Jeopardy! Round, Double Jeopardy! Round, or Tiebreaker Round clues (437 results returned)
#9082, aired 2024-04-16 | DON'T EAT THAT! $200: It comes before poor, nap, cheap & bag dirt |
#9082, aired 2024-04-16 | DON'T EAT THAT! $400: A rook is a type of this, another 4-letter fowl crow |
#9082, aired 2024-04-16 | DON'T EAT THAT! $600: Types of these devices include atomic & grandfather clocks |
#9082, aired 2024-04-16 | DON'T EAT THAT! $800: Binney & Smith began selling boxes of these, made from wax, in 1903; colors ranged from black to yellow crayons |
#9082, aired 2024-04-16 | DON'T EAT THAT! $1000: This Peter Frampton band sang "30 Days In The Hole" Humble Pie |
#9039, aired 2024-02-15 | THOSE WORDS PACKED SOMETHING TO EAT $400: Containing a veggie, it completes the saying "Hell hath no fury like a woman..." scorned |
#9039, aired 2024-02-15 | THOSE WORDS PACKED SOMETHING TO EAT $800: There's a fruit inside this word meaning "marked with small patches" such as "of sunlight" dappled |
#9039, aired 2024-02-15 | THOSE WORDS PACKED SOMETHING TO EAT $1200: There's lunch meat nestled in this cloth used for polishing a chamois |
#9039, aired 2024-02-15 | THOSE WORDS PACKED SOMETHING TO EAT $1600: The English word for unagi is inside this old pirate torture where you got dragged by ropes under the ship keelhauling |
#9039, aired 2024-02-15 | THOSE WORDS PACKED SOMETHING TO EAT $2000: Help yourself to a piece of dessert within this word meaning lack of reverence impiety |
#8998, aired 2023-12-20 | DON'T EAT WITH YOUR HANDS $400: Technology historian Henry Petroski said that little frill on these in the party meatballs probably began as an anti-swallowing warning a toothpick |
#8998, aired 2023-12-20 | DON'T EAT WITH YOUR HANDS $800: This type of fork has a special leftmost tine for cutting the treat, maybe while standing a cake (a dessert fork) |
#8998, aired 2023-12-20 | DON'T EAT WITH YOUR HANDS $1200: KFC has introduced fit-on-your-finger versions of these hybrid items to eat sides such as coleslaw a spork |
#8998, aired 2023-12-20 | DON'T EAT WITH YOUR HANDS $1600: Petrossian suggests a spoon made of mother-of-pearl is the material of choice for serving this caviar |
#8998, aired 2023-12-20 | DON'T EAT WITH YOUR HANDS $2000: This Spanish dish is traditionally eaten from a communal pan with a wooden spoon to scrape out the crispy rice called socarrat paella |
#8969, aired 2023-11-09 | EAT $400: In Scandinavia they call it köttbullar; we know it as this, with a nationality in its name Swedish meatballs |
#8969, aired 2023-11-09 | EAT $800: A shiitake is one of these; "take" is Japanese for it a mushroom |
#8969, aired 2023-11-09 | EAT $1200: Does calling these veggies petits pois make them any tastier? peas |
#8969, aired 2023-11-09 | EAT $1600: For a well-done filet mignon, do this "insect" cooking term that means to cut down the center almost completely butterfly |
#8969, aired 2023-11-09 | EAT $2000: You can make your panini with this Italian bread whose name comes from the Latin for "hearth" focaccia |
#8914, aired 2023-07-13 | EAT IT! WEAR IT! OR SIT ON IT! $200: With nearly 30-inch legs, IKEA's Yngvar is this type of seat that's perfect for throwing back some cold ones a bar stool |
#8914, aired 2023-07-13 | EAT IT! WEAR IT! OR SIT ON IT! $400: The dried chilies in this spicy Szechwan chicken dish might have a little too much "pao" for some kung pao chicken |
#8914, aired 2023-07-13 | EAT IT! WEAR IT! OR SIT ON IT! $600: As a verb, it means to move busily; as a noun, it was an 1880s piece of undergarment that held out the back of a skirt a bustle |
#8914, aired 2023-07-13 | EAT IT! WEAR IT! OR SIT ON IT! $800: To wear, it's a comfy piece of around-the-house footwear; to sit on, it's a short-legged, armless chair a slipper |
#8914, aired 2023-07-13 | EAT IT! WEAR IT! OR SIT ON IT! $1000: Use a pound of the Bing variety & don't set yourself on fire when you ignite the liquor in this 2-word dessert cherries jubilee |
#8862, aired 2023-05-02 | EAT FOOD. NOT TOO MUCH. MOSTLY PLANTS $400: California Pizza Kitchen & Whole Foods offer pizza crusts made from this veggie, a cabbage relative cauliflower |
#8862, aired 2023-05-02 | EAT FOOD. NOT TOO MUCH. MOSTLY PLANTS $800: A dish prepared "à l'Argenteuil" means served with stalks of this green veggie asparagus |
#8862, aired 2023-05-02 | EAT FOOD. NOT TOO MUCH. MOSTLY PLANTS $1200: A New York Times magazine article called "I Heart" these vegetables talks about trimming & preparing them artichokes |
#8862, aired 2023-05-02 | EAT FOOD. NOT TOO MUCH. MOSTLY PLANTS $1600: The "J" is pronounced like an "H" in the name of this crisp vegetable that's native to Mexico jicama |
#8862, aired 2023-05-02 | EAT FOOD. NOT TOO MUCH. MOSTLY PLANTS $2000: Similar to tofu, this 6-letter Indonesian foodstuff is made from fermented soybeans & often used as a meat substitute tempeh |
#8842, aired 2023-04-04 | LOOKS GOOD ENOUGH TO EAT $200: As the saying goes, you can't make this without breaking eggs an omelet |
#8842, aired 2023-04-04 | LOOKS GOOD ENOUGH TO EAT $400: Named for, & fit for a queen, this pizza has the same colors as the Italian flag Margherita |
#8842, aired 2023-04-04 | LOOKS GOOD ENOUGH TO EAT $600: These aren't real fruit; they're this confection made from almond paste marzipan |
#8842, aired 2023-04-04 | LOOKS GOOD ENOUGH TO EAT $800: Yum! It's this dessert with a caramelized sugar top; can't wait to get to the custard below crème brûlée |
#8842, aired 2023-04-04 | LOOKS GOOD ENOUGH TO EAT $1000: It's a popular street food in Bangkok, but you don't have to go that far to get it pad thai |
#8789, aired 2023-01-19 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $400: Les epinards is French for this vegetable spinach |
#8789, aired 2023-01-19 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $800: Spruce up a salad with slices of the watermelon type of this a radish |
#8789, aired 2023-01-19 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $1200: Not surprisingly, Georgia's state vegetable is this sweet yellow onion that first took root in Georgia some 90 years ago Vidalia |
#8789, aired 2023-01-19 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $1600: This variety of squash seen here has a body part in its name a crookneck |
#8789, aired 2023-01-19 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $2000: These root veggies that look like creamy white carrots are in the same family & are often roasted or boiled & mashed parsnips |
#8674, aired 2022-06-30 | "EAT" $400: Sheep shouts bleats |
#8674, aired 2022-06-30 | "EAT" $800: Types of these fashion folds include box, knife & sunburst pleats |
#8674, aired 2022-06-30 | "EAT" $1200: To beseech or beg for mercy entreat |
#8674, aired 2022-06-30 | "EAT" $1600: Suet & dried fruit go into this British dessert pie mincemeat |
#8674, aired 2022-06-30 | "EAT" $2,500 (Daily Double): This synonym for gloomy or pessimistic is also a conductor's indication of the start of a measure downbeat |
#8567, aired 2022-02-01 | READ IT OR EAT IT? $400: Okies head west The Grapes of Wrath |
#8567, aired 2022-02-01 | READ IT OR EAT IT? $800: A grandfather tells a story about a town called Chewandswallow where food falls from the sky Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs |
#8567, aired 2022-02-01 | READ IT OR EAT IT? $1200: Violent gangs of Droogs run wild in the streets of an English city A Clockwork Orange |
#8567, aired 2022-02-01 | READ IT OR EAT IT? $1600: Play in which a working class African-American family moves into an all-white Chicago neighborhood A Raisin in the Sun |
#8567, aired 2022-02-01 | READ IT OR EAT IT? $2000: Just after World War II, a woman learns of a group of book lovers on one of the Channel Islands The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society |
#8366, aired 2021-03-29 | YOU'LL EAT THOSE WORDS $200: Stick your tongue out & exhale sharply to make this fruity sound of disapproval a raspberry |
#8366, aired 2021-03-29 | YOU'LL EAT THOSE WORDS $400: In "Rebel Without a Cause", James Dean & a rival play this in speeding cars, with unfortunate results chicken |
