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<oembed><version>1.0</version><provider_name>Glossary</provider_name><provider_url>https://www.healthbenefitstimes.com/glossary</provider_url><author_name>Glossary</author_name><author_url>https://www.healthbenefitstimes.com/glossary/author/adminglossary/</author_url><title>Crust - Definition of Crust</title><type>rich</type><width>600</width><height>338</height><html>&lt;blockquote class="wp-embedded-content" data-secret="E5kVZMwGkE"&gt;&lt;a href="https://www.healthbenefitstimes.com/glossary/crust/"&gt;Crust&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;&lt;iframe sandbox="allow-scripts" security="restricted" src="https://www.healthbenefitstimes.com/glossary/crust/embed/#?secret=E5kVZMwGkE" width="600" height="338" title="&#x201C;Crust&#x201D; &#x2014; Glossary" data-secret="E5kVZMwGkE" frameborder="0" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" scrolling="no" class="wp-embedded-content"&gt;&lt;/iframe&gt;&lt;script&gt;
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</html><thumbnail_url>https://www.healthbenefitstimes.com/glossary/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Crust.jpg</thumbnail_url><thumbnail_width>800</thumbnail_width><thumbnail_height>527</thumbnail_height><description>Five hundred years ago, the mark of a skilful baker was the ability to make a pie or loaf of bread with a hard, shell-like crust; refrigeration and plastic bags had not been invented yet, so a thick, tough crust prevented bugs from burrowing in, and kept the inside from drying out. It is not surprising, therefore, that English derived the word crust&#x2014;perhaps via French&#x2014;from the Latin word crusta, meaning shell, a sense that still exists in the name of the marine creatures known as crustaceans. The source of the Latin crusta, incidentally, was an Indo-European word meaning hard that also gave rise, through Greek, to the word crystal. The word crust appeared in English in the early fourteenth century and was followed a few decades later by crustade, the name of a pie made of meat, eggs, and milk, all enclosed with a crust. By the middle of the fifteenth century this new word, crustade, underwent a peculiar change in pronunciation, the result being that the word custard was formed. For the next 150 years a custard continued to be a meat-pie; it was not until the beginning of the seventeenth century that its recipe changed and custard came to mean a dessert made by baking a mixture of eggs, milk, and sugar, often served in a pastry shell. In the Middle Ages the French also had a dish similar to the original meat-filled crustade; they called it a croustade, deriving the name from their word for crust, crouste. English borrowed this French croustade in the mid nineteenth century as the name for a dish made by scooping out the middle of a loaf of bread and then filling it with a ragout. Earlier in the nineteenth century, another French word that derived from the original Latin crusta was borrowed by English: crouton, a crust of bread used to garnish soups or salads.A dry layer of blood, pus or other secretion that forms over a cut or sore.Hard coverings that result when exudate on the skin dries.Dead cells that form over a wound or blemish while it is healing; an accumulation of sebum and pus, sometimes mixed with epidermal material.The most prevalent definition of this term is the crispy or outer layer of a loaf, pie, or any other baked fare. However, when referring to wine, "crust" denotes the buildup of organic salts that wines discharge as they mature.</description></oembed>
