Fruits & Vegetables
Spices & Flavor
Classic Dishes
Origins & History
Cooking Terms
100
  • Q: This crunchy vegetable is botanically classified as a fruit because it develops from the flower of its plant and contains seeds.

A: Tomato

100
  • Q: This spice, a key ingredient in gingerbread, is actually the dried inner bark of a tree.

A: Cinnamon

100
  • Q: This famous French stew, often containing beef and red wine, translates to "beef in wine."

A: Beef Bourguignon

100
  • Q: The potato was first domesticated in the highlands of this South American mountain range.

A: The Andes

100
  • Q: This French cooking term refers to a light mixture of butter and flour used as a base for thickening sauces.

A: Roux

200
  • Q: The green pigment in vegetables that is essential for photosynthesis and breaks down in the fall to reveal other colors.

A: Chlorophyll

200
  • Q: This is the world's most expensive spice by weight, harvested from the stigma of a purple flower.

A: Saffron

200
  • Q: This layered Italian dessert is made with coffee-soaked ladyfingers and mascarpone cheese.

A: Tiramisu

200
  • Q: This beverage, the world's most consumed after water, was first brewed in China.

A: Tea

200
  • Q: What is the technical name for a sharp reduction of liquid in a pan, often used to concentrate flavor?

A: Reduction

300
  • Q: This fruit, which comes in varieties like Granny Smith and Gala, is a member of the rose family.

A: Apple

300
  • Q: The heat in chili peppers is measured in units named after this American pharmacist.

A: Wilbur Scoville

300
  • Q: What is the primary spirit used in a traditional Mojito cocktail?

A: Rum

300
  • Q: This fizzy drink was originally invented by a pharmacist in Atlanta, Georgia, in 1886.

A: Coca-Cola

300
  • Q: This Italian cooking term means "to the tooth," describing pasta that is cooked just firm enough to offer slight resistance when bitten.

A: Al dente

400
  • Q: Found primarily in the tropical regions, this berry is the only fruit with its seeds on the outside.

A: Strawberry

400
  • Q: This compound, which gives garlic and onions their distinct smell and flavor, also gives them their health benefits.

A: Sulfur

400
  • Q: This type of sauce, a staple in Mexican cooking, gets its name from the Nahuatl word for "sauce."

A: Mole

400
  • Q: Before sugar became widely available, this sweet, sticky substance was the most common sweetener in the Western world.

A: Honey

400
  • Q: To gently cook food in liquid that is barely simmering, usually just below boiling point, is called this.

A: Poaching

500
  • Q: What is the main ingredient used to make the Middle Eastern dip hummus?

A: Chickpeas (or garbanzo beans)

500
  • Q: This crystalline compound is often used in Asian cooking to enhance savory flavors, often called the fifth basic taste.

A: MSG (Monosodium Glutamate)

500
  • Q: The name of this common breakfast pastry is derived from the French word for "crescent."

A: Croissant

500
  • Q: The word "restaurant" comes from a French term meaning this.

A: To restore (or to refresh)

500
  • Q: This technique involves quickly cooking food in a very hot pan with a small amount of fat, tumbling the ingredients constantly.

A: Stir-frying