#8366, aired 2021-03-29 | YOU'LL EAT THOSE WORDS $600: Controlled 360-degree spins in a car donuts |
#8366, aired 2021-03-29 | YOU'LL EAT THOSE WORDS $800: A baseball brouhaha is also known as this edible pie plant a rhubarb |
#8366, aired 2021-03-29 | YOU'LL EAT THOSE WORDS $1000: A 1930s guide to underworld lingo provides the first known written use of this baked product as slang for money bread |
#8341, aired 2021-02-22 | THE CELEB CHEF WON'T EAT THAT! $200: Duff Goldman says no to these items seen here & named for its shape, tweeting, "They ruin everything they touch" bell peppers |
#8341, aired 2021-02-22 | THE CELEB CHEF WON'T EAT THAT! $400: The late Anthony Bourdain reveled in eating just about anything, but never on this type of transport--"I like to arrive hungry" an airplane |
#8341, aired 2021-02-22 | THE CELEB CHEF WON'T EAT THAT! $600: Katie Lee: "I hate" this sushi condiment. "& I love spicy food, so I'm not sure why I have (an) aversion to" it wasabi |
#8341, aired 2021-02-22 | THE CELEB CHEF WON'T EAT THAT! $800: Gordon Ramsay spoke for many when he said in typical style, "You don't put (bleepin')" this fruit "on a pizza!" pineapple |
#8341, aired 2021-02-22 | THE CELEB CHEF WON'T EAT THAT! $1000: Rachael Ray (as well as Jimmy Fallon & Barack Obama) will always say, "hold" this creamy condiment mayo (mayonnaise) |
#8215, aired 2020-05-01 | LET THEM EAT CAKE $200: For Christmas, you can make this 2-word chocolate roll cake while watching the same-named item burn on TV a yule log |
#8215, aired 2020-05-01 | LET THEM EAT CAKE $400: Hey, batter batter, don't swing, batter! A trademarked tube pan with fluted sides is used to make this cake Bundt |
#8215, aired 2020-05-01 | LET THEM EAT CAKE $600: An important part of a dessert like a Charlotte, this delicate, light sponge cake sounds perfect (for a cannibal!) ladyfinger |
#8215, aired 2020-05-01 | LET THEM EAT CAKE $800: Pineapple is the main attraction in this kind of cake, inverted before serving so the glazed fruit goes from bottom to top a pineapple upside-down cake |
#8215, aired 2020-05-01 | LET THEM EAT CAKE $1000: Split a sweet Biscuit in half, fill & top it with softly whipped cream & sliced fruit--like strawberries--& you've got this a strawberry shortcake |
#8089, aired 2019-11-07 | LET'S EAT $200: One of these "ocular" steaks, cut from the outer side of the midsection a ribeye |
#8089, aired 2019-11-07 | LET'S EAT $400: This pre-cooked offering for a soldier, MRE for short a Meal, Ready-to-Eat |
#8089, aired 2019-11-07 | LET'S EAT $600: Grilled bread drizzled with olive oil & topped with chopped tomatoes, with a name from an Italian word meaning "toast" bruschetta |
#8089, aired 2019-11-07 | LET'S EAT $800: Considered a delicacy, the soft, green tomalley is this internal organ of a lobster the liver |
#8089, aired 2019-11-07 | LET'S EAT $1000: This pudding made from the starch of the cassava plant tapioca |
#7588, aired 2017-09-13 | EAT IT! $200: I can't decide between chocolate, vanilla & strawberry ice cream; wait, I'll have all 3 in a brick called this Neapolitan |
#7588, aired 2017-09-13 | EAT IT! $400: Jonathan Swift wrote, "He was a bold man that first" ate these; let's be bold & enjoy them on the half shell oysters |
#7588, aired 2017-09-13 | EAT IT! $600: Mozzarella, tomatoes & basil are in this simple salad that gets its name from an Italian island caprese |
#7588, aired 2017-09-13 | EAT IT! $800: For a quick version of this French sauce, mix together mayo, minced garlic, a little salt & lemon juice aioli |
#7588, aired 2017-09-13 | EAT IT! $1000: A Spanish word for a sloop gives us the name of this appetizer, a crisp corn tortilla "boat" filled with beef & cheese a chalupa |
#7517, aired 2017-04-25 | EAT THIS VERB $400: This verb meaning to eat fast is usually associated with turkeys gobble |
#7517, aired 2017-04-25 | EAT THIS VERB $800: This 2-word alliterative phrase means to eat with others, even if there's no loaf break bread |
#7517, aired 2017-04-25 | EAT THIS VERB $1200: Enjoy a snack, Yiddish style nosh |
#7517, aired 2017-04-25 | EAT THIS VERB $1600: Body part verb for what the person seen here is about to do to the food approaching his mouth gum it |
#7517, aired 2017-04-25 | EAT THIS VERB $2000: It's a fancy 3-syallable word for "chew" masticate |
#7358, aired 2016-09-14 | SOMETHING TO EAT $200: Meat or fish presented tartare means it's served this way raw |
#7358, aired 2016-09-14 | SOMETHING TO EAT $400: These Sunshine Biscuits snack crackers have been around since 1921 Cheez-Its |
#7358, aired 2016-09-14 | SOMETHING TO EAT $600: Cremini, a variety of this edible, are intentionally harvested when they're immature mushrooms |
#7358, aired 2016-09-14 | SOMETHING TO EAT $800: The Monterey Jack jalapeno stuffed pretzels seem like they wouldn't fit in this lower-fat line from Stouffer's Lean Cuisine |
#7358, aired 2016-09-14 | SOMETHING TO EAT $1000: Chocolate & cherries team up in this dessert named for a region of Germany a Black Forest cake |
#7279, aired 2016-04-14 | ALL YOU CAN "EAT" $400: A prong on an athletic shoe to prevent slippage a cleat |
#7279, aired 2016-04-14 | ALL YOU CAN "EAT" $800: One ewe emission a bleat |
#7279, aired 2016-04-14 | ALL YOU CAN "EAT" $1200: Hard red winter & hard red spring are 2 types of this wheat |
#7279, aired 2016-04-14 | ALL YOU CAN "EAT" $1600: To request earnestly to entreat |
#7279, aired 2016-04-14 | ALL YOU CAN "EAT" $2000: A 6th century southern Swede; Beowulf was one a Geat |
#7256, aired 2016-03-14 | 1,000 FOODS TO EAT BEFORE YOU DIE $200: Mimi Sheraton describes this delicacy as "tiny, glistening black-diamond beads that lie silky soft on the tongue" caviar |
#7256, aired 2016-03-14 | 1,000 FOODS TO EAT BEFORE YOU DIE $400: When in Rome treat yourself to one of these fried pastry tubes filled with sweetened, whipped ricotta cannoli |
#7256, aired 2016-03-14 | 1,000 FOODS TO EAT BEFORE YOU DIE $600: Spoon up some of this French goodness that's been described as a soup, a stew, a "hotchpotch of all sorts of fishes" bouillabaisse |
#7256, aired 2016-03-14 | 1,000 FOODS TO EAT BEFORE YOU DIE $800: A tasty & popular pairing is Swedish meatballs served with preserves made from these cranberry cousins lingonberries |
#7256, aired 2016-03-14 | 1,000 FOODS TO EAT BEFORE YOU DIE $1000: Sample the great cheeses of Spain, including this one hailing from the same region as Don Quixote & made from sheep's milk Manchego |
#7080, aired 2015-05-29 | IT'S TIME TO EAT $200: At this type of group dinner, folks bring food, usually one dish, to share with others a pot-luck |
#7080, aired 2015-05-29 | IT'S TIME TO EAT $600: Popular varieties of this vegetable include Bibb & butterhead lettuce |
#7080, aired 2015-05-29 | IT'S TIME TO EAT $800: Also known as a turtle bean, this dried bean forms the base for a soup popular in Cuba black bean |
#7080, aired 2015-05-29 | IT'S TIME TO EAT $1000: Order up! At a diner, "nervous pudding" is slang for this offering Jell-O |
#6943, aired 2014-11-19 | SOMETHING TO EAT $200: This fermented Japanese bean paste can be aged 3 years before it's used to make soup miso |
#6943, aired 2014-11-19 | SOMETHING TO EAT $400: Be it the honeycomb or blanket type, do you expect us to swallow this lining of beef stomach? tripe |
#6943, aired 2014-11-19 | SOMETHING TO EAT $600: Haylie & Hilary love this steamed pudding with eggs, dried fruit & spices duff |
#6943, aired 2014-11-19 | SOMETHING TO EAT $800: This Italian ice cream typically consists of three flavors that often contain chopped fruit & nuts spumoni |
#6943, aired 2014-11-19 | SOMETHING TO EAT $1000: This 4-word stir-fried dish of sliced chicken includes snow peas, mushrooms & Chinese cabbage moo goo gai pan |
#6904, aired 2014-09-25 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $200: In the early 19th c. George Stephenson began growing these pickle veggies in glass tubes so they'd grow straight cucumbers |
#6904, aired 2014-09-25 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $400: Winter varieties of this include Golden Acorn, Buttercup & Hubbard squash |
