Old English Puddings – or Desserts
Dessert, Pudding, Sweet – whatever name we call them, they are delicious
In cultures around the world, dessert or pudding is a course that typically comes at the end of a meal, usually consisting of sweet food. The word comes from the French language as dessert and this from Old French desservir, “to clear the table” and “to serve.” The etymology is linked to the medieval practice of a two part meal. During the first, nobles (at a high) and servants (separate) would eat together in the same room. During the second – dessert, the noble family would retreat in separate private quarters for an intimate part of the meal without servants. The food consumed during dessert included but was not limited to sweets.
Common Western desserts include cakes, biscuits, gelatin dessert, pastries, ice cream, pies, pudding, and candies. Fruit may also be eaten with or as a dessert. Variations of desserts can be found all around the world, such as in Russia, where breakfast foods such as bliny, oladi, and syrniki served with honey and jam are also popular as desserts. Desserts are sometimes eaten with a dessert spoon, intermediate in size between a teaspoon and a tablespoon, or a “fruit spoon”.
The first desserts were crusty, made from raw honeycomb and dried dates. It was not until the Middle Ages, when sugar was manufactured, that people began to enjoy more sweet desserts, but even then sugar was so expensive that it was only for the wealthy on special occasions. Early origins of popular frozen desserts, such as ice cream, trace back to the Middle Ages when royalty would request fresh ice flavored with honey or a fruit syrup.
Those attempting to lose weight as part of a dieting program may choose to restrict their intake of dessert foods, as they tend to have a large amount of starch and sugar.
If you require a high quality printout of this article, just click on the printer symbol next to ’Share and enjoy’, and we will do the rest.
Get the best website builder available anywhere –SBI! Lick here for more information

Return from dessert to Home Page
If you want to increase your site popularity and gain thousands of visitors – check out these sites THEY ARE FREE. Spanishchef more than doubled its ‘New Visitors’ last month simply by signing up to these sites:





Follow spanishchef.net on TWITTER
Recommended Reading
- dessert
- Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall's summer baking recipes
- coconut mascarpone cake with mascarpone
- Seville orange meringue pie
- On the search for the best key lime pie
- Couple Saves Big Bucks With Wedding Cake From Local Supermarket
- Cupcakes and cake pops success
- Try a healthier twist on apple pie
- Crust anxiety makes rhubarb pie all the more special
- Strawberry Lemon Icebox (But You Still Have To Bake It) Pie
- Early strawberry season means it's time for cake
- Google+1
“Hey, thanks for the post.Thanks Again. Want more.”
Thanks for the article post.Thanks Again. Cool.