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Something served with espresso
Answer for the clue "Something served with espresso ", 8 letters:
tiramisu
Alternative clues for the word tiramisu
Word definitions for tiramisu in dictionaries
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. an Italian dessert consisting of layers of sponge cake soaked with coffee and brandy or liqueur layered with mascarpone cheese and topped with grated chocolate
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Tiramisu (Italian Tiramisù) is an Italian dessert Tiramisu may also refer to: Tiramisu (film) , Japanese market name of 2002 Cantonese film Tiramisu (TV series) , Malaysia TV3 series 2010-2011 Tirami Su , jazz album by Al di Meola 1987 Tirami Su, classical ...
Usage examples of tiramisu.
Paul selected the key lime pie, Boone the tiramisu, while Alisha declined.
He took a deep breath to slow his heart and filled his mouth with more tiramisu to prevent a sigh of boredom from escaping.
Boone plunged a finger into his tiramisu and scooped up a dollop of the coffee-flavored custard before kneeling before Tania.
Inside the living room, Marcella offered Rae a dainty dessert plate upon which a rectangular cut of tiramisu had been placed.
I could throw in some tiramisu, if that would make the evening more appealing.
Kit had wanted to serve them tiramisu, but the coffee and chocolate it contained would have been deadly to Kory.
Maj, a woman of many talents and with a recipe for killer tiramisu, had come by the house with it and a pair of electrical clippers the week before.
You sit there across from your date eating tiramisu, and instead of thinking what a nice guy he is, you find yourself thinking about trends in desserts and how they always seem to be gooey and calorie-laden in direct proportion to the obsession with dieting.
Rose stood up, interrupting the hilarity of watching Dwayne discover Fontaine had made his piece of tiramisu with spackling compound instead of mascarpone.
And by the time they were discussing rich chocolate mousse versus tiramisu it was too late.
It mixed Georgian and Tudor styles as if the architect hadn't been able to decide between the two, or perhaps thought he was taking the best of both, like a chef making a single dish combining his excellent steak au poivre with his stunning tiramisu.