#6904, aired 2014-09-25 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $600: Developed in Canada, the Yukon Gold variety of this tuber has yellow flesh potato |
#6904, aired 2014-09-25 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $1000: It's the Chinese name for the food seen here, also called Chinese cabbage bok choy |
#6904, aired 2014-09-25 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $2,200 (Daily Double): Unlike the familiar small red globe variety of this root vegetable, the daikon type is carrot-shaped & can be 18" long radish |
#6746, aired 2014-01-06 | EAT, DRINK $400: Caffe Americano is this strong coffee diluted with 3 parts water espresso |
#6746, aired 2014-01-06 | EAT, DRINK $800: It can mean "sour" or a small pie tart |
#6746, aired 2014-01-06 | EAT, DRINK $1200: It's the Friday evening foodstuff seen here challah |
#6746, aired 2014-01-06 | EAT, DRINK $1600: The University of Minnesota created the honeycrisp, a variety of this fruit an apple |
#6746, aired 2014-01-06 | EAT, DRINK $2000: Devised in Boston in 1946, the name of this juice brand combines patriotism & convenience Minute Maid |
#6696, aired 2013-10-28 | ARE YOU GONNA EAT THAT? $400: These, even if you call them escargots, their French name--non snails |
#6696, aired 2013-10-28 | ARE YOU GONNA EAT THAT? $800: This generic 4-letter variety of seaweed, kombu in Japanese--no kelp |
#6696, aired 2013-10-28 | ARE YOU GONNA EAT THAT? $1200: This, Foeniculum vulgare, looking sort of like celery & tasting like licorice--no! fennel |
#6696, aired 2013-10-28 | ARE YOU GONNA EAT THAT? $1600: Also known as the velvet stem, the enoki type of this--yes a mushroom |
#6696, aired 2013-10-28 | ARE YOU GONNA EAT THAT? $2000: The comice type of this fruit--yes, with good cheese a pear |
#6529, aired 2013-01-24 | "L" CAN EAT $200: This twisty candy was used to make the shoe Charlie Chaplin ate in "The Gold Rush" licorice |
#6529, aired 2013-01-24 | "L" CAN EAT $400: In Lombardy this layered dish is a Christmastime specialty, with the sheets of pasta symbolizing Jesus' swaddling clothes lasagna |
#6529, aired 2013-01-24 | "L" CAN EAT $600: To prepare this Thermidor style, mix the meat with a Béchamel sauce & spoon it back into the shells lobster |
#6529, aired 2013-01-24 | "L" CAN EAT $800: Delicate sponge cake in the shape of a digit ladyfinger |
#6529, aired 2013-01-24 | "L" CAN EAT $1000: Make sure you have plenty of schmear to go with this brand of bagels that went frozen in 1962 Lender's |
#6504, aired 2012-12-20 | YOU "R" WHAT YOU EAT $200: Popular types of these dried fruits include sultana, Malaga & Muscat raisins |
#6504, aired 2012-12-20 | YOU "R" WHAT YOU EAT $400: In the French dish lapin à la moutarde, this meat is served in a mustard sauce rabbit |
#6504, aired 2012-12-20 | YOU "R" WHAT YOU EAT $600: On foodnetwork.com you'll find a recipe for pork & these noodles alfredo, a college dorm special ramen |
#6504, aired 2012-12-20 | YOU "R" WHAT YOU EAT $800: Add a little color to a green salad with this leafy Italian vegetable radicchio |
#6504, aired 2012-12-20 | YOU "R" WHAT YOU EAT $1000: It's a marinated herring fillet wrapped around pickle or onion, but don't try to clean the floor with it rollmop |
#6502, aired 2012-12-18 | EAT PREY $200: This bloodsucking insect preys on humans. Sleep tight a bedbug |
#6502, aired 2012-12-18 | EAT PREY $400: This "royal" predator of North America ran to about 40 feet long & 7 tons, but isn't around anymore Tyrannosaurus rex |
#6502, aired 2012-12-18 | EAT PREY $600: Don't tread on this venomous predator seen here a (western) rattlesnake |
#6502, aired 2012-12-18 | EAT PREY $800: One of the fiercest predators of penguins is the leopard variety of this mammal a seal |
#6502, aired 2012-12-18 | EAT PREY $1000: Called the tiger of the sea, this streamlined ocean predator can be a threat to swimmers wearing shiny objects a barracuda |
#6419, aired 2012-07-12 | LET'S EAT THAI $200: Pad Thai is a popular dish consisting of the rice type of these, pan fried with egg, shrimp & tofu noodles |
#6419, aired 2012-07-12 | LET'S EAT THAI $400: A basic ingredient in Thai cuisine is prik kee noo, a small, spicy one of these named for its resemblance to a mouse dropping pepper |
#6419, aired 2012-07-12 | LET'S EAT THAI $600: One of Thailand's most famous dishes is tom yum goong, a type of this made with shrimp soup |
#6419, aired 2012-07-12 | LET'S EAT THAI $800: In names of Thai food dishes, "jade" & "ruby" refer to green & red types of this sauce mixed with coconut milk curry |
#6419, aired 2012-07-12 | LET'S EAT THAI $1000: Used as a condiment, nam pla is a type of sauce made from fermented these fish |
#6344, aired 2012-03-29 | PLACES TO EAT $200: Originally a Spanish term meaning "coffee shop", it's an eatery, often in an institution like a hospital a cafeteria |
#6344, aired 2012-03-29 | PLACES TO EAT $400: A highway service station & restaurant principally for the drivers of all them 18-wheelers a truck stop |
#6344, aired 2012-03-29 | PLACES TO EAT $600: Foul cutlery term for a local restaurant that serves fried, inexpensive food a greasy spoon |
#6344, aired 2012-03-29 | PLACES TO EAT $800: On Food Network, Guy Fieri hosts the show known as "Triple D": these, "Drive-ins and Dives" Diners |
#6344, aired 2012-03-29 | PLACES TO EAT $1000: Drooling for fast food at Indiana's Greenwood Park Mall? Head for an establishment in this 2-word area the food court |
#6250, aired 2011-11-18 | EAT LIKE A HORSE $200: Horses love this fruit of the genus Malus; does one a day keep the vet away? an apple |
#6250, aired 2011-11-18 | EAT LIKE A HORSE $400: Though they're vegetarians, many male horses have 4 of these long "doglike" teeth used for tearing food canines |
#6250, aired 2011-11-18 | EAT LIKE A HORSE $600: Whether crushed, rolled or cooked, these are a high-energy horse food; too much can cause horsie overexuberance oats |
#6250, aired 2011-11-18 | EAT LIKE A HORSE $800: For joint health, some experts recommend giving horses this oil from fish of the genus Gadus--blecch! cod liver oil |
#6250, aired 2011-11-18 | EAT LIKE A HORSE $1000: This protein-rich plant of the pea family is like steak for horses; don't give the little rascals too much of it alfalfa |
#6214, aired 2011-09-29 | EAT-YMOLOGY $200: The name of this foodstuff comes from the Chinese "dou" for beans & "fu" for rotten tofu |
#6214, aired 2011-09-29 | EAT-YMOLOGY $400: This big flatfish got its name because it was largely eaten on holy days halibut |
#6214, aired 2011-09-29 | EAT-YMOLOGY $600: This fruit's name comes from the Latin Persica praecocia, meaning "early ripening peach" an apricot |
#6214, aired 2011-09-29 | EAT-YMOLOGY $800: In German the "Brat" in Bratwurst means "roast"; the "wurst" means this sausage |
#6214, aired 2011-09-29 | EAT-YMOLOGY $1000: Originally traded as solid cakes, after granulation this substance was called sakkara, meaning grit or gravel sugar |
#6077, aired 2011-02-01 | EAT $400: It's the collective name for the heart, liver & gizzard of a turkey, used for gravy giblets |
#6077, aired 2011-02-01 | EAT $800: Use 3 of these to prepare them Newburg style; the first step in the "Joy of Cooking" recipe: "Kill with a knife" a lobster |
#6077, aired 2011-02-01 | EAT $1200: Does calling these veggies petits pois make them any tastier? peas |
#6077, aired 2011-02-01 | EAT $1600: For a well done filet mignon, do this "insect" cooking term that means to cut down the center almost completely butterfly |
#6077, aired 2011-02-01 | EAT $2000: You can make your panini with this Italian bread whose name comes from the Latin for "hearth" focaccia |
#6015, aired 2010-11-05 | LET'S EAT HEALTHY $400: Hake & shad are on the National Resources Defense Council list of fish low in this element (that's what you want) mercury |
#6015, aired 2010-11-05 | LET'S EAT HEALTHY $800: The betacyanin that makes these veggies red may also help fight cancer beets |
#6015, aired 2010-11-05 | LET'S EAT HEALTHY $1200: In 2004, 2 West Virginia men traded gunfire over how to cook a nice healthy skinless this chicken |
#6015, aired 2010-11-05 | LET'S EAT HEALTHY $1600: This Amazonian palm fruit that looks like a purple berry packs an antioxidant wallop the acai fruit |
