What do these foods do for work?

Foods Named After Professions
Shepherd's Pie. Hunter's Chicken. General Tso's Chicken. What do all these meals have in common?
They're foods named after professions and job titles.
Sometimes, food doesn't just feed the stomach โ it tells a story. Some dishes are tied to geography, others to culture or family. And then there are the ones that come with a job title baked right into the name.
But here's the catch: you've probably eaten these dishes without giving much thought to the job title on the plate. That's where this quiz comes in. We're serving up a buffet of questions where each one challenges you to identify the profession hidden in the name of the food. Sounds easy, right? You'll be surprised.
Let's unpack the story behind this delicious connection between jobs and what we eat.
Why Are So Many Dishes Named After Jobs?
Historically, meals were shaped by local trades, like shepherds, hunters, and fishermen. For those people, their lifestyle shaped what they ate. Over time, those meals became iconic, and the job stuck to the name.
Sometimes it's practical โ like shepherd's pie, which uses lamb because, well, shepherds herd sheep. Other times it's more symbolic โ like General Tso's chicken, a dish named after a 19th-century Chinese military leader who probably never tasted it, but lends it an aura of boldness and heat.
Here's a Taste of What to Expect
To whet your appetite, here are some dishes you might encounter in this quiz, along with a quick hint:
- Shepherd's Pie: Minced lamb, topped with mashed potatoes. Spoiler: it's not beef if you're doing it right.
- Fisherman's Stew: Think tomato-y, briny, full of seafood. Perfect for a cold coastal night.
- Hunter's Chicken: Hearty and meaty, sometimes with mushrooms. A nod to game meat and foraged ingredients.
- Cowboy Beans: Meaty, smoky beans perfect around a campfire. Good enough to fuel a day of herding cattle and breaking stereotypes.
- Baker's Dozen: Technically not a dish, but a food term with guild-based origins. And yes, it's 13, not 12.
Some are historical, others are playful. A few may stump even die-hard foodies. But every question comes with a little explanation so you'll learn something, even if you get it wrong.
How to Take the Foods Named After Professions Quiz
Getting started is simple. Here's how it works:
- Each question gives you a brief clue about a dish.
- Your job: pick the profession that appears in the actual name of the dish.
- You'll get four options โ one correct job, three wrong ones.
- Every answer comes with a short explanation, so you're learning as you go.
- Complete all questions to see your result and earn points toward our trivia leaderboard.
If you're a regular quiz taker on our site, your correct answers add to your total trivia score โ and might just help you climb the leaderboard. The more you play, the more you learn, and the more bragging rights you earn.
Some questions will feel like a no-brainer. Others? Not so much. That's the fun part. You'll run into dishes where the profession isn't obvious โ or maybe the name comes from an old language, a historical quirk, or a cultural reference that's no longer common.
For example:
- Marinara sauce isn't named after a woman named Marina. It's from "marinaro," meaning "sailor" โ it was a sauce made for sailors, or at least inspired by what they ate.
- Carbonara might sound fancy, but some say it comes from the Italian word carbonaro โ coal miner โ because the dish was simple and packed with energy, perfect for the working class.
- Financier is a buttery French cake shaped like a brick of gold. It was made to appeal to actual financiers near the Paris stock exchange. The taste of capitalism, literally.
Why Food Named After Jobs Is Weirdly Comforting
There's something grounding about dishes like Farmer's Breakfast, Ploughman's Lunch, or Lumberjack Breakfast. These aren't high-concept dishes served on tiny plates with foam. They're hearty, no-nonsense meals. Meals that say: someone's got work to do.
They remind us of a time when meals had a purpose. Food wasn't just flavor; it was fuel, culture, and a piece of identity.
And now, these meals are part of our vocabulary โ comfort food with backstories.
Can You Tell Which Profession These Dishes Are Named After?
There's something timeless about naming food after the people who might've eaten it, cooked it, or inspired it. So, do you know your shepherd from your sailor? Can you tell your rancher from your cowboy?
Take the quiz and see if you really know what people used to do for a living (before we started naming dishes after them).
