No. I got number 9 wrong. I said crisp. I got number 7 right.

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Helen
Sent: Sunday, February 01, 2009 7:06 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [RecipesAndMore] Re: Food trivia Quiz



Jan, I got one right too. Bet we got the same one! Was it number 9? Lol.

Helen  
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Jan" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, February 01, 2009 4:55 PM
Subject: [RecipesAndMore] Food trivia Quiz


> 
> I got one right.
> Food Trivia Quiz
> FoodReference.com
> All of the answers begin with the letter 'C' 
> 
> 1) This was originally a term referring to a preparation of vegetables

> (in aspic) layered in alternating colors in a mold, cooked in a bain 
> marie, turned out and served hot. It takes it's name from the 
> Carthusian order of monks (vegetarians) who probably created it. There

> is also a story (which has the ring of truth) that on days that meat 
> was forbidden, it would be hidden in the center of the of this dish, 
> enabling the monks to indulge themselves with the forbidden food. This

> same name is used for a liqueur created by these monks in the 16th 
> century, with a secret formula containing more than 130 plants and 
> herbs.
> 
> 2) The record for spitting these is 72 feet 7 1/2 inches.
> 
> 3) What tree was located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, at the corner of

> Brattle and Story Streets, and was cut down to widen the streets in 
> 1876.
> 
> 4) The Chinese consume 40% of the world's supply of these, and their 
> use in China dates back thousands of years. They use them roasted in 
> hot sand, in simmered dishes and in soups. What are they?
> 
> 5) The fruit of this tree grows directly on the trunk and looks like a

> small melon. Inside, the pulp contains 20 to 50 seeds or 'beans'. It 
> takes about 400 of these 'beans' to make a pound of finished product. 
> Name the tree and the finished product.
> 
> 6) Name the herb that has been variously described as: slightly soapy;

> like parsley but tangier; citrusy, biting tang; fragrant; zesty; 
> muddy; a mixture of cumin and caraway; stinky bed bug flavor; smells 
> and tastes of chemicals; pungent; unforgettably pungent; sharp, 
> strong, earthy; sage citrus flavor; clean and distinct flavor; orange 
> peel-like aroma; sweet flavor; slight numbing quality; like wood 
> bugs'; wild and uncharacterizable.
> 
> 7) A fish stew which originated with Portuguese and Italian fishermen 
> in San Francisco, California. It consists of fish and shellfish cooked

> with garlic, tomato and white wine.
> 
> 8) These dried flower buds are picked before they open. The tree is a 
> member of the myrtle family and is native to the Spice Islands of 
> Indonesia (Moluccas).
> 
> 9) A deep dish fruit pie (peach is most common) with only a top 
> biscuit dough crust.
> 
> 10) This black, bulbous fungus is considered by most U.S. farmers as a

> plant disease. The Aztecs considered it a delicacy, and it is still 
> prized in Mexican cuisine.
> 
> Answers
> 
> 1) Chartreuse
> 
> 2) Cherry Pits. The record in the International Cherry Pit Spit 
> Competition is held by Rick Kraus, with a cherry spit of 72 feet 7 1/2

> inches.
> 
> 3) The "spreading chestnut tree" from the poem "The Village 
> Blacksmith" by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. It was a real tree.
> 
> 4) Chestnuts.
> 
> 5) Cocoa tree and chocolate.
> 
> 6) Cilantro. It is one of those tastes that people either love or 
> hate, and no one agrees on a description of its aroma or taste.
> 
> 7) Cioppino
> 
> 8) Cloves
> 
> 9) Cobbler
> 
> 10) Corn smut is a black, bulbous fungus which causes corn kernels to 
> swell to many times their size. Most U.S. farmers consider it a 
> disease, and destroy infected plants. However, the Aztecs considered 
> it a delicacy, and it is still prized in Mexican cuisine. Also known 
> as Mexican truffle, huitlacoche, cuitlacoche, and maize mushroom. It 
> can be found in gourmet markets fresh, canned and frozen. It has a 
> sweet, smoky flavor.
> 
> Courtesy of FoodReference.com.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> > 
>



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