Pavê


Pavê is a traditional Brazilian dessert mainly from south and southeast regions that consists of alternating layers of biscuits and a cream made using condensed milk. It is similar in structure to the tiramisu.
Generally, recipes involve heating condensed milk and milk, and stirring the mixture until it thickens. Then, layers of milk-soaked biscuits are placed into a container alternating with layers of the creamy mixture. Additionally, pavês can be made of many different flavors, such as chocolate, dulce [de leche], peanut, or fruits such as strawberries, pineapples, lemons and peaches.

Etymology

The word pavê is said to have come from the French word pavé, meaning cobblestone pavement. This likely refers to the layout of each of the biscuit layers in the pavê.

History

The origins of pavê are uncertain. However, it was created prior to the tiramisu, as the latter was invented in the late 1960s, and recipes of pavê can be found as early as 1937. Brazilian recipes of refrigerated dairy desserts consisting of alternating layers of soaked ladyfingers and creamy mixtures can be found as early as 1917, although not called "pavê" at the time, but instead "pudding" or simply "cream".
In the 1970s, a peanut variant of pavê was reportedly popular.
A common pun relating to the dessert is "é pavê ou pacomê?". It is a play on words on the colloquial reduction of "para ver" to "pa ve", similar in sound to pavê. The joke means, simultaneously, "is to look at, or to eat?" and "is pavê, or to eat?".