Food Trivia Quiz
FoodReference.com
1) There are over 450 varieties of this 'nut', many of which have been
used for food. They are native to all continents except Australia. What
nut is this?

2) Cheese has been colored with various plant substances for hundreds of
years. Yellow/orange coloring may have originally been added to cheese
made with
winter milk from cows eating hay to match the orange hue (from vitamin
A) of cheeses made with milk from cows fed on green plants. Can you name
3 plant
substances which have been used to color cheese yellow/orange?

3) This blue veined cheese, was first made around 1720, and sold at the
Bell Inn in a village in Huntingdonshire. It owes its name and
reputation to the
village, but it is not actually made there. What is the name of the
village, and the cheese?

4) This traditional dish of a central European country can trace its
origins back to the ninth century Magyar shepherds. Originally it
consisted of chunks
of meat and onions, slowly cooked until all the liquid was boiled away,
and then dried in the sun. The meat could then be used to prepare a stew
by boiling
it in water. What is considered the key ingredient was added to the
recipe in the 18th-century. What is the name of this dish, the country
of origin and
the key ingredient?

5) Before setting up the a fast-food restaurant chain, this man was a
high school dropout, ambulance driver, jazz pianist, Florida real-estate
salesman,
radio station manager, and paper cup salesman. What is his name and the
name of his fast-food restaurant chain?

6) This 'fruit' will not ripen on the tree. They must be picked from the
tree to initiate ripening because the leaves supply a substance that
prevents ripening.
The best way to store them is to leave them on the tree; they will store
for 7 months or more when left on the tree. What is the name of this
'fruit'?

7) It is believed that the sheep's milk cheese that Polyphemus the
Cyclops made in his caves in Homer's 'Odyssey' was most likely an early
form of this
cheese. You are really good if you can name this cheese.

8) This sweetest of all fruits has a 55% sugar content. The tree has no
blossoms because the flower is inside the fruit. What is this physically
unusual
fruit?

9) Native to the Mediterranean areas and the Middle East, this vegetable
was used as a flavoring by the ancient Greeks and Romans and as a
medicine by the
ancient Chinese. It was first cultivated in Europe for medicinal
purposes. Cultivation of the plant for food was first recorded in France
in 1623, and
was probably developed there or in Italy. By the early part of the 18th
century, there had been improvement of the wild type previously
transported to
Italy, France, and England, and as early as 1726, the plant was being
used in England to flavor soup and stews. The modern variety we all now
know, was
first cultivated in Kalamazoo Michigan, in 1874. Name this common
vegetable.

10) First made at the beginning of the 20th century, this candy was
named after a race horse of the time. Name the candy and the racehorse.

Answers

1) Acorn.

2) Annatto seed, carrot juice and marigold petals.

3) Stilton.

4) Hungarian goulash (gulyas) is the traditional stew of Hungary and
Paprika was added in the 18th century.

5) Ray Kroc; McDonald's.

6) Avocado.

7) Feta cheese.

8) Figs are the sweetest of all fruits, with a 55% sugar content. The
flower of the fig is inside the fruit, so there are no blossoms on fig
trees. Sort
of like an inside out strawberry.

9) Celery, and the common modern variety is Pascal celery.

10) The candy is lollipop, the race horse was Lolly Pop.

Courtesy of
FoodReference.com.


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