See also: Zephyrette

English edit

Etymology edit

zephyr +‎ -ette

Noun edit

zephyrette (plural zephyrettes)

  1. A type of light, crisp cracker, used primarily for some hors d'oeuvres.
    • 1896, Fannie Merritt Farmer, The Boston Cooking-school Cook Book, page 461:
      Spread zephyrettes with quince jelly and sprinkle with chopped English walnut meat. Place a zephyrette over each and press together.
    • 1896, Ysaguirre, La Marca, Cold Dishes for Hot Weather, page 126:
      Mix with the whites of the eggs, and spread on zephyrette biscuits or on thin slices of bread.
    • 1912, American Druggist and Pharmaceutical Record - Volume 60, page 63:
      In tin packages costing twenty-five cents each the company offers afternoon teas, butter thins, ginger wafers, graham wafers, unsweetened grahams, oatmeals, pilot wafers, square saltines and zephyrettes.
    • 2008, May E. Southworth, Midnight Feasts, →ISBN, page 83:
      As the liquor flows from the oysters, dip it out with a spoon and keep them as dry as possible, until they are plump. Sprinkle them with salt and pepper and add two tablespoonfuls of butter. Lay each one on a zephyrette and pour the liquor over.
  2. A daughter of Aeolus; a tiny female spirit of the wind.
    • 1831, Belle Assemblée:
      The storm, however, subsided ; and subsequently I discovered, upon music and the opera becoming the topics of conversation, that Mr. Nobody rivalled Paganini on the violin ; and believed that his lady danced better than the zephyrette, Taglioni; and that Herz, Hummel, Mozart, Beethoven, Rossini, and Weber, were, in comparison, beaten hollow by one of his little sisters.
    • 1863, Jean Paul Friedrich Richter, Levana ... Translated from the German, page 318:
      ... and then the battles and struggles of these animals, the injuries inflicted on them by each other, and yet their continued existence: and, finally, this mingled, fluttering, hurting, killing, caressing, reproducing life becomes an infinite breath of life, wherein the individual life flies like a tiny zephyrette .
    • 2003, David Rothenberg, Wandee J. Pryor, Writing on Air, →ISBN, page 274:
      Aeolus appeared surrounded by a crowd of his children — the zephyrs and zephyrettes.