Let's get started.
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22 Comments
I got 9 out of 18!
You got a few rightโnice! This quiz wasn’t easy, and you still picked up some delicious trivia. You clearly have an appreciation for culture, history, and food. Keep feeding that curiosity and next time, you’ll be ready to feast on even more facts. You’re learning, leveling up, and that’s something to be proud of.
And all this time, I would call and order, ” Lieutenant Tso’s” chicken.
10/18 Never heard of some of some of them
I got 12 out of 18!
Well done! You’ve got a sharp memory and a good instinct for the origins of these iconic dishes. It takes more than just guessing to do this wellโit takes real pattern recognition and a solid base of general knowledge. You’re the type who could hold your own on a pub quiz team or game show panel!
You got 18 out of 18!
You scored better than 100% of players!
Food historian in the making! Your brain is clearly seasoned to perfectionโsavvy, sharp, and full of flavor. Keep flexing that knowledge because your recall is *chef’s kiss*. Seriously, this level of accuracy is no flukeโit’s elite-tier trivia game. Bravo!
18/18
I got 9 out of 18!
You got a few rightโnice! This quiz wasn’t easy, and you still picked up some delicious trivia.
Some of the the answers had logic behind them, but others were
off the wall.
I got 7 out of 18!
You got a few rightโnice! This quiz wasn’t easy, and you still picked up some delicious trivia. You clearly have an appreciation for culture, history, and food. Keep feeding that curiosity and next time, you’ll be ready to feast on even more facts. You’re learning, leveling up, and that’s something to be proud of.
I got 18 out of 18!
Food historian in the making! Your brain is clearly seasoned to perfectionโsavvy, sharp, and full of flavor. Keep flexing that knowledge because your recall is *chef’s kiss*. Seriously, this level of accuracy is no flukeโit’s elite-tier trivia game. Bravo!
same and good job
9/18
I got 13 out of 18!
Well done! You’ve got a sharp memory and a good instinct for the origins of these iconic dishes. It takes more than just guessing to do this wellโit takes real pattern recognition and a solid base of general knowledge. You’re the type who could hold your own on a pub quiz team or game show panel!
I got 15 out of 18!
Food historian in the making! Your brain is clearly seasoned to perfectionโsavvy, sharp, and full of flavor. Keep flexing that knowledge because your recall is *chef’s kiss*. Seriously, this level of accuracy is no flukeโit’s elite-tier trivia game. Bravo!
11/18
I got 8 out of 18!
You got a few rightโnice! This quiz wasn’t easy, and you still picked up some delicious trivia. You clearly have an appreciation for culture, history, and food. Keep feeding that curiosity and next time, you’ll be ready to feast on even more facts. You’re learning, leveling up, and that’s something to be proud of.
๐ญ
I got 13 out of 18 – 72%
Well done! You’ve got a sharp memory and a good instinct for the origins of these iconic dishes. It takes more than just guessing to do this wellโit takes real pattern recognition and a solid base of general knowledge. You’re the type who could hold your own on a pub quiz team or game show panel!
21 /8 / 25
I got 18 out of 18!
Food historian in the making! Your brain is clearly seasoned to perfectionโsavvy, sharp, and full of flavor. Keep flexing that knowledge because your recall is *chef’s kiss*. Seriously, this level of accuracy is no flukeโit’s elite-tier trivia game. Bravo!
I got 11/18 right
14/18 77% Not bad but never heard of some of them.
Same here. Certainly no clue in the ingredients either. The original ploughman’s lunch was just bread cheese and pickles. I had an English grandmother who often made cheese and pickle sandwiches, my Dad often took them to work for his meal break, and I still love a cheese and pickle sandwich myself. The additions are only found in pubs that have gotten a bit fancy.
9/18 ๐๐ป
18/18
Food historian in the making! Your brain is clearly seasoned to perfectionโsavvy, sharp, and full of flavor. Keep flexing that knowledge because your recall is *chef’s kiss*. Seriously, this level of accuracy is no flukeโit’s elite-tier trivia game. Bravo!