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Can you name the food most associated with each city?
created by
godorock
Enter a food in the box below
Correctly named foods will show up below
Answers do not have to be guessed in order
This quiz has not been verified by Sporcle
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Enter food:
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05:00
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city
food
Buffalo, NY
Philadelphia, PA
Chicago, IL
Miami, FL
New York, NY
Baltimore, MD
Boston, MA
Pittsburgh, PA
New Orleans, LA
Kansas City, MO
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There are
18 comments
for this game.
(Warning: comments may contain spoilers)
U.S. Cities Most Famous Food Quiz
by
godorock
Created Dec 9, 2009 in
Miscellaneous
Game Plays 3,091
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Food Quizzes
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associated
alexinman
:
Dec 10th, 2009 at 00:50 GMT
-3 points
Isn't cheesesteak one word? I always write it that way. And maybe you should accept hoagies and grinders for cheesesteaks. Also, I usually associate North Carolina and Kansas City with barbecue more often than Memphis.
ted
:
Dec 10th, 2009 at 01:13 GMT
7 points
Cool idea, needs better execution. Accept "wings" and "buffalo wings" for Buffalo; "cheesesteak" for Philly; "BBQ" for Memphis. There's currently something wrong with the Boston answer, because "clam chowder" didn't work for me. And I think you should drop New Orleans; that city has an entire cuisine more than a single dish.
cheeks9441
:
Dec 10th, 2009 at 01:19 GMT
6 points
Agreed with the above comments, except cheesesteaks are not the same thing as hoagies and grinders.
TheFoxManCometh
:
Dec 10th, 2009 at 01:32 GMT
0 points
seafood is not a dish. gumbo/beignet's for new orleans, crab cakes for baltimore (crab cakes and football, thats what maryland does) also, the pittsburgh answer should be mustard. there's a reason the steelers are yellow and play at heinz field
shslibrary
:
Dec 10th, 2009 at 18:10 GMT
-2 points
Terrible.
SamB45
:
Dec 10th, 2009 at 19:52 GMT
1 point
I should have known by the fact that the title was not capitalized that this would be a horrible quiz.
DillonFightSong
:
Dec 11th, 2009 at 03:29 GMT
3 points
I must have typed "Primanti Brothers" about 5 times, then gave up and tried to figure out what else Pittsburgh is known for. Nope. It's just misspelled.
JayO
:
Dec 11th, 2009 at 23:55 GMT
3 points
It's a cheesesteak, not a philly cheesesteak, especially if you're asking about the city of Philadelphia
OldSpider
:
Dec 14th, 2009 at 02:25 GMT
2 points
In the US, the more common spelling is 'cream' (as in Boston cream pie).
johndead690
:
Dec 16th, 2009 at 18:55 GMT
2 points
memphis is by far the city most associated with barbeque.
stmiller
:
Feb 7th, 2010 at 16:35 GMT
4 points
Interesting idea. The other comments are a little harsh, although the answers are somewhat subjective... That being said, I also thought of empanadas for Miami, bagels for NYC, baked beans for Boston, and jambalaya for New Orleans.
debbiedoesnothin
:
Feb 10th, 2010 at 22:43 GMT
3 points
I agree with baked beans for Boston. I've never even heard of Primanti Brothers.
Strattosphere
:
Apr 19th, 2010 at 17:14 GMT
2 points
Cajun food for New Orleans.
kristen58
:
Apr 19th, 2010 at 18:37 GMT
1 point
I've heard of Primanti Bros, but I still didn't get that one. It's awfully specific. Could you also possibly accept "thick crust pizza" for Chicago. I saw "thin crust pizza" for NY and tried a parallel structure for Chicago.
MFThomas
:
Apr 28th, 2010 at 22:53 GMT
1 point
there are broblems 1.accept cheesteak 2. accept bbq 3. accept baked beans DIE
Isstvan
:
Sep 20th, 2010 at 19:07 GMT
2 points
@kristen58: thick crust pizza and deep dish pizza are not the same thing. It is strange though that pizza will get you the New York answer, but not the Chicago answer.
lalalala
:
Oct 14th, 2010 at 02:40 GMT
1 point
@isstvan: that's because thin crust is default pizza and deep dish is a variant.
Krys2485
:
Nov 17th, 2010 at 00:51 GMT
1 point
Boston actually isn't known for the clam chowder as it is called New England clam chowder not Boston clam chowder
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