How about another food trivia quiz?

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  • #48796
    Dee
    Participant

    Another brand new quiz here!

    “Hark, villains! I will grind your bones to dust

    And with your blood and it I’ll make a paste,

    And of the paste a coffin I will rear

    And make two pasties of your shameful heads,”

    William Shakespeare, ‘Titus Andronicus’ Act V Scene II

    1) In 1859 George Gilman and his partner George Huntington Hartford invented a new retailing idea, and opened their first store in New York City. 52 years later (1912) they had 400 stores, when George Hartford’s son John had an even more radical idea for their stores. Within 5 years they had over 3,000 stores, and had revolutionized America’s food habits.

    3 questions: What was the first idea of the 2 Georges in 1859?

    What was the idea of Hartford’s son John?

    Finally, what is the name of the company?

    2) Do you know when electric refrigerators were first sold to American housewives and how much they cost?

    3) Gas ranges (stoves) were first introduced in the 1850s.

    Why did it take several decades for them to become popular?

    4) In 1967 Wisconsin was the last state to finally permit the sale of what food product, but still maintained special taxes on it?

    5) In 1903, a German importer received a ship load of beans that had been soaked with saltwater during a storm. He turned to his researchers to figure out a way the shipment might be saved.

    What did they come up with?

    6) Why are there thousands of grasshoppers in the foundation blocks of the First United Methodist Church in Hutchinson, Kansas?

    7) What percentage of all pumpkins are sold for food?

    8) What herb is used in the production of imitation maple syrup, rum and butterscotch flavors?

    9) This cheese dates back to the 7th or 8th century, and was first produced by Irish or Italian Benedictine Monks in a valley in France, and is now considered a German cheese.

    What is this multinational cheese?

    10) What do avocados, eggplants, cucumbers, chilies, and tomatoes have in common?

    SCROLL DOWN FOR ANSWERS

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    ANSWERS

    1) In 1859, George Gilman and George Huntington Hartford had the revolutionary idea to buy tea from boats at the dock, and sell it directly to the consumer from a store near the docks. They were able to dramatically reduced the price consumers paid for tea by eliminating several middlemen. Soon they were doing the same with coffee, spices, canned goods and other products.

    Hartfords son John came up the the revolutionary idea in 1912 to eliminate telephone orders, deliveries, credit accounts and clerks that weighed everything to order for each customer. In the new stores, there would be only one clerk, everything would be sold for cash, and customers would get their own food from the shelves and carry it home themselves! A revolutionary idea at the time.

    The name of the company was originally the Great American Tea Company, which became the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company, and John’s new stores were named A & P – the first supermarkets.

    2) Electric refrigerators were first sold to American housewives in 1916, at a cost of $900.

    3) Housewives were afraid they would blow up the stoves and themselves!

    4) In 1967 Wisconsin repealed its law forbidding the sale of yellow margarine. Until then, margarine could only be sold with a separate coloring ‘pellet’ in the plastic pouch of white (its natural color) margarine, which had to be kneaded into the margarine by the consumer to color it to look the same as butter. As in many other states, the dairy industry was able to force the continuation of a special tax on margarine.

    5) The researchers perfected a process to remove the caffeine from the saltwater soaked coffee BEANS, and invented Sanka Coffee – a contraction of the French “sans caffeine.”

    6) When the First United Methodist Church in Hutchinson, Kansas was being built in 1874, there was a grasshopper plague. The foundation was being laid for the church, and the pastor insisted the work continue. As the mortar was being mixed for the foundation, thousands of grasshoppers were mixed into it.

    7) 99% of all pumpkins are sold for decorations, Only 1% are sold for food.

    (this can’t possibly be true, but I did not look into it)

    8) Fenugreek.

    9) Muenster Cheese, originally from the Munster valley in Alsace.

    10) They are all botanically fruits that are most usually prepared and served as vegetables.

    #702936
    Moonshadow_NZ
    Moderator

    2/10. #3 was a good guess and #10 was logical.

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