- A drink consisting of several liqueurs of different densities, poured to form differently colored layers.
- A brandy or liqueur served after dinner with coffee.
[French : pousser, to push (from Old French; see poussette) + café, coffee; see café.]
Dictionary:
pousse-ca·fé (pūs'kă-fā') ![]() |
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| Food Lover's Companion: pousse-café; Pousse-Café |
[poos ka-FAY] 1. This French term literally means "push the coffee," and in France refers in general to cordials, brandies, etc. That might be served after dinner with coffee. 2. In the United States, it refers to a very elaborate, multicolored after-dinner drink made by layering 2 to 7 or more various liqueurs on top of one another without disturbing the layer below. A slender, straight-sided liqueur glass is used and the heaviest (usually the sweetest) liqueurs are poured in first. The pousse-Café debuted in New Orleans in the mid-19th century and was all the rage by the early 1900s.
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| WordNet: pousse-cafe |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
small drink served after dinner (especially several liqueurs poured carefully so as to remain in separate layers)
| Wikipedia: Pousse-café |
A pousse-café is a term for a layered drink prepared by gently adding each ingredient from densest to least dense in order to create colored stripes when the drink is viewed from the side. Some bartender guides list a drink containing, from bottom to top, grenadine, yellow chartreuse, and green chartreuse as the original pousse-café. The drink is made primarily as a delight for the eye rather than for its taste. It is sipped, sometimes through a silver straw, one liqueur at a time. The drink must be created and handled carefully, as the layers created will mix together into a brown sludge if handled roughly.
The name literally means "it pushes the coffee" in French. Colloquially, the term is equivalent to a "chaser" for coffee. A digestif, an alcoholic cordial sometimes consumed after a meal to aid digestion, is called a "pousse-café" or coffee-chaser. In France there is no tradition for the type of elaborate recipe that follows.
A more elaborate recipe is:
Eric Felten (September 16, 2006). "Neither Shaken Nor Stirred". Wall Street Journal. p. 9.
Tyler, S. and Herbst, R. The Ultimate A-to-Z Bar Guide. New York: Broadway Books, 1998. Pousses attack
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