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Dessert is a food typically served at the end of a meal. It is a "sweet finish" for after an entree or main meal. Dessert can be an elaborate dessert or something simple like a fruit.
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The afikoman is a piece of matzoh that is set aside for the end of the seder meal. In order to keep the children awake at the seder meal which is held late into the night, many have a custom of hiding the afikoman-matzoh and letting the children search for it, and giving a prize to whoever finds it. In other families, it is the children who hide the afikomen who then 'ransom' it from the head of the table. The word afikomen itself means dessert. This practice was added to the Seder in in the Middle Ages.
L'shanah haba'ah biyerushalayim - next year in Jerusalem.
Europe
Yes, they have dessert but not in a way like most other cultures do which immediately marks the end of a meal.
Yes, the noun 'dessert' is a common noun, a general word for any treat or sweet food at the end of a meal; a word for any dessert of any kind.
frosting icing baking
if i buy cooking academy dose it have a free play version or dose it just end when when you finish the dessert exam
The English word "dessert" comes from the French "dessert" as many words refering to cooking. Dessert comes from the verb "desservir" that is the action you make when you remove every dishes on the table at the end of the meal, and you bring the sweets dishes.
The homophone partner for "dessert" is "desert." "Dessert" refers to a sweet course served at the end of a meal, while "desert" refers to a dry, barren land typically with little or no vegetation.
Some of the desserts were