Y1 Food for life - lesson 7_V1f

Food for life - lesson 7
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Cette leçon contient 53 diapositives, avec quiz interactifs, diapositives de texte et 2 vidéos.

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Food for life - lesson 7

Slide 1 - Diapositive

Today:
  • Watching & Listening assignment
  • The British food quiz
  • Reading assignment?
  • Enrichment assignment
  • Homework Monday the 25th of March: finish this LessonUp + deadline handing in Food Vlog.

Slide 2 - Diapositive

Watching and listening
We are going to do a watching- and listening assignment.
First, we will watch the video together. You will receive a watching assignment with this.
Next, we will discuss the answers to the watching assignment together.
Then, you will watch the video by yourself, and answer some listening assignments.

Slide 3 - Diapositive

Watching
 While watching, note down on a piece op paper:
A. the names of the 4 courses Anna is cooking.
First course - Second course - Third course - Dessert
B. Verbs (werkwoorden) that are used for describing how you prepare food.

We will discuss them together after watching.

Slide 4 - Diapositive

Slide 5 - Vidéo

The first course is ...

Slide 6 - Question ouverte

The second course is ...

Slide 7 - Question ouverte

The third course is ...

Slide 8 - Question ouverte

The dessert is ...

Slide 9 - Question ouverte

Verbs (werkwoorden) that are used to describe how you prepare food are ...

Slide 10 - Question ouverte

Listening
 Now listen to the video again by yourself. The video is on the next slide. You may stop or repeat the video as many times as you like. Then, answer the listening questions on the slides that follow.
Tip: if you click the 'ondertiteling' button, you can also read what Anna is saying.

Slide 11 - Diapositive

Slide 12 - Vidéo

Finish this sentence:
1. Whether the idea of eating insects grosses you out or not depends on ...

Slide 13 - Question ouverte

Finish this sentence:
2. Insects are included in the in the traditional diet of at least ...

Slide 14 - Question ouverte

3. Name three reasons why it is easier to eat bugs in the tropics:

Slide 15 - Question ouverte

Finish this sentence:
4. The fact that most people in the US & Europe regard the idea of eating bugs with disgust is mostly ...

Slide 16 - Question ouverte

5. What is entomophagy?

Slide 17 - Question ouverte

Finish this sentence:
6. Insects are efficient at ...

Slide 18 - Question ouverte

It takes a lot of food to raise a cow to maturity.
7. It takes ... less feed to produce the same amount of cricket meat.

Slide 19 - Question ouverte

8. Bugs can be a great source of ..., ..., ... .
Name 3 things.

Slide 20 - Question ouverte

How do these bugs taste?
9. Crickets taste ...

Slide 21 - Question ouverte

How do these bugs taste?
10. Scorpians taste like ...

Slide 22 - Question ouverte

Ready?

Try your knowledge about British food in the next assignment!
Try to guess the right answer for each question. You may also search the internet for answers.

Slide 23 - Diapositive

Try to guess the right answer for each question.

1. Which of these do the British eat most of in Europe?
A
crisps and chocolate
B
fresh fruit and vegetables
C
sausages

Slide 24 - Quiz


2. What is the most popular food in Britain?
A
fish & chips
B
pizza
C
curry

Slide 25 - Quiz


3. What is 'haggis'?
A
a cocktail made from whisy & fruit juice
B
a type of fish eaten in Scotland
C
a Scottish dish made from sheep's stomach and innards

Slide 26 - Quiz


4. Stilton, cheddar and double Gloucester are all kinds of: ...
A
apple
B
cheese
C
pig

Slide 27 - Quiz


5. What do most British people have for breakfast?
A
toast and cereal
B
cappuccino and croissant
C
fried eggs and bacon

Slide 28 - Quiz


6. Who invented the sandwich?
A
the Earl of Sandwich
B
Lord Sandwich
C
Queen Elizabeth I

Slide 29 - Quiz


7. Why was the sandwich invented?
A
the inventor wanted food which he/she could take for a picnic in the countryside
B
the inventor wanted food which he/she could eat with one hand while gambling
C
the inventor wanted food which could be prepared quickly for guests

Slide 30 - Quiz


8. What is a 'kebab'?
A
a type of pub
B
Turkish fast food
C
a hot drink

Slide 31 - Quiz


9. Which of the following ingredients would not be a possible ingredient of a British pudding?
A
pig's blood
B
chocolate
C
lettuce

Slide 32 - Quiz

10. Which of these do you find in a pub in Britain?
A
lager
B
cider
C
bitter

Slide 33 - Quiz

11. What is 'chicken tikka masala'?
A
a type of salad
B
a type of Chinese food
C
a curry

Slide 34 - Quiz


12. Where do people eat deep-fried chocolate bars?
A
Scotland
B
Ireland
C
Wales

Slide 35 - Quiz


13. When are toffee apples eaten in the UK?
A
Christmas
B
Halloween
C
Easter

Slide 36 - Quiz


14. When did the first curry house open in Britain?
A
1809
B
1919
C
1969

Slide 37 - Quiz

15. What is the difference between these things?
'chips' and 'French fries'
'crisps' and 'chips'
'fizzy drink' and 'soda'

Slide 38 - Question ouverte

Reading
Read the text: "Are Brits becoming more adventurous in the kitchen".
After the text, which consists of 5 paragraphs, you are going to decide which statements are true and which statements are false.
Now, let's read!

