Funistrada
Funistrada is a fictitious food item. The term was inserted in a U.S. Army survey of soldiers circa 1974[1] regarding their food preferences. Funistrada, along with a fake vegetable dish called "buttered ermal" and a fake meat dish called "braised trake", was inserted "to provide an estimate of how much someone will respond to a word which sounds like a food name or will answer without reading."[2]
Funistrada scored higher in popularity than eggplant, lima beans, and cranberry juice.[3][4] All three fake items, however, had the highest percentage of "never tried" responses.[5]
Appearances
    
- Bill Bryson cited the food in his 1990 book Mother Tongue[6] as an example of a word that is made up for a specific purpose.
 - It appears in CHOW: A Cook's Tour of Military Food by Paul Dickson[7]
 - A restaurant in Northern Michigan has used the name Trattoria Funistrada since 2000.[8]
 - A Breeders' Cup horse took the name in 1985.[9]
 
See also
    
- Fictitious entry – Deliberately incorrect entry in a reference work
 
References
    
- Armed Forces Food Preferences
 - Armed Forces Food Preferences p. 4
 - "» Funistrada, the Army's 'Ghost Food' - Entropic Memes". www.slugsite.com.
 - Davidson, Alan. "Funistrada." The Oxford Companion to Food. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999.
 - Armed Forces Food Preferences p. 54
 - Bryson, Bill (1990), The Mother Tongue, London, UK: Hamish Hamilton, p. 77, ISBN 0-380-71543-0
 - "CHOW: A Cook's Tour of Military Food by Paul Dickson - Kirkus Reviews". kirkusreviews.com.
 - "Trattoria Funistrada".
 - Equibase.com. "Equibase - Profiles". equibase.com.
 
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