Learning Spanish: Make Licuados

Plan a Fun Fruit Smoothie Making Activity in Español

© Catherine Fortin

A Licuado or Smoothie, Microsoft Clip Art
Students will love making fruit smoothies, licuados, in Spanish class. Preparing, sharing, and talking about licuados in Spanish teaches the language the best way.

There is no better way to learn Spanish than by doing - en espaol. Here the doing is preparing, and then drinking. Students will learn and remember the fruit and the steps needed to make a refreshing fruit smoothie or a licuado. Bringing simple smoothies, or licuados, into your class will delight students with a traditional Latin American snack and useful Spanish while making them.

Fruit Smoothies in Latin America: Licuados

Latin Americans have always used their abundant and mouth-watering native fruit in desserts, snacks, and smoothies, licuados. Licuado stands serve heavenly combinations like mango-banana-vanilla or pineapple-papaya. A summer stroll in the evening isn't complete without sharing a licuado with a friend or family member.

Learning with Licuados

Experiential learning is most effective for acquiring a language naturally. Students see, touch, hear, and taste the ingredients and the final product. Making licuados is ideal for presenting or reviewing fruit and kitchen vocabulary and verbs too.

Presenting Preparando Licuados

The teacher needs to present and model the preparation of a licuado in Spanish first. The teacher should demonstrate and narrate the preparation in Spanish that is appropriate for the learners using as many real life materials as possible. See Teaching Spanish the Effective Way.

Most beginning students need practice with the basic I or Yo sentences, but more advanced students can use a different subject pronoun. Students even further along can use the practice with sentences using the future and past tenses, or even the subjunctive and conditional modes.

The simple logical narration should go something like:

Yo preparo un licuado. I'm preparing a smoothie.

Yo pelo una banana. I'm pealing a banana.

Yo corto una banana con un cuchillo. I'm cutting a banana with a knife.

Yo corto unas fresas. I cut some strawberries.

Yo pongo la banana y las fresas en la licuadora. I put the banana and the strawberries in the blender.

Yo pongo una taza de hielo en la licuadora. I put a cup of ice in the blender.

Yo pongo una taza de jugo en la licuadora. I put a cup of juice in the blender.

Yo pongo la tapa en la licuadora. I'm put the top on the blender.

Yo prendo la licuadora. I turn the blender on

Yo apago la licuadora. I turn the blender off.

Yo pongo el licuado en un vaso. I put some smoothie into a class.

Yo bebo el licuado. I drink the smoothie

After students have done a variety of reading and speaking, or even writing activities with the narrative, they're ready to make smoothies.

Making a Game-plan for Smoothies

Like any classroom undertaking, making smoothies requires careful planning, organization and good orchestration.

When? Designate a class period, or at least twenty five minutes

Who?: the entire Spanish class and the teacher

Who brings what?: Ask for volunteers to bring in the basic ingredients

How?: Ask for some ingredients at the beginning of class and set up in front of the class. Demonstrate making a smoothie while narrating the process in Spanish. The teacher can lead a question and answer session in Spanish or lead other speaking activities about making the smoothie.

If there is more than one blender, the teacher can make smoothie making centers.

Conversational Activities

There are so many conversational opportunities once the smoothies are done:

Writing Activities

After the smoothies are finished and the final clean-up is done, students will be ready to do a writing activity appropriate to their age and Spanish proficiency.

Preparing, drinking, and then discussing the preparation of licuados is optimal for practical use of Spanish in class. Students will get a great taste of Latin American culture with the multi-sensory experience that making licuados provides.


The copyright of the article Learning Spanish: Make Licuados in Learning Spanish is owned by Catherine Fortin. Permission to republish Learning Spanish: Make Licuados in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.


A Licuado or Smoothie, Microsoft Clip Art
       



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