#6015, aired 2010-11-05 | LET'S EAT HEALTHY $2000: If liquid yogurt sounds good, you'll like this fizzy milk from the Caucasus kefir |
#5825, aired 2010-01-01 | TIME TO "EAT" $200: To practice trickery or fraud in game play cheat |
#5825, aired 2010-01-01 | TIME TO "EAT" $400: A spike on the bottom of an athletic shoe a cleat |
#5825, aired 2010-01-01 | TIME TO "EAT" $600: Bartender's adjective for a cocktail served without water neat |
#5825, aired 2010-01-01 | TIME TO "EAT" $800: Moss type used as fuel peat |
#5825, aired 2010-01-01 | TIME TO "EAT" $1000: The administrative metropolis in a U.S. county the seat |
#5737, aired 2009-07-14 | LET'S EAT $200: Let's have these for breakfast, perhaps at the International House of them, around since 1958 pancakes |
#5737, aired 2009-07-14 | LET'S EAT $400: It's the cheerful name for the fried eggs seen here sunny-side up |
#5737, aired 2009-07-14 | LET'S EAT $600: The name of this Mexican dish, a crisp tortilla filled with meat & cheese, is from the Spanish for "wadding" a taco |
#5737, aired 2009-07-14 | LET'S EAT $800: The name of this edible root has its root in Latin radishes |
#5737, aired 2009-07-14 | LET'S EAT $1000: This member of the nightshade family is the main ingredient in marinara sauce the tomato |
#5725, aired 2009-06-26 | EAT IT $400: Not made by Jell-O, spotted dick is a British type of this made with suet & raisins a pudding |
#5725, aired 2009-06-26 | EAT IT $800: Naturally, Whole Foods' 365 Organic line includes this type of oat, fruit & nut cold cereal granola |
#5725, aired 2009-06-26 | EAT IT $1200: Popular in Cajun cooking, tasso is usually a spiced type of this meat ham |
#5725, aired 2009-06-26 | EAT IT $1600: This restaurant isn't named for roast beef but rather for the Raffel Brothers Arby's |
#5725, aired 2009-06-26 | EAT IT $2000: Frequently used in soups, this tiny 4-letter pasta means "barley" in Italian orzo |
#5682, aired 2009-04-28 | EAT IT, BEAT IT OR TREAT IT $400: Couscous eat it |
#5682, aired 2009-04-28 | EAT IT, BEAT IT OR TREAT IT $800: Ague treat it |
#5682, aired 2009-04-28 | EAT IT, BEAT IT OR TREAT IT $1200: Tabor beat it |
#5682, aired 2009-04-28 | EAT IT, BEAT IT OR TREAT IT $1600: Yaws treat it |
#5682, aired 2009-04-28 | EAT IT, BEAT IT OR TREAT IT $2000: Quinoa eat it |
#5588, aired 2008-12-17 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $200: A single one of these is actually an unopened flower bud from a thistlelike plant; its leaves & "Heart" are edible an artichoke |
#5588, aired 2008-12-17 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $400: It's easy to see why the wood ear type of this is so named a mushroom |
#5588, aired 2008-12-17 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $600: If these are too hot, drink milk: casein in milk wipes away capsaicin, the fiery compound that gives them heat chilies (chili peppers) |
#5588, aired 2008-12-17 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $800: These veggies, often garnet red, have the highest sugar content of any vegetable, but are very low in calories beets |
#5588, aired 2008-12-17 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $1000: These sprouts, a member of the cabbage family, are one of the few vegetables to have originated in northern Europe Brussels sprouts |
#5549, aired 2008-10-23 | LET'S EAT $400: 11-year-old Frank Epperson first got the idea for this treat after leaving his fruit-flavored soda outside overnight a popsicle |
#5549, aired 2008-10-23 | LET'S EAT $1200: This cake with coconut in its frosting isn't named for a country, but rather a chocolatier German chocolate cake |
#5549, aired 2008-10-23 | LET'S EAT $1600: This type of mozzarella is named for Asian animals brought to Europe by the Goths buffalo |
#5549, aired 2008-10-23 | LET'S EAT $2000: Actually from the French, the name of this beef cut was noted by Samuel Johnson to have been "knighted" sirloin |
#5549, aired 2008-10-23 | LET'S EAT $2,500 (Daily Double): Rumors that these snacks were named for a physicist are untrue; they're named for a town in Massachusetts Fig Newtons |
#5504, aired 2008-07-10 | VEGETARIANS CAN EAT THAT? $200: These bakery pastries don't contain the "ursine" parts in their names; that would be too "grizzly" bear claws |
#5504, aired 2008-07-10 | VEGETARIANS CAN EAT THAT? $400: The Godiva candy called an "open" one of these bivalves is a praline "pearl" resting in a chocolate shell an oyster |
#5504, aired 2008-07-10 | VEGETARIANS CAN EAT THAT? $600: In 1981 the Trolli Company gave us the "gummi" type of these creepy crawlies seen on your lawn worms |
#5504, aired 2008-07-10 | VEGETARIANS CAN EAT THAT? $800: No gastropods were harmed to make this sweet swirled roll (do the French call it a cinnamon escargot?) snails |
#5504, aired 2008-07-10 | VEGETARIANS CAN EAT THAT? $1000: The classic French cookie called a langue de chat looks like this kitty part--luckily, not an ingredient tongue |
#5487, aired 2008-06-17 | LET'S EAT $200: Soup made with ham hocks & the navy type of this is on the menu in the U.S. Senate restaurant every day beans |
#5487, aired 2008-06-17 | LET'S EAT $400: Choose a dry day to make the pie combining lemon & this egg-white concoction; the latter does poorly in humidity meringue |
#5487, aired 2008-06-17 | LET'S EAT $600: The French dish eggs sardou features artichoke hearts & this veggie, creamed spinach |
#5487, aired 2008-06-17 | LET'S EAT $800: Peter Brady wanted them with applesauce; people in Butte, Montana eat them deep-fried on buns pork chops |
#5487, aired 2008-06-17 | LET'S EAT $1000: Boursin, a rich cheese from Normandy is often flavored with the cracked type of this pepper |
#5481, aired 2008-06-09 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $200: Green olives are traditionally stuffed with these red veggies pimientos |
#5481, aired 2008-06-09 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $400: If chives were chive talkin', they'd mention they were part of this vegetable family onions |
#5481, aired 2008-06-09 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $600: For cooking, garlic bulbs are broken up into segments called these cloves |
#5481, aired 2008-06-09 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $800: When making a pie with strawberries & this tart vegetable, just use its red stalks; the leaves are toxic rhubarb |
#5481, aired 2008-06-09 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $1000: Before cooking, you have to top & tail & maybe destring the runner type of these beans |
#5401, aired 2008-02-18 | EAT IT, WEAR IT OR PLAY IT $200: Pinochle play it |
#5401, aired 2008-02-18 | EAT IT, WEAR IT OR PLAY IT $400: Prosciutto eat it |
#5401, aired 2008-02-18 | EAT IT, WEAR IT OR PLAY IT $600: Mahjong play it |
#5401, aired 2008-02-18 | EAT IT, WEAR IT OR PLAY IT $800: Mantilla wear it |
#5401, aired 2008-02-18 | EAT IT, WEAR IT OR PLAY IT $1000: Petits pois eat it |
#5380, aired 2008-01-18 | YOU ARE WHAT YOU EAT $200: Ah yes, my sweet, if you eat this sticky liquid, comb & all, I'll definitely call you my this honey |
#5380, aired 2008-01-18 | YOU ARE WHAT YOU EAT $400: Eat too many of this "original goumet jelly bean" & its name may describe your tummy a Jelly Belly |
#5380, aired 2008-01-18 | YOU ARE WHAT YOU EAT $600: If I eat a frankfurter before I show off my skiing stunts, you have every reason to call me one of these a hot dog |
#5380, aired 2008-01-18 | YOU ARE WHAT YOU EAT $800: Lewis Browning ate more than 22,000 of these creme-filled Hostess cakes; if you did the same, I'd call you one a Twinkie |
#5380, aired 2008-01-18 | YOU ARE WHAT YOU EAT $1000: If you spend your last dime on one of these New Orleans-style hero sandwiches, you really will turn into one a poor boy |
#5370, aired 2008-01-04 | AM I HUNGRY ENOUGH TO EAT THAT? $400: In Finland's Vorschmack, beef & this meat are baked, then ground with herring (pass the mint jelly) lamb |
#5370, aired 2008-01-04 | AM I HUNGRY ENOUGH TO EAT THAT? $800: This fermented legume product is the most versatile & important vegetarian ingredient in Chinese cuisine tofu |
