Mrs P here. I am having a bit of a break from writing the blogs as you know; this week it's 2 more
pupils from 8P who are having a go. They created this blog all by
themselves, and with a bit of tweaking by me have published it for you below.. Do take time to read it through and have a go at the multiple choice quiz
at the bottom of the page No one entered last week's quiz; so the chocs
go into the roll-over and get added to the prizes for this week. That
means there will be a runner up too, rather than just one winner..
Hey guys, I’m Alex and this is Priyesh, from 8P. This week we are blogging about potatoes, and how they are humble. We’ve found 48 synonyms for humble. We had to go through a lot of websites and thesauruses to get them. Some of them are: obliging, obsequious, reverential, self-conscious, self-effacing, subservient, supplicatory, unambitious, unostentatious, unpretentious. All relevant to the spud, don't you agree?
Hey guys, I’m Alex and this is Priyesh, from 8P. This week we are blogging about potatoes, and how they are humble. We’ve found 48 synonyms for humble. We had to go through a lot of websites and thesauruses to get them. Some of them are: obliging, obsequious, reverential, self-conscious, self-effacing, subservient, supplicatory, unambitious, unostentatious, unpretentious. All relevant to the spud, don't you agree?
In the English dictionary, it said ‘also called Irish
potato, white potato. The edible tuber of a cultivated plant, Solanum Tuberosum, of the nightshade
family.’
Potato in Gujarati is ‘batako’.
If you want to play some Christmas games, just go to:
INTERESTING SPUD FACTS
·
Children get more
vitamin C, B1, B6, Folate,Iron, Magnesium and Potassium from potatoes than beetroot,
bananas, nuts, broccoli and avocado all combined.
·
All the nuts,
seeds and nut products eaten by children provide kids in the UK with less
selenium than potatoes.
·
The record number
of chip portions sold in a fish & chip shop, in a day, is 4000
·
¼ of all potatoes
grown in Britain are made into chips. That’s around 1.5 million tons each year,
or nearly the same weight as 125,000 full double decker buses.
CHRISTMAS FOOD FACTS
· One notable medieval English
Christmas celebration featured a giant 165-pound pie.
The giant pie was nine feet in diameter. Its ingredients included:
* 2 bushels of flour
* 20 pounds of butter
* 4 geese
* 2 rabbits
* 4 wild ducks
* 2 woodcocks
* 6 snipes
* 4 partridges
* 2 neats' tongues
* 2 curlews
* 6 pigeons
* 7 blackbirds.
The giant pie was nine feet in diameter. Its ingredients included:
* 2 bushels of flour
* 20 pounds of butter
* 4 geese
* 2 rabbits
* 4 wild ducks
* 2 woodcocks
* 6 snipes
* 4 partridges
* 2 neats' tongues
* 2 curlews
* 6 pigeons
* 7 blackbirds.
· In the Ukraine, they bake a
traditional Christmas bread called "kolach". This bread is braided
into a ring, and three such rings are placed one on top of the other, with a
candle in the center of the top one. The three rings symbolize the Holy
Trinity.They also set the table for Christmas Eve dinner with two tablecloths:
one for the ancestors of the family, the other for the living members as in
pagan times, ancestors were believed to be benevolent spirits who, when shown
respect, brought good fortune. The Ukrainians also prepare a traditional
twelve-course meal at Christmas time. A family's youngest child watches through
the window for the evening star to appear, a signal that the feast can begin.
· The inventor of the Christmas cracker
or bon-bon was Tom Smith who owned a sweet shop in London.
Visiting France in the 1840's, while Tom was in France, he came across sweets wrapped in a twist of paper. As they were quite popular, he began to copy the idea.When Tom noticed that young men were buying them to give to their sweethearts, he began to place "love mottoes" on small slips of paper inside the sweet wrapping.Later in 1846, and thinking about Christmas, Tom's thoughts turned towards placing toys and novelties inside the twisted wrapping. He experimented with this and invented the idea of producing a wrapping that could be pulled apart. Voila! The humble Christmas cracker!
Visiting France in the 1840's, while Tom was in France, he came across sweets wrapped in a twist of paper. As they were quite popular, he began to copy the idea.When Tom noticed that young men were buying them to give to their sweethearts, he began to place "love mottoes" on small slips of paper inside the sweet wrapping.Later in 1846, and thinking about Christmas, Tom's thoughts turned towards placing toys and novelties inside the twisted wrapping. He experimented with this and invented the idea of producing a wrapping that could be pulled apart. Voila! The humble Christmas cracker!
A fun christmas quiz - Mrs P has the answers locked away in the Food Tech safe. Print off your responses, hand them in this week, and win a Christmas selection box! If no one enters, the 2 bloggers get the chocs!!
1Mince
pies used to be oblong with a pastry figure on top. Who did this symbolise?
Jesus
Rudolf
Noddy Holder
2
Brussels sprouts got their name because
They
were called russels, but this was mispronounced
They were popular in
Brussels
Little cabbages was
deemed too long a name
3 How
many mince pies should you eat for luck?
3
6
12
52
4 When
did good king Wenceslas step out?
On
the eve of Christmas
On the feast of Stephen
To the tune of Jingle
Bell Rock
5 In
which direction should you stir mincemeat?
Clockwise
Anticlockwise
6 Who
first tucked into turkey in Britain?
Henry
VIII
Charles I
Oliver Cromwell
Queen Victoria
7 Which
spice would you not normally use when mulling wine?
Cinnamon
Cloves
Nutmeg
Cumin
8 What
might have been served as a traditional Christmas dinner in early Britain?
Lancashire
hotpot
A mustard-smothered
pig's head
Black pudding
9 What
might you find running through the middle of stollen?
Chestnuts
Marzipan
Gold
More cake
10 Which
of the following is a traditional flavouring for bread sauce?
Sage
Cloves
Star
anise
11 The
first mince pies actually contained meat as well as fruit.
True
False
12 What
do Germans cook their Brussels sprouts in?
Water
Apple juice
Beer
Schnapps
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