Middle School Spanish

Mr. McCarthy

Middle School Spanish

Archives for Grade 6 Spanish

Spanish 6

 

We had Cuban Sandwiches and many asked for the recipe.

 

Sándwiches cubanos

An authentic recipe begins with “take a good sized cardboard box, 2 Complete Sunday newspapers, 2 cookie sheets and 6-8 heavy bricks.” Cuban sandwiches are the classic Cuban beach food. The newspaper goes above and below the sandwiches in the cardboard box for insulation. The bricks are to flatten the sandwiches between 2 cookie sheets as you warm them in the oven. You should never make less than 5 or 6 dozen Cuban sandwiches at a time. I know you think you don’t need that many; guess again. Go ahead and delude yourself that you will eat only one and can freeze the rest. (They do freeze well.) They are a quite inexpensive way to feed a very large crowd but labor intensive in the assembly.

Buy a bottle of sour orange marinade (naranja agria by Badia which Stop & Shop usually has) or mojo criollo in the Goya section of a big supermarket or make your own marinade (much better) from 1 Cup of orange juice, the juice of 5 juicy lemons or limes, a whole head of garlic peeled, 2 Tablespoons of sea salt, 2 Tablespoons of oregano and 1 Tablespoon of ground cumin. A quarter of a cup of olive oil should be added to this mixture or per one bottle of the naranja agria or mojo criollo.   If you make your own, puree it in the blender and pour it over a 3-4 lb. boneless pork shoulder roast that has been pierced deeply and often with a cooking fork. Marinate this in the fridge for 3 days. Double this to make 6 dozen sandwiches

While you are waiting for the marinade to work its magic: From the Deli section of the supermarket you will need a pound of sliced domestic boiled ham (rectangular if you can), a pound and a half of Land-O-Lakes white cheese, a pound of Genoa hard salami, and a pound of Swiss Cheese (the longest, most rectangular they have). I order finger rolls at my supermarket bakery to pick up on the day I make the sandwiches or I buy 5 or 6 dozen hot dog rolls which are cut sideways, NOT top to bottom. The finger rolls I have to cut myself. I judge the width of a bun by eye and on wax paper make 64 stacks of first ham, then white cheese, then salami, and finally Swiss cheese, all cut about ¾” wide except the salami. Since that is round, I cut it in half. You can bundle these stacks up and keep them in the fridge or freeze them to get them out of your way. This will speed up assembly time by quantums.

On assembly day, Get 6 dozen tears of aluminum foil ready to wrap each sandwich individually. They used to make aluminum foil “Wrappers” which had 50 precut sheets the perfect size. I have not found them again since 2006. However, my skill level does run to tearing aluminum foil into 6 dozen 12” or so sheets so I have come to cope.

Cook the pork in the marinade for 1 ½ hours at 350. Leave it in the oven until it is cool enough to handle. Remove it from the marinade and thin slice it so that you have about 6 dozen slices or slivers. Lay out 6 dozen slices of kosher dill pickle stackers, about 5 jars. I like Vlasic. Drain these on paper towels. If you run short of 6 dozen or the slices are mostly rind, just cut however many you need in half lengthwise and throw away the uglies.

Assemble in batches of however many open buns fit your cookie sheets. This is a good time to have a friend around as a second pair of hands. Combine yellow mustard with mayonnaise in equal quantities in a bowl or use Durkee’s Famous Sauce which is mustard and mayonnaise already combined. Melt 3 sticks of butter. Brush the butter on the open-faced buns then put them under the broiler until they begin to brown.

When a batch is toasted, brush the mustard/mayo mixture on both sides. This waterproofs the bun. Add on your prepared stack of meats and cheese, then the pickle slice, then the pork roast slice, and wrap in foil. Mash the foil wrapped sandwiches flat.  (These will keep a day or 2 in the fridge but only if you sleep in front of the fridge to repel pirates. I found this out the hard way.)

On the day you wish to feed the crowd put the sandwiches on end in a crock pot and warm them for about an hour or until they are warm to the touch. To economize on time you can stack them 32 high on a cookie sheet and warm them in a 350 oven for a while.   They can be eaten warm, room temperature or cold from the fridge.  I prefer them at room temperature.  ¡Buen provecho!

 

Spanish 6

Spanish 6 is studying ar, er, and ir verb endings.  WS 3 is due on Monday.

The food of the month was  Chimichurri (an Argentine sauce for meat) on a steak slice.

Recipe

10 cloves of garlic

1 bunch of flat parsley

3/4 cup of olive oil

1/4 cup of white wine vinegar

1/4 cup of chicken stock

3/4 teaspoon dried oregano

3/4 teaspoon of dried basil

 

Chop the garlic a bit. Put it in a blender / processor with some of the liquid, Puree. Remove the stems from the parsley and chop.  Add the parsley leaves and other ingredients.  Puree until a nice green smooth texture is achieved.  A tablespoon of hot pepper flakes may be added but I did not use this today for the children.  Salt and pepper to taste.

Prepare some cooked meat and enjoy!

