Jive Turkey
Where did the year go? November already? Meh. At least we get to eat some turkey right? Before you tear off a crispy tendril of roasted skin, or sink your choppers into a succulent drumstick, how about some turkey knowledge to impress your friends? (Yeah, I know. Greg did the same thing last year. But we have new readers, right?)Turkey Vocab:Caruncle - brightly colored growths on the throat region. Turns bright red when the turkey is upset or during courtship.Gizzard - a part of a bird's stomach that contains tiny stones. It helps them grind up food for digestion.Hen - a female turkey.Poult - a baby turkey. A chick.Snood - the flap of skin that hangs over the turkey's beak. Turns bright red when the turkey is upset or during courtship.Tom - a male turkey. Also known as a gobbler.Wattle - the flap of skin under the turkey's chin. Turns bright red when the turkey is upset or during courtship.Scientific genus and species: Meleagris gallopavo Turkey History:Have you ever wondered what Turkey (the country in the Middle East) and the American bird have in common? A case of mistaken identity resulted in the American Turkey being named after the country. When the Spanish first found the bird in the Americas more than 400 years ago they brought it back to Europe. The English mistakenly thought it was a bird they called a "turkey" so they gave it the same name. This other bird was actually from Africa, but came to England by way of the Turkey (lots of shipping went through Turkey at the time). The name stuck even when they realized the birds weren't the same.Turkey Action:Peacocks aren't the only birds who use their fancy tails to attract a mate. Each spring male turkeys try to befriend as many females as possible. Male turkeys, also called "Tom Turkeys" or "Gobblers" puff up their bodies and spread their tail feathers (just like a peacock). They grunt, make a "gobble gobble sound" and strut about shaking their feathers. This fancy turkey trot helps the male attract females (also called "hens") for mating.After the female turkey mates, she prepares a nest under a bush in the woods and lays her tan and speckled brown eggs. She incubates as many as 18 eggs at a time. It takes about a month for the chicks to hatch.When the babies (known as poults) hatch they flock with their mother all year (even through the winter). For the first two weeks the poults are unable to fly. The mother roosts on the ground with them during this time.Wild Turkey:Wild Turkey is a brand of Kentucky straight bourbon whiskey distilled and bottled by the Austin, Nichols division of Campari Group. Its nicknames include "The Dirty Bird," "Gobble Gobble," "Thunder Chicken," "Boat Gas" and "The Kickin’ Chicken", the last being a reference to the 101 proof of its most common bottling, as compared to the 80 proof of standard bourbons. The distillery is located near Lawrenceburg, Kentucky. It offers tours, and is part of the American Whiskey Trail and the Kentucky Bourbon Trail.Talk Turkey:Speak plainly, get to the point, as in ,“Don't call me until you're ready to talk turkey.” The origin of this phrase, somewhat outside of the most basic underlying sentiments regarding Thanksgiving, seems to be a humorless fable about taking advantage of a language barrier.Cold Turkey:"Without preparation," 1910; narrower sense of "withdrawal from an addictive substance" (originally heroin) first recorded 1921. Cold turkey is a food that requires little preparation, so "to quit like cold turkey" is to do so suddenly and without preparation. Jive Turkey:1. (US, idiom, slang) Someone who is jiving, as in dancing. Often applied to people being funny or showy. 2. (US, idiom, slang) Someone who is jiving, as in behaving in a glib and disingenuous fashion. Etymology: Coined in the 1970s
—Lisa
—Lisa