Slide 39 - Diapositive

Are Brits becoming more adventurous in the kitchen?
What comes into your mind when you think of British food? Probably fish and chips, or a Sunday dinner of meat and two vegetables. But is British food really so bland and uninteresting? Despite a reputation for less-then-spectacular cuisine, Britain is producing more and more top class chefs who dominate our television screens and whose recipe books frequently top the
best seller lists.

Slide 40 - Diapositive

It’s thanks to these TV chefs rather than any advertising campaign that Britons are turning away from meat-and-two-veg and ready-made meals and becoming more adventurous in their cooking habits. It seems that TV programmes have the power to bring a higher profile to cooking and are wielding real influence on what people cook at home.

Slide 41 - Diapositive

According to a new study from market analysts, 1 in 5 Britons claim that watching cookery programmes on TV has encouraged them to try different food. Almost one third say they now use a wider variety of ingredients than they used to, and just under 1 in 4 (24%) say they now buy better quality ingredients than before. One in four adults say that TV chefs have made them much more confident about expanding their culinary knowledge and skills, and young people are also getting more interested in cooking. With an increasing number of male chefs on TV, it’s no longer ‘uncool’ for boys to like cooking. The UK’s new obsession with food is reflected through television scheduling. Cookery shows and documentaries about food are broadcast during prime time evening slots.

Slide 42 - Diapositive

Many of the new celebrity chefs promote modern ‘fusion cuisine’, which blends classic ‘British’ cooking with international and exotic influences. Even the chefs themselves are younger, more beautiful and much more experimental, such as Nigella Lawson and Jamie Oliver. Jamie Oliver was only 23 when he first appeared on British television screens. More than 4 million people tuned in to his popular show ‘Jamie’s Kitchen’. The show began as an experiment and turned into a phenomenon. Jamie gave himself nine months to take a team of unemployed 16 to 24-year-olds, with virtually no previous experience of cooking, and transform them into top class chefs to work in his new restaurant in East London, ‘Fifteen’. Jamie left school himself without formal qualifications and believes that with a passion for food, anyone can become a good cook. ‘Fifteen’ has become a hit in London and is booked up months in advance.

Slide 43 - Diapositive

Jamie Oliver has proved to be a huge inspiration for British people. The recent survey finds that the number of those sticking to a traditional diet is slowly declining and around half of Britain’s consumers would like to change or improve their cooking in some way. There has been a rise in the number of students applying for food courses at UK universities and colleges, such as those offered by the School of Culinary Art at South Trafford College. Having been ridiculed for centuries for its mediocre cuisine, is Britain now competing with countries such as France and Italy in the field of culinary excellence?

Slide 44 - Diapositive

1. Britain is starting to get a reputation for bad cuisine.
A
true
B
false

Slide 45 - Quiz

2. Advertising campaigns are encouraging British people to try new foods.
A
true
B
false

Slide 46 - Quiz

3. The most popular TV chefs in Britain are younger and more charismatic than they used to be.
A
true
B
false

Slide 47 - Quiz

4. 'Jamie's Kitchen' is a TV programme about ordinary people who set up their own restaurants with no cooking experience.
A
true
B
false

Slide 48 - Quiz

5. Jamie's restaurant 'Fifteen' will be opening in several months time.
A
true
B
false

Slide 49 - Quiz

6. The traditional British diet may be dying out.
A
true
B
false

Slide 50 - Quiz

Enrichment assignment
Write a review about your favourite restaurant.

Some tips/ideas:
1. Use an informal or semi-formal style.
2. In the title, give the main idea or opinion.
3. Write about the important parts of the experience, not every detail.
4. Organise your ideas into paragraphs.
5. Write about the good and the bad.

Slide 51 - Diapositive

Take a picture of the review you have written and send it in here.

Slide 52 - Question ouverte

Homework Monday the 25th of March:
  • Finish this LessonUp-lesson. The enrichment assignment is optional!
  • Check if you have finished LessonUp lesson 6, please!
  • Don't forget to finish your food vlog for the 25th of March!

Slide 53 - Diapositive