This question was closed without grading. Reason: Otra razón
Nov 23, 2009 12:51
15 yrs ago
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español term

germinados

español al inglés Otros Cocina / Gastronomía
Es correcto el término "germinates" como alternativa a "sprouts" para una revista gastronómica? Habla sobre germinados de soja y otros vegetales y su uso para adornar algunos postres de alta pastelería.

Discussion

Cecilia Gowar Nov 23, 2009:
I endorse that... or "sprouted seeds and pulses"
http://www.aconbury.co.uk/
Evans (X) Nov 23, 2009:
agree with Carol yes I think "sprouted seeds" covers beans, grains and pretty much anything you can sprout. I think you'd be safe with that.
Carol Gullidge Nov 23, 2009:
if you need a catch-all expression, then "sprouted seeds" works, as in
Sprouting - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
... 1999,Federal Register Notice of Availability, 64 FR 57893, Guidance for Industry: Reducing Microbial Food Safety Hazards for Sprouted Seeds and Guidance ...
Seeds that can be sprouted - Sprouting - Nutritional information
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sprouting - Cached - Similar
Sprouting
Nutritious - seeds are packed with nutrients, sprouted seeds are even better. As each grows, proteins, enzymes, vitamins and other nutrients increase whilst ...
conditions - containers - what to do - what to sprout
www.primalseeds.org/sprouting.htm - Cached - Similar
Living and Raw Foods: Sprouted Seeds: "Forgotten Food," enhances ...
Article: Sprouted Seeds: Forgotten Food, enhances immune system and rejuvenation. This is just one of the many articles available at the living and raw ...
www.living-foods.com/articles/sproutedseeds.html
Hack (asker) Nov 23, 2009:
In conclusion... if I have to use the word "germinados" without really specifying what kind of sprouts/shoots they are (soy, alfalfa, etc), which word do you suggest? I'm not sure now... :(
David Ronder Nov 23, 2009:
But not 'germinates'... ...which was the original question, and I think we all agree on that.
David Ronder Nov 23, 2009:
It's probably wisest to specify what kind of shoots or sprouts you're talking about, in which case you can use either word.
Carol Gullidge Nov 23, 2009:
shoots yes, cgowar, I think you're right about shoots being bamboo shoots, as in Chinese cuisine. Quite a different kettle of fish from bean sprouts
Cecilia Gowar Nov 23, 2009:
I don't think so. You would not use "sprouts" alone and as for "shoots" it's mostly used to refer to bamboo shoots.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bamboo_shoot
Carol Gullidge Nov 23, 2009:
sprouts there's no problem with "bean sprouts" for the GB audience, although "sprouts" on its own is usually assumed to be Brussels sprouts. But I'm sure Hack was already well aware of this. As far as I can tell, he was merely asking whether "germinates" can be used as a suitable alternative to the word "sprouts"
David Ronder Nov 23, 2009:
Sure, I'm just saying that what the word 'sprouts' conjures up for most British English speakers is Brussels sprouts.
Cecilia Gowar Nov 23, 2009:
Well "Brussels sprouts" son coles o repollitos de Bruselas, pero "soy/alfalfa/bean (etc) sprouts" son brotes de
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfalfa
David Ronder Nov 23, 2009:
Sprouts I think you should really be wary of using 'sprouts' here because for British English at least that usually means Brussels sprouts, or 'cols de Bruselas'. 'Shoots' is much less ambiguous.
Hack (asker) Nov 23, 2009:
I know it all sounds quire odd, but I can tell you that prestigious pastry chefs do use these sprouts in Haute Pâtisserie (and the results are amazing). The thing is, I was just about to use the word 'sprout' when I came across a text written by an American girl -who works as a translator- who used the word "germinates" for "sprouts" and it just didn't sound ok to me. Thanks for your answers, I'll stick to 'sprouts' then. :)
En castellano la palabra "germinados" es muy común en pastelería. Creo que los pasteleros pasan de la RAE :)
Evans (X) Nov 23, 2009:
recipe This is still a savoury recipe, not a dessert. I'd be very surprised to see sprouted beans or grains in a dessert recipe. I hope the asker can tell us more!
Carol Gullidge Nov 23, 2009:
Hack were you looking for the answer to your question, or a translation of germinados? It wasn't very clear
neilmac Nov 23, 2009:
Nice recipe here http://www.biomanantial.com/recetas-con-germinado-de-soja-a-...
You can expect to find anything on your plate nowadays, especially if it's described as "Alta" cocina/reposteria, etc
Cecilia Gowar Nov 23, 2009:
No será "germen de soja"?? A veces se usa para designar la salsa de soja.... por otro lado, "sprouts" se dice "brotes" en español.... la palabra "germinado" no está aceptada por la RAE ni me parece que sea un sustantivo tampoco...
Carol Gullidge Nov 23, 2009:
Gilla yes, it does sound very odd as a decoration for desserts!
Carol Gullidge Nov 23, 2009:
I presume this was meant to be directed to native English speakers?
Evans (X) Nov 23, 2009:
sprouts on pastries? I've never come across the use of sprouts (soy bean or otherwise) on puddings or pastries (with the possible exception of Chinese food). I doubt the word germinates is used however. Could you give us the sentence in which this is used?

Proposed translations

+6
14 minutos

beanshoots / beansprouts

That's what 'germinados' (noun) are (Oxford). 'Germinates' in English is not a noun but the 3rd person form of a verb: the Spanish equivalent would be 'germina'.

If you use 'sprouts' on its own, English-speakers will think you mean Brussels sprouts. 'Shoots' would be the generic term, 'beanshoots' if specifically soya.

Hope that helps.
Peer comment(s):

agree neilmac : Yes, they are recently sprouted soybeans :) "Germinates" is the verb (also possibly a highly technical term in noun form) not suitable for a cookery book.
2 minutos
Thanks, neilmac
agree Lisa McCarthy : This gets my vote (soya bean sprouts) - and nothing from the culinary world surprises me any more :-)
38 minutos
Thanks, LisaMac
agree Eileen Banks : :)
1 hora
Thanks, Eileen
agree Jenny Westwell
1 hora
Thanks, la acequiera
agree Emma Ratcliffe
2 horas
Thanks, Emma
agree eski : Covered the bases: Saludos! :)) eski
3 días 7 horas
Gracias y saludos, eski!
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+1
14 minutos

sprouts

That is the word. I never saw "germinates" used in cookery and I'm not even sure it is a noun.
Peer comment(s):

agree elainelarson : "whatever" sprouts. Bean sprouts, alfalfa sprouts, radish sprouts.....
3 horas
Thanks Elaine!
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14 minutos

germinated

Like you pointed out, germinar means to germinate. And this term is used for soy and other vegetables, since they germinate and grow.
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19 minutos

shoots

It seems odd to be using beansprouts and the likes for puddings! But this might work.

Search for 'soya shoots', 'cress shoots', 'mustard shoots'...
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1 hora

sprouted beans or grains

As I suggested in my discussion entry.
I would go for beansprouts but that precludes alfalfa, wheat and other such grains that are sprouted too, and the question suggests other plants are included.
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13 minutos

I don't think so

at least I've never heard of the verb germinate being used as a noun in this way in English, nor can I find any refs to it...

But perhaps, in the very upper echelons... who knows?

Anyway, to me, it doesn't sound at all natural - if that's any help!

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Note added at 2 hrs (2009-11-23 15:31:57 GMT)
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"Sprouted seeds" now seems to be what you're looking for - if indeed you don't wish to be too specific
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