Dessert is a course that typically comes at the end of a meal, 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." Some common desserts are cakes, cookies, fruits, and candies.
Although the custom of eating fruits and nuts after a meal may be very old, dessert as a standard part of a Western meal is a relatively recent development. Before the rise of the middle class in the 19th-century, 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 have a separate final sweet course but mix sweet and savoury 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 apart from 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 beverages.
A cake is a form of food that is usually sweet and often baked. Cakes normally combine some kind of flour, a sweetening agent (commonly sugar), a binding agent (generally egg, though gluten or starch are often used by vegetarians and vegans), fats (usually butter or margarine, although a fruit puree can be substituted to avoid using fat), a liquid (milk, water or fruit juice), flavors and some form of leavening agent (such as yeast or baking powder).
Cake is often the dessert of choice for meals at ceremonial occasions, particularly weddings, anniversaries and birthdays. There are literally thousands of cakes recipes (some are bread-like and some rich and elaborate) and many are centuries old. Cake making is no longer a complicated procedure; Baking utensils and directions have been so perfected and simplified that even the amateur cook may easily become an expert baker. There are five basic types of cake, depending on the substance used for leavening Carmel Pudding Recipe.
In the United States and Canada, a cookie is a small, flat baked pastry. In most English-speaking countries outside North America, the most common word for this is biscuit; in many regions both terms are used, while in others the two words have different meanings a cookie is a bun in Scotland, while in North America a biscuit is a kind of quick bread.
- + Strawberry Cheesecake
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- + Black Forest Chocolate Cups
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- + Banana Blueberry Cake
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- + Angel Food Cake
- + Fresh Summer Peach Cobbler
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- + Puffed Apple Pancake
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- + Wheat Blueberry Muffins
- + Belgian Waffles
- + Banana Fritters
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- + Fresh Fruit and Yogurt Pots
- + Apple Cake
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- + Almond Biscotti
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- + Raspberry Chocolate Swirl Cheesecake
- + Delicious Lemon Cupcakes
- + Almond Ice Cream
- + Vanilla Bean Pound Cake
- + Apple and Pear Pie
- + Dutch Stroopwafels
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