Oh My Gourd
Great British Baking
Turkey Time
Plymouth
Sweater Weather
100

Squash are typically categorized into two categories based on these seasons.

Winter and Summer

100

This dessert is often associated with Swiss, French, Polish and Italian cuisines, and traditionally made from whipped egg whites and sugar.

Meringue

100

Wild Turkeys are native to North America, and can be found in every U.S. state except for this one.

Alaska

100

This ship brought the Pilgrims from England to Plymouth Rock, Massachusetts, in 1620.

The Mayflower

100

While an American would say they were wearing a sweater, a person from England would call it by another name.

A Jumper

200

This racket and ball sport is typically played by two players in a four-walled court with a small, hollow rubber ball.

Squash

200

This traditional British cake is circular, 2 ¹⁄₈ inches in diameter, and has three layers: a Genoise sponge base, a layer of orange flavoured jam and a coating of chocolate.

Jaffa cakes

200

A family of confections based on a gel of starch and sugar. Traditional varieties are often flavored with rosewater, mastic, Bergamot orange, or lemon.

Turkish Delight

200

This common eating implement would not have been used at the First Thanksgiving feast.

Fork

200

This famous character's sweater is yellow with a black zigzag.

Charlie Brown

300

Although named for pumpkins, the flavors in "pumpkin spice" are actually a combination of these three ingredients.

Cinnamon, Nutmeg, Cloves

300

Former Great British Baking Show judge Mary Berry had one unique way of passing the time on set: binge-watching this American TV show, where the blue rock candy was not made of sugar.

Breaking Bad

300

The number of feathers on the average turkey.

5,500

300

The settlement of Plymouth, established by the pilgrims in 1620, was the second successful English colony in North America. This is the first, set up in 1607.

Jamestown, Virginia

300

Players in this sport don't wear "jerseys" they we are "sweaters."

Hockey

400

This Multi-Michelin starred chef and star of the small screen was born in Johnstone, Scotland.

Gordon Ramsay

400

This portable, round tent covered with skins or felt was used as a typical dwelling by several distinct nomadic groups in the steppes of Central Asia.

Yurt

400

The country now known as the Republic of Turkey was part of this empire prior to the First World War.

Ottoman Empire

400

The pilgrims spent their first winter suffering badly from this illness, caused by a lack of vitamin C, that leaves its victims vulnerable to infections, gum disease, and bleeding from their skin.

Scurvy

400

English playwright Noel Coward popularized this sweater in the 1920s, popular with beatniks and artists.

turtleneck

500

Gourds and squash are members of this plant family, which includes over 700 members.

Cucurbitaceae

500

Though it has now fallen out of use, this was the term once used for a "female baker."

Bakester

500

The long fleshy part of a male turkey's beak.

The snood

500

One of the pilgrims, a man named Stephen Hopkins, had previously attempted to cross the Atlantic 10 years earlier when his ship was blown off course and wrecked off the coast of Bermuda. The event inspired this play by William Shakespeare.

The Tempest

500

In October 2013, this country broadcast a "National Knitting Evening," a show lasting 12 hours that covered the complete sweater-making process, from lamb shearing to the knitting of the garment.

Norway