See also: Bavarese

English edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from Italian bavarese.

Noun edit

bavarese

  1. A bavaroise (creamy dessert).
    • 1982, Giuliano Bugialli's Classic Techniques of Italian Cooking, page 444:
      A bavarese should not be fluffy, but a tender though firm mold. Sometimes a light pastry is placed on the bottom, particularly when it is to be cut into small pieces for little coffee-time pastries. The vegetable bavarese may be used [...]
    • 1995, The Wine Spectator, volume 20, page 118:
      There's a creamy panna cotta (a cooked custard like crème brûlée); a Medici pudding of toasted bread, pignoli, raisins and Italian pastry cream, a bavarese (Italian Bavarian cream); and a thick, fudgelike chocolate tart.
    • 2008, Domenica Marchetti, Big Night In: More Than 100 Wonderful Recipes, →ISBN:
      To serve, carefully unmold the Bavarese onto a serving platter (you may need to dip the base of the mold or souffle-dish briefly in hot water to make unmolding easier).
    • 2016, The Vatican Cookbook: Presented by the Pontifical Swiss Guard, →ISBN:
      Serves 4 Just before serving, purée the strawberries, sugar and cognac, and pour over the Bavarese in the individual glasses, creating a thick surface. Serve with whole strawberries or chocolates.

Italian edit

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /ba.vaˈre.ze/, (traditional) /ba.vaˈre.se/[1]
  • Rhymes: -eze, (traditional) -ese
  • Hyphenation: ba‧va‧ré‧se

Adjective edit

bavarese (plural bavaresi)

  1. Bavarian (of, from or relating to Bavaria)

Noun edit

bavarese m or f by sense (plural bavaresi)

  1. Bavarian (native or inhabitant of Bavaria)

Noun edit

bavarese m (uncountable)

  1. Bavarian dialect of the German language

Noun edit

bavarese f (plural bavaresi)

  1. bavaroise (drink; creamy dessert)

References edit

  1. ^ bavarese in Luciano Canepari, Dizionario di Pronuncia Italiana (DiPI)