Junior
Composition and Conversation
Interview Practice
on Eating in Taiwan or the U.S.
Preparation --
CASE STUDY -- PREINTERVIEW VOCABULARY EXERCISE --
GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS
FOR INTERVIEWS --
Questionnaire 1
-- American/Taiwanese Meals and Mealtimes
Questionnaire 2:
What Do Americans/Taiwanese Eat?
Questionnaire 3:
American/Taiwanese Table Manners
Questionnaire 4
-- American/Taiwanese Views on Food and
health
ADDITIONAL INTERVIEWS
In Conclusion
Preparation
PREREADING VOCABULARY EXERCISE
Study the sentences below. The words in italics
are defined in parentheses.
barbecue¡Xcroissant¡Xdish¡Xfresh¡Xhealth
food¡Xjunk food----nut¡Xpot luck¡Xprocessed¡Xsour
cream¡XTY dinner
-
"I 'll barbecue hot dogs and hamburgers." (cook on
an open fire)
-
The French might not recognize the croissants served
at McDonald's. (a French crescent-shaped roll)
-
Jeanette was preparing her dish. (food made in a
certain way)
-
The time saved by opening a can of peas was more
important to buy housewives than was the better taste of fresh peas. (foods
recently picked)
-
health foods may be popular today because many Americans
are tired of processed foods like Rick's California dip. (foods made from
fresh ingredients, often containing no meat, sugar, or preservatives)
-
Rick just can't live without junk food. (food such
as candy bars that makes one gain weight without giving the body what it
needs)
-
" Jeanette's a health food nut!" (someone who feels
so strongly about something that he or she seems a little crazy)
-
The rest of the party is pot luck. (each guest beings
some food)
-
It is made only from natural, not processed, food.
(foods that are treated in some way at the factory)
-
Rick walked into the kitchen and started mixing a
package of dried mushroom soup with some sour cream. ( a milk product made
from heavy cream)
-
Many prefer frozen pizzas., potato chips, and TV
dinners. (frozen dinners sold at American supermarkets)
Directions
In each numbered sentence below, fill in the blank
with the best word from the vocabulary list about. Change tense and number
(singular or plural) where necessary.
-
Many Americans today are __________about Chinese
food.
-
For one thing, every Chinese ___________is made from
natural foods.
-
Very few Chinese foods are ___________in factories.
-
Almost all the vegetables used are ______.
-
But while more Americans enjoy Chinese food all the
time, many Chinese-American children are learning to like American _____-like
potato chips.
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CASE STUDY
At the end of her first semester in an American
college, Elsa, a student from Greece, was surprised to hear her chemistry
professor invite the whole class to a party at his house.
" I hope you all will be able to come, " he announced.
" I'll barbecue hot dogs and hamburgers, but the rest is pot luck. I hope
we have some good cooks here!"
Elsa was happy to have the chance to try some
real American home cooking after eating in the college cafeteria all semester.
She wanted to see what real American food was like.
The morning of the party, Elsa prepared a traditional
Greek spinach pie, spanalopitta. an American classmate, Jeanette, had invited
her to cook it in her kitchen. While Elsa cooked, Jeanette was preparing
her dish for the party, a salad called tabbouleh.
"But I used to eat a salad just like that in Greece!"
laughed Elsa, when she say Jeanette washing the tomatoes. " Is that a typical
American dish?"
"No, it's Middle Eastern. But my grandmother is
from Lebanon, and it's always been my favorite salads. and now it's quite
popular. I ever saw it on the menu at school," said Jeanette.
Jeanette's boyfriend, Rick, walked into the kitchen
and started mixing a package of dried mushroom soup with some sour cream.
" This is called California dip," he explained to Elsa. " I'm going to
buy potato chips to eat it with. i probably should go buy some carrots
and celery, too, to serve with the dip. But it's so much work to wash them
and cut them up."
" I hope you can't get the wrong idea of American
food, Elsa. Rick just can't live without junk food!" said Jeanette.
' Yeah, and Jeanette's a health food nut!" answered
Rick.
Questions
-
Why was Elsa surprised that her professor invited
the class to a party?
-
Do you think it is a formal or an informal party?
Do you think that it would be O.K. to wear blue jeans to such a party?
-
When Jeanette said, " I hope you don't get the wrong
idea of American food," what did she mean?
-
Do Jeanette and Rick enjoy the same foods?
-
Do you think that Jeanette and Rick helped Elsa get
a better idea of what Americans eat?
Background
Jeanette's tabbouleh salad and Rick's California
dip are examples of two kinds of food popular in the United States today.
International, or "ethnic," dishes, like Jeanette's Lebanese salad, have
become quite popular with Americans in recent years. Of course, Americans
cook them their own way. The French might not recognize the croissants
served at McDonald's, for example. and indeed, throughout United States
history, certain foreign foods have become all-American favorites: pizza
comes form Italy, and the first fried chicken in America was probably cooked
by Africans.
