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When you're looking for great Dessert Recipes
Dessert
is a course that typically comes at the end of a dinner, usually
consisting of sweet food but sometimes of a strongly-flavored
one, such as some cheeses. The word comes from the Old French desservir,
"to clear the table."
The word dessert is most
commonly used in Ireland, U.S., Canada, Australia (and in
France), while sweet, pudding or afters
would be more typical in the UK and some other Commonwealth
countries for this course. According to Debrett's, pudding
is the proper term, dessert is only to be used if the
course consists of fruit, and sweet is colloquial.
Check these great dessert
recipes...
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Dessert as a standard part of a
Western meal is a relatively recent development. Before the
19th-century rise of the middle class, and the mechanization of
the sugar industry, sweets were a privilege of the aristocracy,
or a rare holiday treat. As sugar became cheaper and more
readily available, the development and popularity of desserts
spread accordingly.
Some cultures do
not have a
separate final sweet course but mix sweet and savory dishes
throughout the meal as in Chinese cuisine, or reserve elaborate
dessert concoctions for special occasions. Often, the dessert is
seen as a separate meal or snack rather than a course, and may
be eaten some time after the meal (usually in less formal
settings). Some restaurants specialize in dessert. In colloquial
American usage "dessert" has a broader meaning and can
refer to anything sweet that follows a meal, including
milkshakes and other drinks.
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