Apple Pie
American Foods
Steak
Hot dog
Peanut ButterHamburger
PB and jelly Milkshake
Apple pie
Coke
An appleA piece of apple pie
Uncountable noun Countable noun
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
Countable nouns Apple
OrangeTomato Tomato
StrawberryCucumber
Carrot Asparagus
Uncountable nouns Sugar, Flour
RiceButterCheese
Milk, Coke Jam
Bread Grape Pasta
Answer for Worksheet 2. B
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
Bingo
Cooking vocabulary
Microwave Bake Stir Roll out Peel Chop
Pour BoilGrill Measure Slice Preheat
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
Pre-listening: Vocabulary
Sauce CinnamonDough FillingStrip Web topPie dish Pie CrustTop crust Bottom crust
Measurement abbreviation
tsp = teaspoon
tbsp = tablespoon
c = cup
oz = ounce
gal = gallon
Ib = pound
” = inch
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UdPh7svwCwc
3 min 40 sec
Caramel 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.
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.
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.
Communicative Activity
Recipe for peanut butter cookies
Recipe card
Recipe card
Name of recipeList of ingredients
Directions for combining ingredients
Review test
Worksheet 8: Food quantifiers/containers and imperative
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
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