#5370, aired 2008-01-04 | AM I HUNGRY ENOUGH TO EAT THAT? $1200: Some of the toughest meat, this cut from the leg may be fore or hind the shank |
#5370, aired 2008-01-04 | AM I HUNGRY ENOUGH TO EAT THAT? $1600: This edible Christmas item sounds a lot more appetizing when called by its Italian name, panettone a fruitcake |
#5370, aired 2008-01-04 | AM I HUNGRY ENOUGH TO EAT THAT? $2000: Hawaiians have made a staple out of this chopped fish dish made with seaweed & kukui relish poke |
#5353, aired 2007-12-12 | THEY'RE "GR"EAT! $200: 2-word title of this guy, who we hope doesn't make a house call for a very long time the Grim Reaper |
#5353, aired 2007-12-12 | THEY'RE "GR"EAT! $400: Thin oatmeal cereal in water; please, sir, may I have some more? gruel |
#5353, aired 2007-12-12 | THEY'RE "GR"EAT! $600: It's the mythological creature of earth & sky seen here the griffin |
#5353, aired 2007-12-12 | THEY'RE "GR"EAT! $800: A small cavern often used for meditation or as a shrine a grotto |
#5353, aired 2007-12-12 | THEY'RE "GR"EAT! $1000: Famous work designed by this German is seen here (Walter) Gropius |
#5247, aired 2007-06-05 | LET'S EAT $200: 3 of the Dead Sea Scrolls tell of the preparation of a sacred meal of bread & this potent potable wine |
#5247, aired 2007-06-05 | LET'S EAT $400: Put on your goggles at breakfast when eating Citrus paradisi, this fruit that grows in clusters grapefruit |
#5247, aired 2007-06-05 | LET'S EAT $600: A food staple on any camping trip is gorp, "good old raisins &" these peanuts |
#5247, aired 2007-06-05 | LET'S EAT $800: Some soldiers might say it stands for "yuck!", but "MRE" stands for this in the army a meal ready to eat |
#5247, aired 2007-06-05 | LET'S EAT $1000: Actress Suzette Reichenberg may have lent her name to this dish that is served on fire Crêpe Suzette |
#5210, aired 2007-04-13 | EAT IT, BEAT IT OR TREAT IT $200: Conga beat it |
#5210, aired 2007-04-13 | EAT IT, BEAT IT OR TREAT IT $400: Beriberi treat it |
#5210, aired 2007-04-13 | EAT IT, BEAT IT OR TREAT IT $600: Tinea treat it |
#5210, aired 2007-04-13 | EAT IT, BEAT IT OR TREAT IT $800: Daikon eat it |
#5210, aired 2007-04-13 | EAT IT, BEAT IT OR TREAT IT $1000: Udu beat it |
#5195, aired 2007-03-23 | PEOPLE YOU CAN EAT $200: Californians James Logan & Rudolf Boysen both lent their names to varieties of these they developed berries |
#5195, aired 2007-03-23 | PEOPLE YOU CAN EAT $400: As the 4th Earl of this, John Montagu could have made a lot of bread off the culinary item named for him Sandwich |
#5195, aired 2007-03-23 | PEOPLE YOU CAN EAT $600: Robert Cobb, the owner of the Brown Derby restaurant, famously created one of these a salad |
#5195, aired 2007-03-23 | PEOPLE YOU CAN EAT $800: This turn-of-the-century opera diva has had a peach & ice cream dessert & a type of toast named for her Nellie Melba |
#5195, aired 2007-03-23 | PEOPLE YOU CAN EAT $1000: These nuts native to Australia were named after a Scottish-born Australian chemist Macadamia nuts |
#5154, aired 2007-01-25 | LET'S EAT CHINESE $400: This soup may be hard to swallow, especially if the feathers & twigs aren't removed bird's nest |
#5154, aired 2007-01-25 | LET'S EAT CHINESE $800: Smaller & lighter than an egg roll, this appetizer isn't a seasonal favorite; it's enjoyed all year long spring roll |
#5154, aired 2007-01-25 | LET'S EAT CHINESE $1200: This classic dish is known in Chinese as Beijing kao ya Peking duck |
#5154, aired 2007-01-25 | LET'S EAT CHINESE $1600: Spice up your evening with this Szechwan dish made with your choice of meat, peppers, dried chiles & peanuts kung pao |
#5154, aired 2007-01-25 | LET'S EAT CHINESE $2000: Traditionally, it's shredded pork stir-fried with eggs, bamboo shoots & other veggies & served in thin pancakes moo shoo |
#5141, aired 2007-01-08 | EAT YOUR FRUITS & VEGGIES $400: It's traditional to top ham with glazed rings of this tropical fruit pineapple |
#5141, aired 2007-01-08 | EAT YOUR FRUITS & VEGGIES $1200: In the 1970s the sugar snap variety of this veggie was created when snow & green varieties were crossed peas |
#5141, aired 2007-01-08 | EAT YOUR FRUITS & VEGGIES $1600: Although this cruciferous vegetable is usually seen with white florets, green & purple are also available cauliflower |
#5141, aired 2007-01-08 | EAT YOUR FRUITS & VEGGIES $2000: Unlike most varieties of this fruit, the calimyrna is pollinated by wasps; it's not self-pollinating a fig |
#5141, aired 2007-01-08 | EAT YOUR FRUITS & VEGGIES $3,000 (Daily Double): Beurre d'Anjou, a variety of this fruit, is thought to have originated in France; it was introduced into the U.S. in 1842 a pear |
#5075, aired 2006-10-06 | EAT WELL $200: Eat a salad with this vegetable that can be classified as butterhead, crisphead, leaf or Romaine lettuce |
#5075, aired 2006-10-06 | EAT WELL $400: Some of the recommended "whole" types of this food pyramid product are quinoa, millet, sorghum & barley grains |
#5075, aired 2006-10-06 | EAT WELL $600: If you want to go nuts, eat this nut native to Brazil and taken to Asia by Portuguese missionaries the cashew |
#5075, aired 2006-10-06 | EAT WELL $800: If you don't like fuzzy food, eat this fruit that often originates from peach seeds a nectarine |
#5075, aired 2006-10-06 | EAT WELL $1000: Among legumes, a good source of protein, are peas & this type of seed such as the pinto, white or black variety beans |
#5061, aired 2006-09-18 | LET'S EAT $400: To make this labor-intensive Italian dish, you must constantly stir stock into rice 1/2 cup at a time risotto |
#5061, aired 2006-09-18 | LET'S EAT $800: This catch-all stew of meat, potatoes & vegetables is said to have originaed in the hobo camps of the early 1900s mulligan stew |
#5061, aired 2006-09-18 | LET'S EAT $1,000 (Daily Double): For Marcel Proust the "vicissitudes of life had become indifferent" after eating these small French cakes madeleines |
#5061, aired 2006-09-18 | LET'S EAT $1200: This steak used for fajitas, also called the Romanian tenderloin, is the diaphragm muscle skirt steak |
#5061, aired 2006-09-18 | LET'S EAT $1600: This type of quahog clam is named for a Long Island bay, not its anatomy Littleneck |
#4892, aired 2005-12-13 | YOU'RE JUST "GR"EAT $200: One particle of sand a grain |
#4892, aired 2005-12-13 | YOU'RE JUST "GR"EAT $400: It's the geographic feature mentioned in Arizona's state nickname the Grand Canyon |
#4892, aired 2005-12-13 | YOU'RE JUST "GR"EAT $600: Not only did Buck Henry pen this 1967 coming-of-age film classic, he played a hotel desk clerk, too The Graduate |
#4892, aired 2005-12-13 | YOU'RE JUST "GR"EAT $800: In 1967 "The Colonel's Coup" overthrew the monarchy in this country Greece |
#4892, aired 2005-12-13 | YOU'RE JUST "GR"EAT $1000: The 4 basic forces in physics are the strong nuclear, the weak nuclear, the electromagnetic & this one gravity |
#4891, aired 2005-12-12 | TIME TO EAT $200: From the Italian for "cord", it's long thin strands of pasta spaghetti |
#4891, aired 2005-12-12 | TIME TO EAT $400: It's the brand of hot dog that "kids love to bite" Armour hot dogs |
#4891, aired 2005-12-12 | TIME TO EAT $600: This protein-rich Middle Eastern dish is deep-fried chickpea patties & tahini wrapped in flat bread falafel |
#4891, aired 2005-12-12 | TIME TO EAT $800: The Chicken Po'boy & the Catfish Po'boy are culinary highlights of this fried-chicken chain Popeyes |
#4891, aired 2005-12-12 | TIME TO EAT $1000: Latvian food favorites include unpasteurized beer, herbed potatoes & these long thin fish of the order Apodes eels |
#4850, aired 2005-10-14 | GROWN-UPS EAT THAT? $200: If a grown-up tries to serve you the oxtail type of this, say, "No thanks. I'll have the chicken noodle" soup |
#4850, aired 2005-10-14 | GROWN-UPS EAT THAT? $400: Don't be fooled: calamari is just a fancy name for this sea creature that has suction cups on some of its squiggly arms squid |
#4850, aired 2005-10-14 | GROWN-UPS EAT THAT? $600: Maybe kids would eat more of these green spears if we called them by their German name, Spargel asparagus |
#4850, aired 2005-10-14 | GROWN-UPS EAT THAT? $800: Unlike Florentine cookies (dipped in chocolate--yum!), eggs Florentine is made with this leafy green veggie (not so yum) spinach |
