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A: That would be Dairy.

Last April at the International Association of Culinary Professionals conference I met a Des Moines food writer and consultant named Joyce Lock who mentioned she'd created a Trivial Pursuit-style game for food geeks to be published by Chronicle Books.

An advance of Lock's Foodie Fight arrived yesterday, just in time to happily distract four of us from a deadly boring meal at Il Fiasco (review pending). You're right. This is even nerdier restaurant behavior than taking digital pics of your pasta, but we didn't actually pull out the boards, game pieces, and dice. Once begun however, we couldn't stop quizzing each other from the question cards, which are divided into six categories: food people; world cuisines and food places; food on film and in print, movies, and art; party planning etiquette and wine pairing; food science; eating out; and cooking techniques. Good times.

The object is to answer three questions correctly in each category, thereby filling up an individual game card with tokens. There are more than 1,000 questions with a healthy range of difficulty, likely to challenge the expert without without destroying the confidence of the dilletante. The game's release date is set for August 30.

Lock probably won't appreciate spoilers but here's a couple, sans answers. Feel free to answer, but I won't tell you if you're right.

Which oil has a higher smoke point--peanut or corn? 

What was the secret ingredient in the food wafer "soylent" consumed in the 1973 film Soylent Green?

How much water does an oyster's gill filter in an hour--10 to 12 pints, 10 to 12 quarts, or 10 to 12 gallons?


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Comments
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Kelly Mahoney
August 17th - 2:17 p.m.
I don't know the answers to those questions, so I won't attempt it. Sounds like a fun/educational game, I'll have to pick one up. Also, I didn't know DQ came from Joliet, but it makes sense. It's hard to find a DQ out here -- Sonic and Cold Stone are far more popular in Tucson.

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kellytheculinarian.blogspot.com
whet
August 17th - 3:12 p.m.
Number two is easy: foie gras.
David Hammond
August 17th - 11:19 p.m.
I'd play this game.

Looking forward to your review of Il Fiasco (What a name! Shows a lot of chutzpah...or something. Kind of like calling a place El Boondoggle or Le Snafu).
bucky
August 20th - 4:14 p.m.
Soylent green is people!



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