释义 |
Definition of sorbet in English: sorbetnoun ˈsɔːbeɪˈsɔːbɪt 1A water ice. 冰糕 mass noun they ate orange sorbet Example sentencesExamples - You could, of course, use a home-made sorbet, but I find making one ice at a time is enough.
- At my outdoor market, I've been buying colorful blood oranges from Tunisia and Spain and making refreshing sorbets, then candying the peel to serve alongside.
- A six-shooter of ice creams and sorbets in tall glass cylinders is wonderfully pretty, though a more adventurous mix of flavors would be welcome.
- She insists I try the sorbet made from her favourite Meyer lemons and then the vanilla panna cotta with slices of kumquat in a slick of sweet local honey.
- Long before the modern refrigerator was invented, adventurous cooks were using mixtures of crushed ice and salt to chill syrups into sorbets, and custards into ice creams.
- Fruit-flavored ice creams, sorbets and sherbets benefit from the use of vanilla because the ingredient can balance out acidic notes of the citrus or fruit product.
- When I asked tremulously for an ice cream at Le Caprice and was presented instead with a sorbet, I perceived deliberate deceit and collapsed into hysterical sobs.
- Fill each cone with Champagne sorbet, Pinot Noir sorbet, and port sorbet and drizzle some caramel sauce and port sauce around the dish.
- While I can refuse the warm dark chocolate torte with white chocolate sorbet and the pink grapefruit, orange and mango terrine I am powerless to resist the home-made cookies and ice-cream.
- Other desserts include bananas or papaya in caramel and cream sauce, bread pudding with custard, coconut or banana tarts, delicious coconut sorbet, and a mean coconut nougat.
- For dessert we finished with either the assorted flavoured sorbets or rum brownies with ice-cream which was absolutely fantastic and I can't fault them on their food.
- I also need filet mignon, cheeseburgers, every type of ice cream and sorbet, plus fresh fruit and snacks.
- Pudding was a passion fruit sorbet which Ronay pronounced the best sorbet he had ever eaten, and we finished the meal with coffee and Armagnac.
- The latest celebrity accessory is a personal kitchen devil capable of rustling up anything from a pomegranate sorbet to a finger-food feast for 500.
- Secure the saffron crisps into the lime sorbet and sprinkle the top of the sorbet with saffron threads.
- These are topped off by a variety of puddings ranging from light sorbets to incredibly rich chocolate mousses.
- Any dessert with a sorbet or ice cream will give pleasure here.
- We headed straight to Ciao Bella, famous for its sorbets and gelati.
- Finally, shortly before serving, the chefs add a blood-orange sorbet and a drizzle of blueberry compôte.
- Raspberry souffle with a raspberry sorbet was of a far higher order.
2archaic An Arabian sherbet. 〈古〉阿拉伯的一种冰冻果子露 Example sentencesExamples - That's right, sherbets and sorbets originally were drinks made from sweetened fruit juice.
OriginLate 16th century: from French, from Italian sorbetto, from Turkish şerbet, based on Arabic šariba 'to drink'; compare with sherbet. sherbet from early 17th century: The words sherbet and sorbet (late 16th century) are essentially the same, and are closely related to syrup (Late Middle English) and shrub (mid 18th century), a drink made with sweetened fruit juice and rum or brandy. All go back to a group of words centring on Arabic sariba ‘to drink’. The sharp-tasting powdered sweet sherbet was originally used to make a fizzy drink, from the 1850s.
Definition of sorbet in US English: sorbetnoun 1A dessert consisting of frozen fruit juice or flavored water and sugar. Example sentencesExamples - It's composed on the spot, and consisted of a glass of fruit sorbet, bubbles, and bland creamy foam on the two occasions I ordered it.
- If you tried the slab-and-paddle maneuver using fat-free sorbet, the sad truth is that you would wind up with wet cookie crumbs swimming in a puddle of flavored sugar water.
- Everything at Ortanique, from chicken skewers off the bar menu to sides of avocado salsa to sorbet desserts, is plated intelligently and artfully.
- Dessert lovers haven't been left out in the cold, either - there's premium ice cream, sorbet and frozen yogurt.
- The sweet and tangy fruit sorbet cleanses the palate so your taste buds are ready to appreciate the next dish.
- Dessert was prickly pear sorbet with raspberry sauce and mint leaves.
- Top with a scoop of blackberry tea sorbet and butternut squash drips.
- Silky mango sorbet can ease the passage, or a crackle-crusted fried-pudding dessert that comes on like some splendid, eccentric moon cake.
- For dessert you can make a fabulous tangerine sorbet using the juice and peel.
- It was followed, oddly, by a very average passion fruit sorbet.
- It was only a small cup- less than the amount of a shot glass- and some of it was sorbet, but it was kind of exciting for them.
- The study's results show flavor diversity among product categories including milk, yogurt, cheese, ice cream, sorbet and frozen novelties.
- For the mango sorbet: In a saucepan, bring the sugar and water to a boil.
- I just about had room for a very tasty lemon sorbet for dessert, but Karin had to face the disappointment of ordering tiramisu just seconds after the last piece had been sold to a diner at another table.
- If you can't resist dessert, though, choose fresh fruit, gelatin, sorbet, sherbet, fruit ice, meringues or plain cake with fruit purée.
- I settled on the pear and the waiter suggested he bring a little elderflower sorbet on the side.
- There's must-have chocolate, sugared cookies, even splashy sips of champagne or sparkling fruit juice over teensy scoops of sorbet.
- Remove the yogurt sandwiches and mint sorbet from freezer and stand at room temperature for two minutes.
- A big wedge is served with lemon sauce and passion fruit sorbet.
- Low-fat means sorbet, ices, frozen yogurt, sherbet, or low-fat ice cream.
- 1.1archaic An Arabian sherbet.
〈古〉阿拉伯的一种冰冻果子露 Example sentencesExamples - That's right, sherbets and sorbets originally were drinks made from sweetened fruit juice.
OriginLate 16th century: from French, from Italian sorbetto, from Turkish şerbet, based on Arabic šariba ‘to drink’; compare with sherbet. |