#4850, aired 2005-10-14 | GROWN-UPS EAT THAT? $1000: Trifle is a fancy dessert; this similar word is a fungus found in the forest by trained pigs a truffle |
#4717, aired 2005-02-22 | EAT IT, SPEND IT, OR WEAR IT $200: Dashiki wear it |
#4717, aired 2005-02-22 | EAT IT, SPEND IT, OR WEAR IT $400: Kashi eat it |
#4717, aired 2005-02-22 | EAT IT, SPEND IT, OR WEAR IT $600: Jerkin wear it |
#4717, aired 2005-02-22 | EAT IT, SPEND IT, OR WEAR IT $800: Birr spend it |
#4717, aired 2005-02-22 | EAT IT, SPEND IT, OR WEAR IT $1000: Schnecken eat it |
#4708, aired 2005-02-09 | EAT YOUR VEGETABLES! $200: Catherine de Medici was a lover of this food eaten by scraping the leaves with your teeth an artichoke |
#4708, aired 2005-02-09 | EAT YOUR VEGETABLES! $400: The cross called celtuce combines the taste thrill of these two vegetables celery & lettuce |
#4708, aired 2005-02-09 | EAT YOUR VEGETABLES! $600: They make up the genus Beta beets |
#4708, aired 2005-02-09 | EAT YOUR VEGETABLES! $800: Each of the plants seen here yields dozens of these veggies Brussels sprouts |
#4708, aired 2005-02-09 | EAT YOUR VEGETABLES! $1000: Snow Crown, a popular variety of this veggie, has a pure white head cauliflower |
#4641, aired 2004-11-08 | IF YOU GROW IT, THEY WILL EAT $200: Endive is a member of the same family as this flower, so "give me your answer, do" daisy |
#4641, aired 2004-11-08 | IF YOU GROW IT, THEY WILL EAT $400: While there are over 5,000 varieties of this fruit, you probably eat the Anjou or Bartlett a pear |
#4641, aired 2004-11-08 | IF YOU GROW IT, THEY WILL EAT $600: Though American in origin, the Cape Gooseberry got its name by being cultivated on this South African Cape the Cape of Good Hope |
#4641, aired 2004-11-08 | IF YOU GROW IT, THEY WILL EAT $800: One of the oldest plants cultivated by man, it produces 1 bunch of "hands" & then is cut down bananas |
#4641, aired 2004-11-08 | IF YOU GROW IT, THEY WILL EAT $1000: The California types of these are Mexican-Guatemalan hybrids & include the Hass avocados |
#4609, aired 2004-09-23 | YOU ARE WHAT YOU EAT $200: I wasn't surprised to see that overacting thespian eat the Smithfield type of this (he really is one, you know) a ham |
#4609, aired 2004-09-23 | YOU ARE WHAT YOU EAT $400: Gorge on these chocolate-&-peanut butter bars (or let them slip through your digits) & folks will call you this Butterfingers |
#4609, aired 2004-09-23 | YOU ARE WHAT YOU EAT $600: I couldn't believe it when I saw the boss eat a 20-lb. wheel of brie--that's why we gave him this title the Big Cheese |
#4609, aired 2004-09-23 | YOU ARE WHAT YOU EAT $800: Hey, you! You with the long-lasting caramel sucker & the blonde in the mink! Bet she calls you this! Sugar Daddy |
#4609, aired 2004-09-23 | YOU ARE WHAT YOU EAT $1000: You're such a grouch! For your June 25th birthday I'm serving you this, the symbol of your zodiac sign a crab |
#4500, aired 2004-03-12 | THEY EAT THAT? $400: A food stand by London's Petticoat Lane is called, & serves, "Jellied" this elongated fish eel |
#4500, aired 2004-03-12 | THEY EAT THAT? $800: In Berlin it's popular to dust your sausage with this powder popular in Asia curry powder |
#4500, aired 2004-03-12 | THEY EAT THAT? $1200: Swifts may provide the raw material for this Asian soup bird's nest soup |
#4500, aired 2004-03-12 | THEY EAT THAT? $1600: Callos, this stomach lining, is considered a delicacy in Madrid tripe |
#4500, aired 2004-03-12 | THEY EAT THAT? $2000: This spread that's from the Land Down Under & in the song "Down Under" is definitely an acquired taste Vegemite |
#4418, aired 2003-11-19 | EAT YOUR FOREIGN VEGETABLES $200: In Italy these are distinguished as peperoni rossi & peperoni verdi red & green peppers |
#4418, aired 2003-11-19 | EAT YOUR FOREIGN VEGETABLES $400: In Espanol it's espinaca (& I'm still not eating it) spinach |
#4418, aired 2003-11-19 | EAT YOUR FOREIGN VEGETABLES $600: In French they're petits pois & weird people use a knife & honey to eat them peas |
#4418, aired 2003-11-19 | EAT YOUR FOREIGN VEGETABLES $800: In Polish it's cebula; you can cry out your response now onions |
#4418, aired 2003-11-19 | EAT YOUR FOREIGN VEGETABLES $1000: In a Caribbean mood in Sweden? You might serve your svarta bonor, these, with kokat ris, "white rice" black beans |
#4358, aired 2003-07-09 | EAT, EAT! $400: "Joy of Cooking" says a rule of thumb is 1/2 cup of this for every pound of turkey stuffing |
#4358, aired 2003-07-09 | EAT, EAT! $800: This small fish sold whole is probably the best-known fish with "dab" in its name a sanddab |
#4358, aired 2003-07-09 | EAT, EAT! $1200: In this Mideastern equivalent of a gyro, meat is shaved off a rotating vertical spit shawarma |
#4358, aired 2003-07-09 | EAT, EAT! $1600: Eaten at Passover, charoset is a fruit & nut mix which represents this used by bricklayers mortar |
#4286, aired 2003-03-31 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $200: It's the number one vegetable (or is it a fruit?) planted by backyard gardeners in the U.S. tomato |
#4286, aired 2003-03-31 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $400: Habaneros are the hottest domesticated types of these peppers |
#4286, aired 2003-03-31 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $600: Most Idaho baking potatoes are of this variety which may weigh up to 18 ounces Russet |
#4286, aired 2003-03-31 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $800: The French know this purple pear-shaped vegetable as an aubergine eggplant |
#4286, aired 2003-03-31 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $1000: Also known as a butter bean, the 2 main varieties of this veggie are baby & fordhook lima bean |
#4201, aired 2002-12-02 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $200: In 1893, as a result of a tariff dispute, the Supreme Court proclaimed it a vegetable, not a fruit the tomato |
#4201, aired 2002-12-02 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $400: In the 1970s horticulturists developed sugar snaps by crossing the snow & green varieties of this peas |
#4201, aired 2002-12-02 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $600: Whether its smooth-leaf or savoy, make sure you wash the sand off the leaves of this vegetable before eating spinach |
#4201, aired 2002-12-02 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $800: Red globes are radishes; yellow & white globes are varieties of this veggie onion |
#4201, aired 2002-12-02 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $1000: When eating these hot vegetables, keep a glass of milk handy; it neutralizes the hot compound capsaicin peppers |
#4153, aired 2002-09-25 | EAT YOUR WAY ACROSS THE U.S.A. $200: At Obrycki's in Baltimore you can feast on this in a savory soup, "cocktail" or "cakes" crab |
#4153, aired 2002-09-25 | EAT YOUR WAY ACROSS THE U.S.A. $400: Our head writer says the world's best pizza is from La Casa Pizzaria on Leavenworth St. in this largest Nebraska city Omaha |
#4153, aired 2002-09-25 | EAT YOUR WAY ACROSS THE U.S.A. $600: At St. Louis' Crown Candy Kitchen, drink 5 of these (milkshakes, not beer) in 1/2 hour & they're free! malts |
#4153, aired 2002-09-25 | EAT YOUR WAY ACROSS THE U.S.A. $800: Quaker Steak & Lubes in PA. & OH. offer 15 kinds of these in a bucket; the atomic ones come with a release form! chicken wings |
#4153, aired 2002-09-25 | EAT YOUR WAY ACROSS THE U.S.A. $1000: Veal meatloaf & peach bread pudding are specialties of Buckhead Diner, in this city's upscale Buckhead district Atlanta |
#4140, aired 2002-09-06 | EAT MEAT $400: This meat is also called kid & when curried is a Jamaican specialty goat |
#4140, aired 2002-09-06 | EAT MEAT $800: In the film comedy "Love and Death", Napoleon says the Napoleon pastry must be developed before this British meat dish Beef Wellington |
#4140, aired 2002-09-06 | EAT MEAT $1200: From a Cree word, this Native American food was made from cranberries, dried deer meat & melted fat pemmican |
#4140, aired 2002-09-06 | EAT MEAT $1600: From the French for "to crunch", it's meat combined with a thick white sauce & deep-fried croquettes |