Jeanette's grandmother's dish, tabbouleh, is not
as popular or well known as pizza. but some Americans like it because they
consider it a health food: it is made form only natural, not processed,
foods. More and more Americans are interested in food that have spent more
time at the farm than at the factory.
health foods may be popular today because many
Americans became tired of processed foods like Rick's California dip. Canned,
frozen, and processed foods became very popular in the United States in
the 1950s. At that time, the American food industry tried to convince American
cooks that these foods were more timesaving, modern, and safe. And those
values were more important to most A0mericans than the taste of the foods.
The time saved by opening a can of peas was more important to busy housewives
than the better the United States changed so that it actually became cheaper
to buy canned or frozen peas than fresh ones.
What do American eat today? Many, like Rick, who
grew up eating food out of a can, prefer frozen pizzas, potato chips, and
TV dinners. others prefer "plain old American food," which usually means
something like simply cooked meat with potatoes and vegetables cooked separately.
At the same time, some Americans, like Jeanette, have become interested
in other kinds of foods, such as health foods and international foods.
PRE-INTERVIEW
VOCABULARY EXERCISE
Study the sentences below. The words in italics
are defined in parentheses.
avoid¡Xbalanced meal¡Xbelch¡Xdiet¡Xhelping¡Xhome
remedy¡Xlap¡Xlick¡Xrecipe¡Xslurp¡Xsnack¡Xtaboo¡Xtreat
-
What foods do you try to avoid? (stay away from)
-
What is a balanced meal? (a meal having all the right
kinds of foods for good health)
-
What would you think if your guest belched after
the meal? (made a noise when air came up from the stomach)
-
Do you think most Americans eat a healthy diet? (the
foods that people eat every day; sometimes it means the foods that people
eat to lose weight)
-
What do you think if your guest asks for a second
helping? (a serving of more food)
-
What foods or home remedies are said to be good for
a cold? (homemade medicines; traditional cures such as special teas)
-
Do you keep one hand in your lap while eating? (the
upper part of your legs when you are seated)
-
She licked the gravy from her fingers. (touch with
the tongue outside the mouth)
-
Would you ever ask for the recipe? (directions for
making a dish)
-
Is it all right to make slurping sounds while eating?
(to make noise when eating soup or other foods with liquids)
-
What is your favorite snack? (foods eaten between
meals)
-
What foods or meats are taboo to most Americans?
(never eaten, because people think they are disgusting)
-
When you were a child, what foods did your mother
prepare as a special treat?(something special, not eaten every day)
Directions
in each numbered sentence below, fill in the blank
with the best word from the vocabulary list above. Change tense an number
(singular and plural) where necessary.
-
" Boy, do I love ice cream!" cried Karen as she ____________her
cone with her tongue.
-
" Me too!" agreed Jenny as she ________her ice cream
soda.
-
" This is a real _________for me. I try not to eat
it too often so I won't get fat," said Karen.
-
" Well, I try to only have it for dessert, not as
a _________at night, " added Jenny.
-
" Just think, Jenny. if we didn't try to _________
ice cream, it probably wouldn't taste so good when we finally had it!"
Interviews and Analysis
GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS FOR INTERVIEWS
On the pages that follow there are four questionnaires;
-
Questionnaire 1: American Meals and Mealtimes;
-
Questionnaire 2: What Do Americans/Taiwanese Eat?
-
Questionnaire 3: American/Taiwanese Table Manners;
-
Questionnaire 4: American/Taiwanese Views on Food
and health.
Choose the topic that interests you most, and interview
an American, using one of the questionnaires. Make up one question of your
own and write down any new vocabulary. In class, get together with other
students who interviewed with the same questionnaire. Together, analyze
the answers given by the Americans and plan a report.
QUESTIONNAIRE 1
AMERICAN MEALS AND MEALTIMES
-
In your household, at what time is breakfast? Lunch?
Dinner?
-
Which is the main meal? Is it always?
-
At which meals do all the people in your household
sit down to eat together? How long do you usually spend at the table?
-
When your whole household eats together, who generally
does the cooking? Who serves/ Who washes the dishes?
-
Does everyone sit in certain chairs? Explain. Where
would a guest sit?
-
How often do you eat between meals? What is your
favorite snack?
-
How often do you eat out? where do you usually go?
-
When you were growing up, what meals did your family
eat together? Who talked? What did they talk about?
-
How were family meals served? Who did the cooking?
Who washed the dishes?
-
Does your family observe any special customs at mealtimes,
such as saying grace?
-
(Your own question)
Person interviewed: __________________________Sex:___________
Age: _____________Ethnic background: ______________
New vocabulary
Questionnaire 2
WHAT DO AMERICANS EAT?
-
What is your favorite breakfast? Your favorite lunch?
Your favorite dinner? Your favorite dessert? Your favorite snack? How often
do you get to eat your favorite foods?
