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Unit 1. Word listСтр 1 из 58Следующая ⇒
British Meals. Introductory Text. The usual British meals are breakfast, lunch, tea and supper. Breakfast is generally bigger than you have on the Continent, though some English people like a “continental” breakfast of rolls and butter and coffee. But the usual English breakfast is porridge or corn flakes with milk or cream and sugar, bacon and eggs, marmalade with buttered toast, and tea or coffee. For a change you can have a boiled egg, cold ham, or perhaps fish. We generally have lunch at about one o’clock. The businessmen in London usually find it impossible to come home for lunch, and so they go to a cafe or a restaurant; but if I am making lunch at home I have cold meat (left over probably from yesterday’s dinner, the so-called leftovers), potatoes, salad and pickles, with a pudding or fruit to follow. Sometimes we have a mutton chop, or steak and chips, followed by biscuits and cheese, and some people like a glass of light beer with lunch. Afternoon tea you can hardly call a meal, but it is a sociable sort of thing, as friends often come in then for a chat while they have their cup of tea, cake or biscuit. In some houses dinner is the biggest meal of the day. We sometimes begin with soup, followed by fish, roast chicken, potatoes and vegetables, a sweet, fruit and nuts. In my house as in great many English homes we make the midday meal the chief one of the day, and in the evening we have the much simpler supper – an omelette, or sausages, sometimes bacon and eggs and sometimes just bread and cheese, a cup of coffee or cocoa and fruit. But Uncle Albert always has “high tea”. He says he has no use for these “afternoons teas” where you try to hold a cup of tea in one hand and a piece of bread and butter about as thin as a sheet of paper in the other. He’s a Lancashire man, and nearly everyone in Lancashire likes high tea, they have it between 5 and 6 o’clock. They have ham or tongue and tomatoes and salad, or sausages, with good strong tea, plenty of bread and butter, then stewed fruit, or a tin of pears, apricots or pineapple with cream or custard and pastries or a good cake. And that’s what they call a good tea. (From C.E.Eckersley) Unit 1. Word list national dishes to string to lay the table chop sauce dice cutlery tail napkin top serviette shred salt-cellar simmer sugar basin skin clear soup bone broth peel fried/roasted/ grilled pour baked slice stewed grate boiled spread (spread, spread) starter sprinkle with appetizer/hors d'oeuvres season salad stew chop stuff meat-ball scrape pancake combine sandwich mix soft drink/hard drink add juice sieve beer crush to treat drain to try/ taste heat delicious melt helping crumble menu strain order stir pan roll out kettle blend mincer whip grater blanch saucepan/pot/casserole rinse bowl mug saucer underdone/rare overdone sour, bitter, salty, sweet BAKERY a loaf of bread(white, brown, rye /stale, fresh) baking, pastry pastry/dough bun, scone, roll, rusk, pie, cake, ring, dough nuts, pastry, biscuits, sponge cake, cookies(Am.), plum cake crisps pudding custard crust (of bread) BUTCHERY POULTRY meat turkey pork, beef, veal, mutton broiler ham, bacon chicken rasher duck rump-steak goose beefsteak sirloin, fillet minced meat sausage fat, lard, suet frankfurter hot-dogs chops, cutlets, rissoles, liver heart tongue tender/tough/fat/lean meat hamburger GROCERY DAIRY cereal milk castor/ granulated/lump sugar whipped/sour cream buckwheat, rice, semolina curds/cottage cheese pasta, macaroni, noodles, spaghetti cheese millet fresh/new laid eggs flour hard/soft boiled eggs oats/porridge fried/scrambled /poached eggs Indian/China/Ceylon/Georgian tea omelet black/white/ready ground coffee yogurt instant coffee butter cocoa, hot chocolate pepper vinegar sunflower/vegetable/ olive oil spice cinnamon mustard bay leaf mayonnaise margarine FISH FRUIT herring apricot water melon, shrimps/prawns. scallop pear pumpkin-fruit lobster plum perch peach pike cherry trout grapes cod banana salmon pineapple sprats tangerine caviar persimmon eel pomegranate crucian kiwi fruit broiled fish water melon smoked /marinated fish grape fruit fish jelly VEGETABLES BERRIES tomatoes strawberry cucumber raspberry carrot gooseberry potato blackberry radish/garden radish/white radish black/white/red currants aubergine/egg plant (Am.) blueberry turnip, courgette bilberry beetroot, sugar beet cranberry beans/French beans lettuce, leek NUTS asparagus, celery cabbage walnut fennel almond garlic (a clove of garlic) nutmeg spinach cashew nut cauliflower green/brown onion capsicum vegetable marrow celery pumpkin parsley mushroom sauerkraut
HARD DRINKS (spirits) SOFT DRINKS dry/brut, sweet wine beverage white/red/sparkling/vintage/fortified wine lemonade whisky coca-cola vodka Pepsi (on the rocks) brandy juice liqueur stewed fruit champagne, vermouth jelly rum cocktail/milk cocktail beer/lager/ginger beer/dark (bitter) beer mineral water/soda gin and tonic sherry shandy gin and lime CONVERSATIONAL PHRASES To tip a waiter Breakfast/lunch/brunch/elevenses/high tea dinner/supper consists of/includes….. Menu includes (consists of…) For the first /second course/dessert Where can we get a quick meal? Can you tell me if there's a restaurant around here? I am hungry/starving/thirsty. Can I reserve a table for two for 2 o'clock today? What's the house specialty/speciality? What shall we start with? What wine do you recommend to go with meat? Would you like a refill? Help yourself to some more … Please, pass me … The meal is delicious/tasty/gorgeous/splendid May I have the bill? I'll treat you/ it's on me. Let's go Dutch. To your health/Cheers! I don't care for fish in any shape or form. I leave the choice to you I am into chocolate. I am an immense/great/small eater. I have a sweet tooth. This dish makes my mouth water. I'd like to have a bite/snack. Let's go to the snack-bar/buffet/cafeteria/restaurant/pub/luncheonette. Do they serve dishes a la carte or table d'hote? Would you like some more gravy/dressing? How is it prepared? The cake is fatting/filling I’ll die from overeating.
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