#4140, aired 2002-09-06 | EAT MEAT $2000: These "meats", including the kidneys, heart & brain, must be "the spice of life" variety meats |
#4121, aired 2002-07-01 | LET'S GO EAT $200: Competing establishments called Ray's vie to sell New Yorkers this Italian specialty pizza |
#4121, aired 2002-07-01 | LET'S GO EAT $400: If you're in this city & in the mood for meat, your choices include Morton's, the Pump Room & Mike Ditka's Chicago |
#4121, aired 2002-07-01 | LET'S GO EAT $600: This chain serves Friday's Fajitas on Saturday, Sunday & Monday too-- it's one of their trademarks TGI Fridays |
#4121, aired 2002-07-01 | LET'S GO EAT $800: Alitoto's in San Francisco is credited with inventing cioppino, this type of stew a fish stew |
#4121, aired 2002-07-01 | LET'S GO EAT $1000: Chapter One is a restaurant housed in this world capital's Writers Museum off Parnell Square Dublin |
#4107, aired 2002-06-11 | EAT IT! $200: This Hormel product was once simply known as "spiced ham" Spam |
#4107, aired 2002-06-11 | EAT IT! $400: It's the Spanish-named appetizer of tortilla chips & often beans, beef & onions topped with melted cheese nachos |
#4107, aired 2002-06-11 | EAT IT! $600: Paper-thin & often served for dessert, it's the French equivalent of a pancake crêpes |
#4107, aired 2002-06-11 | EAT IT! $800: (Jimmy of the Clue Crew gets ready to eat skewered meat.) This Asian favorite, sometimes chicken, sometimes beef, is usually served with a spicy peanut sauce satay |
#4107, aired 2002-06-11 | EAT IT! $1000: Traditionally, shepherd's pie contains this meat, ground or diced lamb |
#4078, aired 2002-05-01 | LET THEM EAT CAKE $200: Truly "heavenly", this sponge cake made without egg yolks or butter is fat-free angel food cake |
#4078, aired 2002-05-01 | LET THEM EAT CAKE $400: Despite its name this state dessert of Massachusetts is really a custard-filled cake Boston cream pie |
#4078, aired 2002-05-01 | LET THEM EAT CAKE $600: (Sarah of the Clue Crew puts in an evening as a dessert chef.) This dessert is a layer of cake & ice cream that's topped with meringue & then browned in the oven Baked Alaska |
#4078, aired 2002-05-01 | LET THEM EAT CAKE $800: Ricotta can be used to make this type of cake, part of a "factory" restaurant chain's name cheesecake |
#4078, aired 2002-05-01 | LET THEM EAT CAKE $1000: This 3-layered "feminine" white cake filled with fruit & nuts was created in South Carolina, not Maryland Lady Baltimore cake |
#4069, aired 2002-04-18 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $200: A recipe calling for this American marsupial might begin, "First, you start your truck" possum |
#4069, aired 2002-04-18 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $400: Gravy can be made from these, the liver, heart & gizzard of a fowl; they may include the neck, feet & cock's comb, too giblets |
#4069, aired 2002-04-18 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $600: Sure, they taste like chicken, but grenouille legs are the legs of these frogs |
#4069, aired 2002-04-18 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $800: This clinging gastropod, mentioned in a Don Knotts film title, can be tasty in a vinaigrette dressing limpet |
#4069, aired 2002-04-18 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $1000: Heaps of shells found at prehistoric sites indicate early man ate these; the petit-gris type is popular today snails |
#4021, aired 2002-02-11 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $200: Green olives are traditionally stuffed with these red veggies pimentos |
#4021, aired 2002-02-11 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $400: Cooks often use different varieties of these tubers for salads than the kind they use for baking potatoes |
#4021, aired 2002-02-11 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $600: Winter types of this include banana, spaghetti & acorn squash |
#4021, aired 2002-02-11 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $800: When making a pie with this tart vegetable & strawberries, just use its red stalks; the leaves are toxic rhubarbs |
#4021, aired 2002-02-11 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $1000: A sunchoke is also called a Jerusalem one of these an artichoke |
#3989, aired 2001-12-27 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $200: When microwaving a whole potato, do this to it so it doesn't explode poke a hole in it |
#3989, aired 2001-12-27 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $400: If chives were chive talkin' they'd mention they were part of this veggie's family onions |
#3989, aired 2001-12-27 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $600: Garlic bulbs are broken up into segments called these for cooking cloves |
#3989, aired 2001-12-27 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $800: An L.A. Times correction on March 29, 2001 reported that one of these it had shown as edible can be poisonous mushroom |
#3989, aired 2001-12-27 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES! $1000: All out of pumpkins? You can substitute the butternut type of this in recipes squash |
#3963, aired 2001-11-21 | I EAT A... $100: ...corned beef, Swiss cheese & sauerkraut sandwich on rye that is fried & named this Reuben |
#3963, aired 2001-11-21 | I EAT A... $200: ...Denver omelet, which is usually made with ham, onion & the bell type of these peppers |
#3963, aired 2001-11-21 | I EAT A... $300: ...bowl of this Creole specialty, whose name comes from an African word for okra gumbo |
#3963, aired 2001-11-21 | I EAT A... $400: ...pita dipped in this thick Middle Eastern sauce made from chickpeas hummus |
#3963, aired 2001-11-21 | I EAT A... $500: ...creamy potato & leek soup served cold that's called this vichyssoise |
#3897, aired 2001-07-10 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $200: We wonder if this variety meat tastes you while you're tasting it tongue |
#3897, aired 2001-07-10 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $400: Don't put your PB&J on this -- it's the thymus gland or pancreas of a calf sweetbread |
#3897, aired 2001-07-10 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $800: A sausage made out of trotters is made from these parts of a pig or a sheep the feet |
#3897, aired 2001-07-10 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $1000: Often sauteed with onions (probably to mask the taste), this brownish large organ has great nutritional value the liver |
#3897, aired 2001-07-10 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $1,500 (Daily Double): This word for beef stomach lining has become a slang term for "rubbish" tripe |
#3784, aired 2001-02-01 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $100: Paris Silverskins are the small ones of these used in Gibson cocktails onions |
#3784, aired 2001-02-01 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $200: Yes, they were named after the capital of Peru lima beans |
#3784, aired 2001-02-01 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $300: In Asian cuisine, sprouts are from beans & shoots are usually from this bamboo |
#3784, aired 2001-02-01 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $400: The Dutch type of this is white, as it's grown underground; the American is green, as the spears are grown above asparagus |
#3784, aired 2001-02-01 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $500: Antoine-Auguste Parmentier pushed this tuber on Louis XVI; now Parmentier in a recipe means "with" it potato |
#3694, aired 2000-09-28 | EAT YOUR CARBOHYDRATES $100: In Indonesia nasi goreng is the fried type of this staple grain Rice |
#3694, aired 2000-09-28 | EAT YOUR CARBOHYDRATES $200: Y'all can bulk up with this pie made from the nut of a type of hickory tree Pecan pie |
#3694, aired 2000-09-28 | EAT YOUR CARBOHYDRATES $300: Type of pasta seen here, its name means "striped" Rigatoni |
#3694, aired 2000-09-28 | EAT YOUR CARBOHYDRATES $400: This name for a seasoned, stewed &/or stuffed mass of dough follows "Diddle Diddle" in a nursery rhyme Dumpling |
