(transitive) To present (food or drink) to those who will consume it; to serve.
1842, Gibbons Merle & John Reitch, The Domestic Dictionary and Housekeeper's Manual, page 87:
let these remain upon a slow fire until they are well set, then break over them seven or eight eggs, as for poaching, and add salt and pepper; cook gently until the yolks are set, but not hard, brown with a salamander, and serve up.
2009, Bryan O'Sullivan, Mercurial: The Definitive Guide, →ISBN, page 85:
Run hg serve inside a repository, and in under a second it will bring up a specialized HTTP server; this will accept connections from any client, and serve up data for that repository until you terminate it.
2005, Nicole Beland, Girls Seek Bliss: Zen and the Art of Modern Life Maintenance:
It's inevitable that anything that provides us with such incredible amounts of pleasure and satisfaction is bound to serve up an equal amount of stress.
1946 September 13, Lee A Gould, “Princeton 17, Pennsylvania 14”, in Princeton Alumni Weekly, volume 47:
West served up another fungo pass which Ulrichs flagrantly stole from Minisi on the 4.
2007, Bryan Tsao, Carolina Bolado, & Joe Distelheim, The Hardball Times Baseball Annual 2008, →ISBN, page 172:
Livan Hernandez each allowed a major league-high 34 home runs; they were among the 605 different pitchers who served up long balls in 2007.
2012 April 18, Phil McNulty, “Chelsea 1-0 Barcelona”, in BBC Sport[1]:
Messi was caught in possession by Frank Lampard, who released Ramires, and the reliable Brazilian served up the perfect cross for Drogba to sweep a left-footed finish past Barcelona goalkeeper Victor Valdes.