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queso

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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English

Etymology

Borrowed from Spanish queso, as found in Tex-Mex cuisine. Doublet of cheese.

Pronunciation

Noun

queso (usually uncountable, plural quesos)

  1. Ellipsis of chile con queso: melted cheese, used for instance as a dipping sauce.
    • 1998, Jane Butel, Jane Butel’s Quick and Easy Southwestern Cookbook, New York, N.Y.: Harmony Books, →ISBN, page 237:
      The day before, prepare the tortillas for the chalupitas and the quesos.
    • 2009, Pat Miller et al., editors, Gabby Gourmet 2009 Restaurant Guide: Your Guide to Dining in the Greater Denver Area by Pat Miller and Friends, Denver, Colo.: TDF Publishing Ltd., →ISBN, page 340:
      The ceviche is very good with just the right amount of spice; and quesos with chorizos and flour tortillas are a must.
    • 2012 February 5, Wanna B Gourmande, “Pancho's Villa(dos)”, in WannaBGourmande.com, archived from the original on 20 January 2021:
      It's something I call an "enchalupa." It's a flour tortilla deep-fried with the chalupa 'mold' so it forms a cruncy-fried bowl. Layer a touch of our queso dip, chicken, tomatoes, onion and enchilada sauce. Top with shredded cheese and pop it under the salamander til everything is melty and delicious. I like it with sour cream and cilantro on top. Serve this with beans and rice, and BAM! Instant lunch for the Chef.
    • 2012, Alison Cook, “Why Chile con Queso Matters”, in Brett Anderson, Sara Camp Arnold, John T. Edge, editors, Cornbread Nation 6: The Best of Southern Food Writing, Athens, Ga.: University of Georgia Press, →ISBN, page 7:
      All quesos, of course, are not created equal. You can have the high-rent, artisanal versions; I’ll take the low road. Snobbery has no place in my personal connoisseurship, since my quesos of choice are (almost) invariably made of processed cheese.
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Old Spanish

Etymology

From Latin cāseum, accusative of cāseus. Cognate with Old Leonese keso and Old Portuguese queijo.

Pronunciation

Noun

queso m (plural quesos)

  1. cheese
    • c. 1250, Alfonso X, Lapidario, f. 12v:
      Et ſi la fregan con la leche. lo q̃ ende ſale, quaia toda la leche ſobre q̃ la pongan ⁊ por ende los daq̃lla tierra uſan della en ſus q̃sos. ⁊ en toda otra coſa de leche q̃ quierẽ quaiar.
      And if they wash it with milk, what results from it curdles the milk into which it is put, and so the people of that land use it in their cheeses, or in any other dairy thing they wish to curdle.

Alternative forms

Descendants

  • Ladino: kézo
  • Spanish: queso (see there for further descendants)
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Spanish

Etymology

Inherited from Old Spanish queso, from Latin cāseus.

Pronunciation

Noun

queso m (plural quesos)

  1. cheese
    Synonym: formaje
  2. (Spain, colloquial) foot
    Synonym: pie

Derived terms

Descendants

Further reading

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