 

 

Grade 6 Spanish

We got back on track by reviewing the test we took just prior to the vacation.  Each student corrected their test and then I reviewed the correct areas.  Today we retook a similar test to prove that we now understand both what we knew already and what we learned in the review.  We are on to the next Chapter once we review this test on Monday.  Anyone who still needs to can retake this test during recess any day this coming week.

Spanish 6

As I sit home and contemplate the year so far I feel so proud of what this class has accomplished.  They are enthusiastic learners and great young people.  We have progressed well in our text and many new skills have been acquired.

Thanks for helping with the Goya juice.  We were able to have each lower school student drink some juice from this Spanish Company as they ate the foods the French and Spanish departments prepared.

The Carnaval presentation went well the the sixth grade providing great energy.  Many in the class warmed to the Shakira song “Estoy Aquí” and sing it both in and out of school.

As you know learning a world language is work on a continuum.  Each new skill, each year, is a step towards the next level.  This class will be perfectly poised to have a terrific year in Spanish 7 staring from day one next year.

Spanish 7

 

As I sit home and contemplate the year so far I feel so proud of what this class has accomplished.  They are enthusiastic learners and great young people.  We have progressed well in our text and many new skills have been acquired.

Thanks for helping with the Goya juice.  We were able to have each lower school student drink some juice from this Spanish Company as they ate the foods the French and Spanish departments prepared.

The Carnaval presentation went well the the sixth grade providing great energy.  Many in the class warmed to the Shakira song “Estoy Aquí” and sing it both in and out of school.

As you know learning a world language is work on a continuum.  Each new skill, each year, is a step towards the next level.  This class will be perfectly poised to have a terrific year in Spanish 7 staring from day one next year.

Spanish 6

On the 29th of this month grades 6 and 7 will form one group and sing a song made famous by Shakira.  ”Estoy aquí” is a lot of fun to sing and we will be performing it on the 29th as part of the show celebrating Mardi Gras or “Carnaval” as it is called in Spanish.

After the performance the World Language Department will be offering both French and “Spanish” food to the young audience.  I will buy all the food stuff / materials needed but I am asking that a volunteer in each class prepare the food.   “Dulce de Leche” on Maria cookies, “Sopa Negra” in Tortilla scoops, and guava jelly and cheese on a small “tosta”  are all past favorites that I have or soon will prepare again for my classes but this time I want the students to be involved.  I am also asking each student to bring in a can of Goya juice / Nectar so that the young bcd students will have a Spanish drink.  The cans cost about a dollar.  I am asking my students to pick a flavor that they like in hopes that it will also be a good flavor for one of our younger students.  The flavors include, Pineapple, peach, strawberry, guava, apricot,tamarind and many others.  Please avoid the “Malta” as it is rare that a youngster likes it.  I will be collecting the Goya drinks starting Monday the 13th.  Thanks for your help.

 

In class we just finished and took a test unit 2A.  Along with practicing our songMonday and perhaps Tuesday will be spent going over the test, understanding our errors and thereby preparing to retake the test if a student wishes to improve their grade.  We will then be on to 2B first learning the vocabulary and then the grammar of this unit.

Spanish 6

This past week in honor of turkey day we ate Mole Poblano in class.  The students asked for a recipe.

 

 

Here is a link to one of the many recipes for Mole Poblano.

 

http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/mole-poblano-recipe/index.html

 

Mole means grind and Poblano means from the state of Puebla.  The dish is the national dish of Mexico.  I like to slow cook the turkey and then pull it.  Many cooks just place the mole over a turkey slice or leg.  If you want a short cut you can use “Doña María” mole sauce.  It usually can be purchased in grocery stores in the Goya section.  Also, the Mercado near the movie house in Great Barrington has a selection of both green and the traditional chocolate.  If you are slow cooking the turkey use turkey broth as a liquid and then degrease and save it to mix into the “Doña María” mole sauce.  Reuse the container to mix about 4 liquids to one “Doña María” mole jar.  You want a consistency similar to gravy.  Once mixed and heated you have your mole sauce.

 

In class we are just finishing lesson 1A.  The lesson was about infinitives and how to say what you like and don’t like.  There will be a test Wednesday.

Spanish 6

Spanish 6 is off and running in fine form.  Next Wednesday we will test 1A.  Today  as I write this I am waiting for them to get back from their trip to offer them “Mole Poblono” which is turkey done mexican style.  It is the Mexican National Dish.  I will post a recipe by Monday.

Spanish Grade 6

I look forward to a  great year in Spanish 6. Our text book this year is “Realidades”.  It is an excellent book! Your study of Spanish will intensify as you follow this exciting curriculum. And of course the study of culture will continue with both more authentic readings and tastes. Hope you’re ready because I sure am!

Grade 6

We are working on the vocabulary on page 117.  Monday we have the third and last quiz on these words and Wednesday there will be a test on the entire list.  As usual anyone who would like to improve a grade can come in on Thursday to get help and retake a test.

Last Thursday we enjoyed Cuban sandwiches.  I have  posted a how to recipe for anyone who would like to make them at home.

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