Onion jam. From the people who brought you mackerel jelly and raccoon marmalade. What's next, mushroom ice cream? (okay, nearly made myself gag with that last one)
My Iranian friend makes his own homemade bacon ice cream... uses bacon grease instead of the fatty cream and maple syrum instead of sugar. Throws in some bits of bacon when it's almost done. Sounds revolting but is actually quite good.
I got 754,000 hits for "black currant jelly," 3.2 million for kiwi, 13 million for lime. Never heard of Bacon or Onion jelly.. I did guess Jalapeno, though.
Is currant jelly different from black currant jelly? I'm not actually sure what a currant is I just know I've had the latter in my refrigerator before.
Blackcurrants and redcurrants are a different thing entirely, but they are specifically called blackcurrant and redcurrant. They are not types of currant.
I'm guessing you may use currant for blackcurrant?
Currants can be black, red or white. Most often though the jelly will indicate. To account for all you would have to do separate searches for black currant, blackcurrant, red currant, redcurrant, and so on, and add the totals. The different currants are different species so I would say that's like combining blackberry and raspberry for one answer.
I tried gooseberry jam and gooseberry jelly, (578,000 and 434,000 hits, respectively.) Gooseberries are a first cousin of the currant, but I didn't even think to try currant. BTW, I made 63 jars of gooseberry jam this spring. Surely that should have boosted the stats. ;-)
Interesting, but I'm not sure how Google search results is a credible measurement. This quiz was making me hungry until I gave up and saw onion and bacon.
Marmalade is usually orange flavour, but you can have other citrus fruits in it. As the description says, the point is to guess to particular flavour of the various jams, jellies, marmalades and preserves. It doesn't say they're all called jam. Chutney can be various flavours too - mango chutney being a famous example.
This quiz seems possibly inaccurate. There are too many things that could go at the end of the flavours. How is cranberry not on here? Cranberry sauce (eaten with roast turkey especially) is extremely popular, at least in the UK. Also, "blackcurrant" should be accepted for "currant" (as the main type of currant jam). And "bramble" should be accepted and taken into account for "blackberry".
In the US, jellied cranberries are not the same thing as cranberry jelly. Here, jelly refers to adding pectin and sugar to fruit juice and cooking until clear and thickened. Jam refers to mashing the whole fruits and cooking with sugar until thickened, and preserves are pieces of fruit (not mashed) cooked with sugar until clear and thickened. Marmalade is made with citrus fruits. We also have butters (apple butter is the favorite) made by pureeing the fruits, adding sugar, and cooking for hours until dark and sweet.
Maybe you should imagine that onion Jelly is not supposed to be put on pancakes like other jellies, but with foie gras or other meat it is actually excellent :)
Blackcurrants and redcurrants are a different thing entirely, but they are specifically called blackcurrant and redcurrant. They are not types of currant.
I'm guessing you may use currant for blackcurrant?
Some people don't know what there missing.
#justsayin