MADE BY Anastasia Odnovalova TEACHER N.V. Skachko SECONDARY SCHOOL NAMED AFTER MARSHAL V.I.CHUIKOV SEREBRYANYE PRUDY MOSCOW REGION What is American food? Hamburgers and hot dogs? Fried chicken and giant steaks? Well, yes. But spaghetti and pizza are American too, and so is sweet and sour pork. The fact is that Americans eat every kind of food imaginable. There are, for example, more than 1,000 Chinese restaurants in New York City alone. At the same time, people in the States still like to think of some kinds of food as especially American. They like the idea of the American family sitting around the table eating turkey at Thanksgiving. They like to think of 'Mom' as the best cook in the world, even if their own mother never did much cooking. “As American as apple pie” and “Like Mother makes it” are popular expressions. AS AMERICAN AS APPLE PIE. The truth is, though, that families in the US eat together less often than they used to. Instead of meeting at the dinner table, families often meet in the kitchen, around the refrigerator. There's no time for old-fashioned cooking. Quick snacks all through the day have taken its place. And to save trouble, people eat wherever they like, in the street, in front of the TV, or at their desks. An enormous fast-food industry gives hungry Americans the snacks they want when they want them. Ice cream, popcorn, and hot dogs are on sale everywhere. Best known, perhaps, is the McDonald's hamburger business. But if more and more Americans eat fast food, more and more Americans also worry about it. Fast food makes you fat, and Americans are the fattest people in the world. They are also the most interested in their health, and snack food is not healthy. The fashion for health food is growing all the time. Among middle-class people, salads, beans, and fruit have taken the place of steak and ice cream. Drinking is going down too. Only 67 percent of adults drink alcohol at all, and one-third of those drink less than they used to. Smart businesspeople order mineral water, not wine, at their business lunches. Being fat, in fact, can cause real problems for an American. He or she will find it harder to get a good job, or even to make friends. If you want to do well, you must be thin. It doesn't seem fair, does it? Advertisers and fast-food sellers scream at people to eat, eat, eat. But inside, there is another voice saying “stop, stop, stop.” POPCORN – A FAVORITE AMERICAN SNACK Heat 1 tablespoon of vegetable oil in a deep, heavy pan. Add 25 grams of dried kernels (maize). Cover with a lid and shake the pan. The corn will start to 'pop'. Take the pan off the heat when all the corn has popped. Sprinkle with salt or sugar and serve. 1937: The McDonald brothers, Dick and Mack, open a little drive-in restaurant in Pasadena, California. They serve hot dogs and milk shakes. 1945: They have 20 waiters. All the teenagers in town eat hamburgers there. 1948: They get paper boxes and bags for the hamburgers. They put the price down from 30 cents to 15 cents. They cut the menu down from 25 things to only 9. There are no more waiters - it is self-service. So it is cheaper and faster. And they have windows all around the kitchen – so everyone can see it is clean. Parents start bringing their children to the restaurant. Poor families eat at a restauraте for the first time. 1960s: The McDonald's company opens hundreds of McDonald's restaurants all over the States. 1971: They open restaurants in Japan, Germany and Australia. Now ... the McDonald's company opens a new restaurant every 8 hours! There are McDonald's restaurants in over 70 countries. McDonald's restaurants serve almost exactly the same food in every country. On May 8, 1886, Dr John Styth Pemberton, a chemist, carried a bottle down the street in Atlanta, Georgia, to Jacob's Pharmacy on the corner. There, soda water was added to it, and the new drink was put on sale for five cents a bottle. The drink contained sugar, water, the leaves of the coca plant, and the juice of the kola nut. Dr Pemberton's partner, Frank Robinson, thought of a name for it. “Coca-Cola,” he said. “The two Cs would look well in advertising.” For the first year of its life, CocaCola sold only thirteen drinks a day. By its hundredth birthday, in 1986, it was selling 7.9 billion dollars' worth a year. Not much of the money went into John Pemberton's pocket. He died two years after he had invented Coca-Cola, and Asa G. Candler, a clever businessman, bought the business for $2,300. From then on, Coca-Cola's success was all due to advertising. The words “Coca-Cola, delicious and refreshing”, in flowing, graceful writing, were soon to be seen everywhere: on calendars, clocks, trays, and walls. The more people heard of it, the more people wanted it, and by 1895, Candler could say, “Coca-Cola is now sold and drunk in every state in the United States.” But the great days of Coca-Cola were still to come. In World War II, the company made a promise that every American soldier, sailor, and airman could have a Coke for five cents a bottle, anywhere in the world. The company knew they would lose money, but it was worth it. In one smart move they made sure that five billion bottles of Coke would find their way around the world, creating new demand in more countries. They also knew that the idea of Coca-Cola as something truly, especially American would be strengthened. In the years that followed the war, Coca-Cola managed to make itself one of the most powerful symbols of America both inside and outside the States. “Drink Coca-Cola, and you will share in the American dream,” the advertisements seem to say. So what is in this magic drink that has become the most successful product in world history? That secret is locked up in a bank in Atlanta, and only a few people alive know the exact recipe. One very important question remains – is Coca-Cola good for you? Dentists say that sugary drinks like Coca-Cola harm your teeth. Doctors say they add to problems of fatness that lead to heart disease. Delicious and refreshing? Maybe. ogiant ['d3aient] огромный, громадный; ospaghetti [spa'geti] спагетти (длинные тонкие макароны); opizza ['pi:tse] пицца; osweet and sour [saue] pork свинина в кисло-сладком соусе o(китайская кухня); oturkey ['t3:kij индейка ; oThanksgiving ['Gaeoks^givirj] День благодарения (официальный oпраздник в память первых колонистов Массачусетса, отмечается в последний четверг ноября); oas American as apple pie типично американский; oexpression [ik'sprejn] выражение; oold-fashioned [.auld'fsejnd] несовременный, старомодный, oстаринный; osnack легкая закуска; o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o enormous громадный, огромный; beans ['bi:nz] фасоль; smart [sma:t] толковый, разумный, зд. крутойadvertiser ['aedvetaiza] рекламодатель; to add добавлять; kernel [кз:п1] зерно, зернышко; maize [meiz] кукуруза; lid крышка; to pop с треском лопаться; to sprinkle ['spnrjkl] посыпать; drive-in restaurant ресторан для автомобилистов; milk shake молочный коктейль; waiter ['weita] официант; self-service ^self'saivis] самообслуживание; beer [bio] пиво; Norway ['no:wei] Норвегия; salmon ['sseman] лосось, семга; the Netherlands [neSelandz] Нидерланды; o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o delicious [di'hjss] очень вкусный; refreshing [n'freJiQ] освежающий, живительный; Atlanta [et'laente] r. Атланта; Georgia ['<J3O:d3i9] Джорджия (штат США); pharmacy ['fa:masi] аптека; coca plant ['кэикэ plaint] кока (южноамвр. кустарник и его пистья); kola ['keule] кола (тропическое дерево); flowing [llauiQ] плавный, гладкий; graceful ['greisfal] изящный; tray поднос; smart move разумный поступок, мудрый шаг; demand [di'maind] спрос; to strengthen ['strerj08n] усиливать(ся), укреплять(ся); powerful ['pauefel] мощный, сильный; advertisement [8d'v3:tism8nt] реклама; to be locked up быть запертым; exact recipe [ig.zakt 'resipi] точный рецепт. Based on The World of English by M. Farrell Faces of the USA by E. Laird