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Brunch is a meal eaten between 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m., sometimes accompanied by alcoholic drink, alcoholic drinks (typically champagne or a cocktail). The meal originated in the British Fox hunting, hunt breakfast. The word ''brunch'' is a portmanteau of ''breakfast'' and ''lunch''. The word originated in England in the late 19th century, and became popular in the United States in the 1930s.


Origin of the word

The 1896 supplement to the ''Oxford English Dictionary'' cites ''Punch (magazine), Punch'' magazine, which wrote that the term was coined in Britain in 1895 to describe a Sunday meal for "Saturday-night carousers" in the writer Guy Beringer's article "Brunch: A Plea" in ''Hunter's Weekly''. Despite the substantially later date, it has also been claimed that the term was possibly coined by reporter Frank Ward O'Malley, who wrote in the early 20th century for the New York City, New York newspaper ''The Sun (New York), The Sun'' from 1906 until 1919. It's thought that he may have come up with the term after observing the typical mid-day eating habits of his colleagues at the newspaper.


At colleges and hotels

Some colleges and hotels serve brunch, often serve-yourself buffets, although menu-ordered meals may be available as well. The meal usually consists of standard breakfast foods such as Egg (food), eggs, sausages, bacon, ham, fruits, pastries, pancakes, waffles, scone, and scones.


Military

The United States, Canada and United Kingdom militaries often serve weekend brunch in their messes. They offer breakfast and lunch options, and usually are open from 09:00-13:00.


Dim Sum brunch

The dim sum brunch is popular in Chinese restaurants worldwide. It consists of a variety of stuffed buns, dumplings, and other savory or sweet foods that have been steamed, deep-fried, or baked. Customers select small portions from passing carts, as the kitchen continuously produces and sends out freshly prepared dishes. Dim sum is usually eaten at a mid-morning, midday, or mid-afternoon teatime.


Special occasions

Brunch is prepared by restaurants and hotels for special occasions, such as weddings, Valentine's Day, St. Patrick's Day, Mother's Day, Father's Day, Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year's Day, New Year's and Easter.


In other languages


Chinese

The Chinese word "早午饭" ( zh, p=zǎo wǔfàn) is defined as brunch, with "早饭" ( zh, p=zǎofàn, labels=no; 早: morning, 饭: meal) meaning breakfast; and "午饭" ( zh, p=wǔfàn, labels=no; 午: noon, 饭: meal) meaning lunch. The combination of "早饭" and "午饭" is thus "早午饭", brunch.


French

The Office québécois de la langue française accepts 'brunch' as a valid word but also provides a synonym ''déjeuner-buffet''. Note that, however, in Quebec, ''déjeuner'' alone (even without the qualifying adjective ''petit'') means 'breakfast'. In Quebec, the word—when Francization, francized—is pronounced .


Italian

In Italian, the English loanword 'brunch' is generally used, though the neologism/calque is increasingly popular, being derived from (breakfast) and (lunch). Even less common but occasionally used is , derived from the same sources. Usage of these terms varies in Italy, as different regions have different cultural definitions of mealtimes and their names. Traditional usage, particularly in northern Italy, included calling the first meal of the day (first ), and the second meal either or (second ), as distinguished from , the evening meal (now generally used as the term for the midday meal). In this scheme, a separate term for 'brunch' would not be necessary, as could be used as a general term for any meal taken in the morning or early afternoon. Although Italian meal terminologies have generally shifted since widespread use of this naming scheme, the concept of a distinct mid-morning meal combining features of breakfast and lunch is largely one imported from the UK and North America in the last century, so the Anglicism 'brunch' is predominant.


Other places


Canada

The area now known as Leslieville neighbourhood is sometimes called the brunch capital of Toronto, as many renowned establishments serve brunch there. Brunch buffets also exist in other parts of Southern Ontario, including Kitchener-Waterloo, where the German-term ''Smorgasborgs'' was sometimes used, from the 1970s onward. In Canada, brunch is served in private homes and in restaurants. In both cases, brunch typically consists of the same dishes as would be standard in an American brunch, namely, coffee, tea, fruit juices, breakfast foods, including pancakes, waffles, and french toast; meats such as ham, bacon, and sausages; egg dishes such as scrambled eggs, omelette, omelettes, and Eggs Benedict; bread products, such as Toast (food), toast, bagels or croissants; pastries or cakes, such as cinnamon rolls and coffee cake; and fresh cut fruit or fruit salad. Brunches may also include foods not typically associated with breakfast, such as Roasting, roasted meats, quiche, soup, smoked salmon, sandwiches, and salads, such as Cobb salad. When served at home or in a restaurant, a brunch may be offered buffet style, in which trays of foods and beverages are available and guests may serve themselves and select the items they want, often in an "all-you-can-eat" fashion. Restaurant brunches may also be served from a menu, in which case guests select specific items that are served by waitstaff. Restaurant brunch meals range from relatively inexpensive brunches available at diners and family restaurants to expensive brunches served at high-end restaurants and bistros.


Philippines

Brunch in the Philippines is served between 9:00 am and noon. Contrary to what is observed in other countries, brunch in the afternoon, between 3:00 and 4:00 pm, is called merienda, a traditional snack carried over from Spanish colonialism.


Gallery

File:Brunch-Fahrten MS MARS.jpg, A brunch on a ship, Lake Constance, Germany File:Brunch orange juice toasts with eggs.jpg, A homemade brunch consisting of cooked eggs on toast and salad, accompanied by orange juice File:Fruits and Tarts -- Formal Brunch Aboard the Celebrity Equinox, 12-09-2011 (6857451879).jpg, A formal brunch buffet aboard the ''Celebrity Equinox'' File:Gourmet cheeseburgers for brunch.jpg, Cheeseburger as brunch File:Snack Counter at The Farm House.jpg, Coldcuts and cheeses with bread in a brunch buffet File:Monki's Huevos Rancheros with spiced rice, ground beef, spinach, mushrooms & tomatoes.jpg, ''Huevos rancheros'' as brunch


See also

* Drag brunch * Elevenses * Israeli breakfast * List of breakfast topics * List of brunch foods * Second breakfast


References


External links


"The Birth of Brunch: Where Did This Meal Come From Anyway?" Smithsonian.comWikibooks Cookbook
{{Authority control Brunch, Breakfast Meals 1890s neologisms