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Wednesday 17 April 2013

Favourite Food Cities

This is the listening we did in class about favourite cities when it comes to food. As soon as I can I'll upload the scripts. These two speeches are great to incorporate some vocabulary to your everyday language, so take notes when you hear interesting words or expressions to remember.





 

Emmi's class on food

Here you have Emmi's presentation on food. You can either just revise it or download it, as you like!



Becoming a food critic


Well, it is now your turn to review your own cooking and results.

The idea is that you write about the experience of cooking, the reason why you chose that dish, the process itself (clear or confusing instructions) and how you found it (easy peasy, a piece of cake, or rather complicated, too much time consuming, worth the time, way too elaborate, relaxing, inspiring, mouth watering). Maybe you could also refer to the ingredients, in case there was something that was either difficult or impossible for you to find, and what you used instead. It may also be a good idea to state whether or not you had cooked something similar before (a good chance to use the past perfect).
You will then tell me about the opinions that you got from those who dared to taste it, and of course your own, as regards flavour, texture and appearance.
Finally, you could mention if you reckon you will make it again, whether you would improve it somehow or stick to the same ingredients and instructions, and what kind of occasion it would be appropriate for.

Here is a list of vocabulary that you may find useful: 

FLAVOURS and TASTES
/’fleivə/
PHONETICS
TRANSLATION
Bitter

Amargo
Sour
/sauə/
Agrio
Hot / Spicy

Picante
Mild

Suave
Salty
/o:/
Salado
Sweet

Dulce
Sugary

Azucarado / dulce
Sickly

Too much sugar
Fresh

Fresco
Bland

Not having a strong or interesting taste - Insipid
Acrid

Having a strong bitter smell or taste that is unpleasant
Stale

Rancio / pasado – stale bread
Tart

Having an unpleasant sour taste
Pungent
/’pnʤənt/
Having a strong taste or smell
Disgusting

Asqueroso
Stodgy

Heavy and making you feel very full
Light

Not containing much fat
Fatty

Containing a lot of fat
Appetizing

Apetitoso
Delicious

Delicioso
Savoury - unsavoury
/’seivəri/
Having a taste that is salty not sweet – pleasant taste or smell
Zippy

Lively and exciting, specially in flavour
Tasty
/teIsti/
Sabroso / having a strong and pleasant flavour
Taste + adjective
Taste of sth
Taste like sth

It tastes sweet
The ice tasted of mint
This drink tastes like sherry
Tasteless

Soso / having little or no flavour
Tasteful

Attractive and of good quality
(Clothes, furniture, decoration)
TEXTURES
PHONETICS
TRANSLATION
Chewy

Needing to be chewed a lot before it can be swallowed
Chunky

Containing thick pieces
Chunky marmalade
Creamy

Thick and smooth, similar to cream, containing a lot of cream
Crispy

Crujiente
Crunchy

Firm and crisp and making a sharp sound when you bite or crush it
Crusty

Having a hard outer layer
Fresh crusty bread
Dry

Not wet, damp or sticky
Greasy

Cooked with too much oil
Heavy

Large in amount or very solid
Heavy lunch or dinner
Juicy

Containing a lot of juice and good to eat


Mushy


Soft and thick, like mush
(mush: a soft thick mass or mixture)
Oily

Containing or covered with oil
Rubbery

Looking or feeling like rubber
Stodgy

Heavy and making you feel very full
Stringy

Containing long thin pieces like string and difficult to chew
Sun-dried

Dried naturally by the heat of the sun
Tender

Easy to bite through and cut
Thick

Not flowing very easily
Thick soup
Thin

Containing more liquid than is normal or expected: the sauce was thin and tasteless
Tough
/tf/
Difficult to cut or chew
Watery

Containing too much water, thin and having no taste: watery soup
Frozen

Congelado
How would you like it, sir /madam?

¿Cómo le gustaría señor / señora?
Have you seasoned the stew?

Sazonar / salpimentar
Burnt

Quemado  / Burnt toast
Well-done

Cooked thoroughly or for a long time / bien hecho, pasado
Medium

Al punto
Rare

Not done / poco hecho – vuelta y vuelta
Raw
/o:/
not cooked / crudo
Over-cooked = overdone

Muy hecho
Under-cooked = underdone

Poco hecho
Done to a turn

Just perfect, not overdone
Edible / inedible
Drinkable (un-) / potable

Comestible
Potable
More-ish

Informal: causing a desire for more (adjective)