheese, and wine; in both cuisines, a more elaborate meal would include a sweet course preceding the dessert offerings. In Spain, Portugal, and Latin-American countries, desserts of flan (a baked caramel custard) are ubiquitous. Other rich sweets based on eggs, milk, and fruits also are preferred. The elaborate cakes and tarts of central and northern Europe make the dessert course a glory of these cuisines. Indian cuisine offers sweet puddings and dense cakes flavoured with rosewater, honey, and nuts.

      In many cuisines, however, there is no usual sweet course; rather, fresh fruit, tea, or coffee constitute the end of the meal. In Japan and China elaborate confections are usually eaten as snacks rather than as part of a meal.

      The dessert course reached its zenith in the banquets of the European courts of the 18th and 19th centuries, when the desire for ostentation and artifice coincided with the widespread availability of refined sugar and flour. On tables decorated with flowers and architectural fantasies in sugar and pastry were presented dozens of creams, tarts, fruits, cakes, pastries, puddings, jellies, and meringues.

      Sweet dessert dishes demand sweet wines. Notable among these are sweet port, sherry, and madeira; Tokaj Aszu of Hungary; sauternes; Greek mavrodaphne; and German Auslese, Beerenauslese, and Trockenbeerenauslese bottlings. Sweet or dry liqueurs and brandies also are offered at the meal's close.

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Universalium. 2010.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • dessert — [ desɛr ] n. m. • 1539 aussi « action de desservir la table »; de 2. desservir 1 ♦ Vx Dernier service d un repas, comportant fromages, pâtisserie, fruits. « Un dessert sans fromage est une belle à qui il manque un œil » (Brillat Savarin). 2 ♦ Mod …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Dessert — Des*sert , n. [F., fr. desservir to remove from table, to clear the table; pref. des (L. dis ) + servir to serve, to serve at table. See {Serve}.] A service of pastry, fruits, or sweetmeats, at the close of a feast or entertainment; pastry,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Dessert — Sn Nachtisch erw. stil. (17. Jh.) Entlehnung. Entlehnt aus frz. dessert m. (älter: desserte), zu frz. desservir abtragen , zu frz. servir aufwarten, dienen und de , dis , aus l. servīre dienen, Sklave sein , neben l. servus m. Diener, Sklave .… …   Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache

  • dessert — Dessert. s. m. Le fruit & tout ce qu on a accoustumé de servir à table avec le fruit. On avoit apporté le dessert, du dessert. un bon dessert. on estoit au dessert. nous n avons point de dessert. Il vieillit, & les gens polis disent, Le fruit …   Dictionnaire de l'Académie française

  • dessert — DESSERT. s. m. Le fruit et tout ce qu on a accoutumé de servir à table avec le fruit. On avoit apporté le dessert, du dessert, un bon dessert. On dit plus communément, Le fruit. [b]f♛/b] Un ancien proverbe dit, Entre Pâque et la Pentecoûte, le… …   Dictionnaire de l'Académie Française 1798

  • Dessert — Dessert, Nachtisch; bei großen Mahlzeiten muß dieser auf das Reichste und Geschmackvollste geordnet und zubereitet sein. Er ist der Schmuck der Tafel, und besteht meistentheils aus Confitüren, Eis. Früchten und süßem Backwerk aller Art und jeder… …   Damen Conversations Lexikon

  • dessert — DESSERT: Regretter qu on n y chante plus. Les gens vertueux le méprisent : «Non ! non ! pas de pâtisseries ! Jamais de dessert !» …   Dictionnaire des idées reçues

  • dessert — c.1600, from M.Fr. dessert (mid 16c.) last course, lit. removal of what has been served, from desservir clear the table, lit. un serve, from des remove, undo (see DIS (Cf. dis )) + O.Fr. servir to serve (see SERVE (Cf. ser …   Etymology dictionary

  • Dessert — Dessert: Die Bezeichnung für »Nachtisch« wurde Mitte des 17. Jh.s aus frz. dessert, (älter:) desserte entlehnt. Das frz. Wort gehört zu desservir »die Speisen abtragen«, einer Gegenbildung mit dé... (lat. dis; vgl. ↑ dis..., ↑ Dis...) zu frz.… …   Das Herkunftswörterbuch

  • dessert — [n] sweet treat cake, candy, confection, cookie, frozen dessert, frozen treat, fruit, ice cream, last course, pastry, pie, pudding, sweet, sweet course, tart; concept 457 …   New thesaurus

  • Dessert — (fr., spr. Deffähr), was bei Mahlzeiten zu Ende derselben, mehr um den Geschmacksinn noch zu befriedigen, als zur eigentlichen Sättigung, auf die Tafel gesetzt u. genossen wird, es besteht solches aus Früchten (bes. feineren Obstarten),… …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

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