I didn't get any of these so don't feel bad if you don't either.
Food Trivia Quiz
FoodReference.com 
1) Originating in Southeast Asia and India, cultivated for 5000 years,
this member of the cashew family can range in size from a plum to 5
pounds. It is one of the most popular fruits in the world, but was
originally a small, fibrous, acrid, sometimes toxic fruit that tasted of
turpentine. Can you name this fruit? 

2) I am native to all continents except Australia. Of my 450 varieties,
many are used for food. According to Greek legend, I was the staple food
of the Golden Age, although now I am mostly fed to animals. I was used
as a rather inferior coffee substitute during the American Civil War,
and I can be used to make a good flour. What am I? 

3) The following paragraphs are all about one plant, can you guess what
it is?
This plant is an herb that most likely originated in and around Malaysia
some 4,000 years ago. It spread and developed many varieties over a wide
area from India to the Philippines and New Guinea. About 2000 years ago
travelers carried it eastward through the Pacific and westward across
the Indian Ocean to tropical Africa. 

Various sacred texts of Oriental cultures mention it. There are
references to it in the Hindu Mahabharata and the Ramayana of the poet
Valmiki. Buddhist writings mention a beverage made from it that Buddhist
monks were allowed to drink, and Yang Fu, a Chinese official of the 2nd
century A.D., describes it in his 'Encyclopedia of Rare Things'. 

Theophrastus, who wrote one of the first scientific botanical works
describes this plant in the 4th century B.C. Alexander the Great saw it
growing in the Indus Valley in 327 B.C. and Pliny the Elder describes it
in 77 A.D. The Arabs introduced it to Egypt, and it made its way
westward across the African continent. 

The Portuguese found it on Africa's Atlantic coast in the 15th century,
and Prince Henry the Navigator had some transplanted to the Portuguese
island of Madeira, where they still flourish. 

In 1516 Friar Tomas de Berlanga planted it in the islands of the
Caribbean. It made the trip to Britain from Bermuda in 1633, and the
Portuguese also introduced it to France, and it became common in the
18th century. 

Its present name probably comes from one of the languages of the Congo
area. Today it is even grown in Iceland as a commercial crop, and world
production is spread out in both the Eastern and Western hemispheres.
There seems to be some disagreement as to which is the world's largest
producer, either Brazil or Uganda. India follows, growing somewhat less
than half of Brazil's crop. The Philippines, Ecuador, Colombia,
Honduras, Tanzania, Rwanda, Indonesia, Thailand, Cote d'voire and
Vietnam are also important producers. 

It grows best in temperatures from 50 degrees F to 105 degrees F, and
requires 100-200 inches of annual rainfall. In some areas its sprouts
are covered and allowed to grow without sunlight so they mature into
thick, long spikes that resemble large white asparagus. Itss sap causes
extremely serious stains that are very hard to remove from both hands
and clothes!
---Can you name the herbaceous plant described above? 

Answers 

1) Mango. 

2) Acorn. 

3) Banana. In Iceland, bananas are grown in soil heated by geysers! The
banana "tree" is entirely herbaceous, it has no real trunk - what
appears to be the trunk is actually the leafstalks rolled tightly around
one another. Since it is herbaceous and has no real trunk, it is not
considered a tree by botanists. 

Courtesy of FoodReference.com. 




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