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Apple Pie

Apple Pie

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Apple Pie. American Foods. Steak. Hamburger. Peanut Butter. Coke . PB and jelly. Milkshake. Apple pie. Hot dog. Uncountable noun. Countable noun. An apple. A piece of apple pie. Countable vs. Uncountable. Answer for Worksheet 2. B. Uncountable nouns Sugar, Flour Rice Butter - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Apple Pie

Apple Pie

Page 2: Apple Pie

American Foods

Steak

Hot dog

Peanut ButterHamburger

PB and jelly Milkshake

Apple pie

Coke

Page 3: Apple Pie

An appleA piece of apple pie

Uncountable noun Countable noun

Page 4: Apple Pie

Countable vs. Uncountable

Countable nouns Uncountable nouns Nouns that can be Countable and Uncountable

• Things that we can count.

• Singular or plural.

• Substances, or concepts that we cannot divide into separate elements. We cannot "count" them.

• Usually treat uncountable nouns as singular.

• Drinks (coffee, water, orange juice) are usually uncountable. But if we are thinking of a cup or a glass, we can say in a restaurant, for example:

“Two teas and one coffee please.”

• Egg, chicken

Page 5: Apple Pie

Countable nouns Apple

OrangeTomato Tomato

StrawberryCucumber

Carrot Asparagus

Uncountable nouns Sugar, Flour

RiceButterCheese

Milk, Coke Jam

Bread Grape Pasta

Answer for Worksheet 2. B

Page 6: Apple Pie

Food quantifier (container)Quantifier (container)

A cup ofA glass ofA stick of

A package ofA bag of

A bottle ofA carton of

A can of A jar of

A loaf of

Uncountable nouns

Sugar, SaltFlour Rice

ButterWaterMilk

Bread JamwineOil

Page 7: Apple Pie

Bingo

Page 8: Apple Pie

Cooking vocabulary

Microwave Bake Stir Roll out Peel Chop

Pour BoilGrill Measure Slice Preheat

Page 9: Apple Pie

Caramel Apple Pie

Ingredients:

• 6 large red apples, sliced • 1/2 cup sugar • 1/2 cup brown sugar • 6 tbsp unsalted butter • Pinch of salt • 1/4 tsp cinnamon powder• 1/4 cup water • 1 package (15-oz) Pillsbury Pie Crust, or pie dough for

a double-crust 9" pie

Page 10: Apple Pie

Pre-listening: Vocabulary

Sauce CinnamonDough FillingStrip Web topPie dish Pie CrustTop crust Bottom crust

Page 11: Apple Pie

Measurement abbreviation

tsp = teaspoon

tbsp = tablespoon

c = cup

oz = ounce

gal = gallon

Ib = pound

” = inch

Page 12: Apple Pie

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UdPh7svwCwc

3 min 40 sec

Caramel Apple Pie

Page 13: Apple Pie

Imperative

“Getting someone to do something”

• Grill the meat!• Pour a cup of milk in a sauce pan. • Give me a glass of water, please. • (You) measure a half cup of sugar.• (Somebody) open the can.

Page 14: Apple Pie

Imperative

Subject youSomeone = one of you hereNot + anybody = none of you here

(Subject)=YOU

Verb-tense

(please)

Affirmative (You) Be quiet!

(Someone) Chop a cucumber.

Negative Do notDon’tNever

(Anybody) Be late!

Stir the soup.

Page 15: Apple Pie

How to write a recipe

• Instructions are written in the imperative.• Instructions are much shorter than ordinary text.• Instructions are often written as a list, in the order that they have to be done.• Full stops are not necessary.

Page 16: Apple Pie

Communicative Activity

Recipe for peanut butter cookies

Page 17: Apple Pie

Recipe card

Page 18: Apple Pie

Recipe card

Name of recipeList of ingredients

Directions for combining ingredients

Page 19: Apple Pie

Review test

Worksheet 8: Food quantifiers/containers and imperative

Page 20: Apple Pie

Suggested Homework

1) Watch food channel and write down the recipe of one of the American foods that you like most or find interesting

2) Take a note of the program name of Food channel and a cook’s name if possible

Page 21: Apple Pie

Suggested Homeworkhttp://www.foodnetwork.com/

Program Schedule

Iron chef Sundays at 9pm

Barefoot Contessa Saturdays at 1:30pm

Semi-homemade Cooking with Sandra Lee

Saturdays at 12:30 pmTuesday-Friday at 2pm

Throwdown! with Bobby Flay Wednesdays at 9pm