-
When you were a child, what foods did your mother
prepare as a special treat?
-
What were your grandmother's special dishes? What
is your family's ethnic background?
-
What are some of the traditional foods in your family
that are prepared for the different holidays?
-
Do you know if this part of the country is famous
for any dish in particular/
-
What are some examples (such as Southern fried chicken)
of other regional cooking in the United States?
-
What local restaurant serves good American food/
-
Do you think that Americans today eat differently
than they did in the past? If so, how?
-
What foods or meats are taboo to most Americans?
-
Are you a vegetarian/ Do you know any? Do you know
why they are vegetarians?
-
(Your own question)
Person interviewed :__________________________Sex:___________
Age: _____________Ethnic background: ______________
New vocabulary
Questionnaire 3
AMERICAN TABLE MANNERS
Special note
Be sure to ask the American you are interviewing
to explain any custom that you don't understand.
-
Suppose that you have invited guests for dinner.
Would you consider it good manners, bad manners, or unimportant if one
of your guests did the following;
-
waited for you to tell him or her where to sit.
-
served him or herself instead of waiting to be served
-
started eating before everyone was served
-
talked with food in his or her mouth
-
picked up a chicken wing with his or her fingers
-
dipped his or her bread into the gravy
-
made slurping sounds while eating
-
kept one hand in his or her lap while eating
-
cut meat with the fork in the left hand and then
changed the fork to the tright before bringing the food to his or her mouth
-
picked up bread with his or her left hand
-
commented on how good the food was
-
asked for the recipe
-
finished everything on the plate
-
said no thanks to more food
-
put his or her elbows on the table
-
described a bloody accident scene during dinner
-
asked for a second helping
-
licked some gravy off his or her fingers
-
left the table to go to the bathroom in the middle
of the meal
-
ate very quickly
-
ate very slowly
-
belched after the meal
-
What are some examples of bad manners besides some
of the ones just mentioned?
-
What are some other examples of good manners?
-
As a child, what table manners did your parents make
sure you learned?
-
(Your own question)
Person interviewed :__________________________Sex:___________
Age: _____________Ethnic background: ______________
New vocabulary
Questionnaire
4
AMERICAN VIEWS ON FOOD AND HEALTH
-
What foods, drinks, vitamins, or home remedies are
said to be good for;
-
a cold
-
a fever
-
a headache
-
a sore throat
-
an upset stomach
-
tiredness
-
losing weight
-
gaining weight
-
for athletes in training
-
for pregnant women
-
What are health foods? Give some examples. Do you
yourself eat any health foods?
-
DO your try to avoid certain foods for health reasons?
Which ones? Why?
-
Do you think most Americans eat a healthy diet? Why
or why not?
-
Do most Americans worry more about being too fat
or about being too thin? Why?
-
Do you watch your weight? How?
-
What is a balanced meal? Give an example.
-
What foods and drinks do Americans believe.
-
(your own question)
Person interviewed :__________________________Sex:___________
Age: _____________Ethnic background: ______________
New vocabulary
GROUP ANALYSIS
Compare the answers given to the questionnaire
by Americans interviewed by members of your group. Prepare a report from
your group's discussion of the following questions:
-
What were the most common, or typical answers to
each question/
-
a. In what ways are these answers different from
the customs of students in the group?
-
in what ways are these answers similar to some students'
customs/
-
If some Americans answered questions differently
from the way others did, can you tell if these difference could be explained
by the ethnic backgrounds of the people interviewed?
-
Does the United States history as a nation of immigrants
from all over the world show in what Americans eat? If so, how?
Additional activities
ADDITIONAL INTERVIEWS
Make up your own questionnaire on another topic
related to eating. One possible topic is American cooking (ask about the
most importantly condiments, cooking methods, utensils; food shopping;
gourmet cooking). Another topic is restaurants: recommendations of the
best local restaurants; different varieties of restaurants; etiquette in
restaurants such as tipping and dress codes. Then interview one or more
Americans using your questionnaire.
RESTAURANT VISIT
While the members of your group, visit a restaurant
recommended by Americans for serving good American food. Ask the waiter
to serve you the most typically American choices on the menu, and share
examples of each among the group.
CLASS COOKBOOK
Put together a class cookbook of popular or traditional
American dishes. Obtain the recipes from cookbooks or from good American
cooks. Or make up an international cookbook, choosing just one type of
food, such as rice dishes. Ask your classmates and some Americans for recipes.
ROLE PLAY
Role-play the following situations:
-
American table manners
-
Good table manners in other cultures
-
An American eating a meal as the guest of someone
from another culture whose table manners are quite different
In Conclusion
Look back to the three impressions of what, when,
and how Americans eat that you wrote down on page 114. Do you still agree
with these comments after studying more about American eating, or would
you change them in any why? If so, how would you change them? Did you learn
anything that surprised you about how and what Americans eat? If so, what?
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