#3694, aired 2000-09-28 | EAT YOUR CARBOHYDRATES $500: The sugar type of this root vegetable is white; the table type is red Beet |
#3693, aired 2000-09-27 | LET'S EAT CHINESE $200: This liquid, especially the white type, usually provides the sour in sweet-&-sour sauce vinegar |
#3693, aired 2000-09-27 | LET'S EAT CHINESE $400 (Daily Double): Famous rank of Tso, aka Tao, a 19th c. warrior after whom a chicken dish was named general |
#3693, aired 2000-09-27 | LET'S EAT CHINESE $400: Though it has a liquid name, this edible tuber of Chinese sedge adds a solid, crunchy texture to stir-fry a water chestnut |
#3693, aired 2000-09-27 | LET'S EAT CHINESE $800: Martin Yan's recipe for the crab version of this egg dish features ginger & cilantro as well as crab & eggs egg foo yung |
#3693, aired 2000-09-27 | LET'S EAT CHINESE $1000: The dried buds of this type of lily are called "golden needles" the tiger lily |
#3591, aired 2000-03-27 | "EAT" IT $200: According to the old saying, these people "never prosper" cheaters |
#3591, aired 2000-03-27 | "EAT" IT $400: Famous ones were concluded at Utrecht, Ghent & Versailles treaties |
#3591, aired 2000-03-27 | "EAT" IT $600: It can mean to fall back, or a safe, secluded place retreat |
#3591, aired 2000-03-27 | "EAT" IT $800: In 1819 he wrote an ode "To Autumn" John Keats |
#3449, aired 1999-09-09 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $200: Broccoflower is a cross between a cauliflower & this veggie Broccoli |
#3449, aired 1999-09-09 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $400: Iceberg & Romaine are 2 of the most common varieties of this salad vegetable Lettuce |
#3449, aired 1999-09-09 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $600: The pickle on your hamburger was made from this veggie (which is actually a fruit) Cucumber |
#3449, aired 1999-09-09 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $1000: Brussels sprouts are related to this main ingredient of cole slaw Cabbage |
#3449, aired 1999-09-09 | EAT YOUR VEGGIES $2,000 (Daily Double): If you're forced to eat spinach, it's the part of the plant you'll eat Leaf |
#3380, aired 1999-04-23 | LET'S EAT ITALIAN! $100: Served before the pasta, it's an appetizer plate of meats, cheese, fish & vegetables antipasto |
#3380, aired 1999-04-23 | LET'S EAT ITALIAN! $200: Long, very thin pasta called capellini is also known by this "divine" name angel hair pasta |
#3380, aired 1999-04-23 | LET'S EAT ITALIAN! $300: This blue-veined cheese is named for a suburb of Milan, not a snake-haired monster Gorgonzola |
#3380, aired 1999-04-23 | LET'S EAT ITALIAN! $400: From the Italian for "knot of wood", these potato dumplings may have cheese or spinach in them gnocchi |
#3380, aired 1999-04-23 | LET'S EAT ITALIAN! $500: It's a layered ice cream dessert usually containing chopped fruits & nuts spumoni |
#3378, aired 1999-04-21 | EAT THAI $200: The staple food in the north of Thailand is the sticky or glutinous type of this Rice |
#3378, aired 1999-04-21 | EAT THAI $400: Tom Kha Kai is a chicken soup flavored with the "milk" of this Coconut |
#3378, aired 1999-04-21 | EAT THAI $600: In the names of noodle dishes this word precedes "Thai", "see ew" & "woon sen" Pad |
#3378, aired 1999-04-21 | EAT THAI $800: You might wish this skewer of chicken or beef served with peanut sauce was "just a little bit longer" Satay |
#3378, aired 1999-04-21 | EAT THAI $1000: Like Southern cooking, Thai-American cuisine features this be"whiskered" creature, deep-fried Catfish |
#3354, aired 1999-03-18 | EAT A GREEN THING $200: Bibb & butterhead are not an MTV cartoon duo, but varieties of this vegetable lettuce |
#3354, aired 1999-03-18 | EAT A GREEN THING $400: Small versions of this common garden vegetable used for pickling are often called gherkins cucumbers |
#3354, aired 1999-03-18 | EAT A GREEN THING $600: These vegetables with a flavor like mild cabbage include the name of a city Brussels sprouts |
#3354, aired 1999-03-18 | EAT A GREEN THING $800: The name of this herb that is used mainly as a decoration on meat dishes comes from the Greek for "rock celery" parsley |
#3354, aired 1999-03-18 | EAT A GREEN THING $1000: Also called roquette, this peppery salad green is very popular with Italian palates arugula |
#3276, aired 1998-11-30 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $100: The book "Fashionable Food" tells how to make a "truly awful" salad with a banana & this cinema snack popcorn |
#3276, aired 1998-11-30 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $200: Witchetty grubs are large insect larvae savored (& named) by this country's Aborigines Australia |
#3276, aired 1998-11-30 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $300: These fleshy growths that top roosters' heads are blanched, dipped in batter & fried for use as a garnish combs |
#3276, aired 1998-11-30 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $400: Larousse reports that the moray type of this is served cold, with garlic mayonnaise eel |
#3276, aired 1998-11-30 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $500: Secreted by sperm whales & found in perfume, this waxy substance is used as a spice in the East ambergris |
#3075, aired 1998-01-02 | WHAT'S TO EAT? $100: The lox that you put on a bagel is a smoked variety of this fish Salmon |
#3075, aired 1998-01-02 | WHAT'S TO EAT? $200: The name of these Asian dumplings sounds like you'll never get them out of the pan Pot stickers |
#3075, aired 1998-01-02 | WHAT'S TO EAT? $300: It's the Irish-sounding name for a diced potato dish fried with onions & peppers Potatoes O'Brien |
#3075, aired 1998-01-02 | WHAT'S TO EAT? $400: Fresh broccoli & zucchini are often featured in this pasta dish served in "spring" or any time Pasta Primavera |
#3075, aired 1998-01-02 | WHAT'S TO EAT? $500: We salute you if you know port-salut is a type of this Cheese |
#3040, aired 1997-11-14 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $100: This snake-like fish can often be found in sushi eel |
#3040, aired 1997-11-14 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $200: The cheeks of this animal can be smoked, as its belly is smoked for bacon Pig |
#3040, aired 1997-11-14 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $300: Mold gives this type of colorful cheese, like Roquefort, its flavor Blue cheese |
#3040, aired 1997-11-14 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $400: McDonald's introduced this "grown-up" hamburger in 1996 Arch Deluxe |
#3040, aired 1997-11-14 | PEOPLE EAT THAT? $500: Tripe is the lining of this digestive organ of cattle Stomach |
#2010, aired 1993-05-07 | EAT YOUR VEGETABLES $100: This vine fruit eaten as a salad vegetable is called a cuke for short cucumber |
#2010, aired 1993-05-07 | EAT YOUR VEGETABLES $200: Like oranges, radishes are rich in this vitamin vitamin C |
#2010, aired 1993-05-07 | EAT YOUR VEGETABLES $300: To make cole slaw don't cook this main ingredient; just slice, shred or chop it cabbage |
#2010, aired 1993-05-07 | EAT YOUR VEGETABLES $400: The white rose type of this is similar to the russet but has a thinner skin potato |
#2010, aired 1993-05-07 | EAT YOUR VEGETABLES $500: This onion relative that resembles a giant scallion is a national symbol of Wales leek |
#1944, aired 1993-02-04 | LET THEM EAT CAKE $200: Heloise hints you can substitute club soda for this when you use German chocolate cake mix ordinary water |
#1944, aired 1993-02-04 | LET THEM EAT CAKE $400: This dessert with a diminutive name is often topped with strawberries shortcake |
#1944, aired 1993-02-04 | LET THEM EAT CAKE $600: You can eat Zuppa Inglese with a fork, not a spoon, even though its name means this in Italian English soup |
#1944, aired 1993-02-04 | LET THEM EAT CAKE $800: Funnel cakes are a specialty of these people who moved to William Penn's colony in the 1600s Pennsylvania Dutch |
#1944, aired 1993-02-04 | LET THEM EAT CAKE $1000: Cassata Alla Siciliana, or Sicilian Cream Cake, is made with this cheesecake cheese ricotta |
Final Jeopardy! Round clues (0 results returned)
Didn't find what you wanted? Try your J! Archive search using Google, Bing, or Yahoo!