What’s your favourite flavour of crisp?

What’s your favourite flavour of crisp?

Neil
Hello, this is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English. I’m Neil.
 
Beth
And I’m Beth. In Britain we call them crisps and you might know them as potato chips, but whatever you call them, these fried potato slices are probably the world’s favourite snack. Neil, are you a big crisp eater and what’s your favourite flavour?
 
Neil
I love crisps, Beth. They are my favourite snack.
 
Beth
My favourite flavour is prawn cocktail, which is controversial because a lot of people don’t like that flavour.
 
Neil
I think my favourite is salt and vinegar.
 
Beth
Yummy! You’re making me hungry.
 
Neil
Well, crisps might be popular but with lots of oil and salt they’re not the healthiest food. So, why do we love them so much? That’s what BBC World Service programme The Food Chain wanted to find out. Here, presenter Ruth Alexander talks to Mitchell Dingwall, a food executive responsible for developing new crisp flavours: 
Ruth Alexander
Why do we love crisps so much?
 
Mitchell Dingwall
Hmm. I think it’s just that crunch, right? You can’t beat the crunch. And then that delicious, salty feeling in your mouth and it just becomes a snowball effect. You just want more of it!
 
Beth
For Mitchell, the best thing about crisps is the loud crunch. He says, “You can’t beat it!” An idiom meaning something like: “That’s the best thing and you won’t find anything better!”
 
Neil
Mitchell says once you’ve started eating crisps, it’s hard to stop and you just want to eat more and more. He calls this a snowball effect – a situation where doing something causes other similar things to happen. You eat one crisp and before you know it, the whole packet’s gone!
 
Beth
In this episode, we’ll be visiting two countries in love with crisps and, as usual, we’ll be learning some useful new words and phrases, all of which you can find on our website, bbclearningenglish.com.
 
Neil
But first, I have a question for you, Beth. The record for the world’s largest packet of crisps was recently broken in Saudi Arabia, but how much did the packet weigh? Was it:
 
a)    about 1.5 tonnes,
b)    about 2.5 tonnes, or
c)    about 3.5 tonnes?
 
Beth
OK. Wow! They are all huge! I’m going to guess about 3.5 tonnes.
 
Neil
OK. We’ll find out the answer later. Let’s travel first to Singapore, home of Jolene Ng, a market research analyst who specialises in salty snacks. Here’s Jolene talking with Ruth Alexander for BBC programme The Food Chain:
 
Ruth Alexander
Is the potato chip the most popular of all salty snacks?
 
Jolene Ng
It’s very, very much dependent on personal preference but if I were to look at certain countries, you could see, like in the UK, it’s very much part and parcel of life. You don’t have it only during snack times. You have it with lunch as well. You put it… My husband’s from the UK and he, kind of, puts it in his sandwich as well.
 
Ruth Alexander
Oh yeah, a cheese sandwich with a crisp inside. Oh yeah, that’s great!
 
Jolene Ng
Exactly!
 
Beth
Jolene says the popularity of different snacks depends on personal preference – someone’s subjective liking or disliking for something, based on their personal opinion.
 
Neil
In some places, crisps are part and parcel of everyday life. Part and parcel means to be an essential element or feature of something. In Britain, crisps are so essential that people even eat crisp sandwiches!
 
Beth
But not everywhere is so in love with potato chips. Let’s meet Jenny Martinez, a food vlogger from Mexico. In Mexico, tortilla corn chips are eaten instead of potato chips, and it’s common to see street vendors selling bags of corn tortillas filled with different sauces. Here, Jenny tells Ruth Alexander more for BBC World Service programme The Food Chain:
 
Ruth Alexander
For you, which is your go-to snack – the tortilla chip or the potato chip?
 
Jenny Martinez
Definitely the tortilla chip.
 
Ruth Alexander
Why?
 
Jenny Martinez
Because you could do so many things – dip it in almost everything, adding some guacamole,spicy salsa or just sour cream with a mixture of chipotle sauce.
 
Neil
Ruth asks if tortillas are Jenny’s go-to snack. You can use the phrase go-to to describe something which is relied upon to be the best thing for a particular purpose. For example, for a lot of people, Wikipedia is the go-to website for online information.
 
Beth
And Jenny thinks corn tortillas are especially good with guacamole, a paste made of mashed avocado… which sounds delicious and maybe a little healthier than a British crisp sandwich! Speaking of which, what was the answer to your question, Neil?
 
Neil
I asked you how heavy the world’s largest bag of crisps was.
 
Beth
And I said very heavy – over three and a half tonnes.
 
Neil
Well, it’s not that big but the real answer is still enormous – about 1.5 tonnes. The bag, made in Riyadh, was nine metres tall.
 
Beth
Yeah.
 
Neil
OK. Let’s recap the vocabulary we’ve learned, starting with the phrase you can’t beat that, meaning that something is the best and you won’t find anything better.
 
Beth
A snowball effect is a situation where one action causes other similar actions to happen.
 
Neil
Someone’s personal preference is their subjective liking or disliking for something, based on their own opinion.
 
Beth
To be part and parcel of something means to be an essential or integral feature of it.
 
Neil
And something which is described as the go-to can be relied upon as the best thing for a particular situation.
 
Beth
And finally, guacamole is a paste made of mashed avocado, lime juice and salt – delicious! Once again, our six minutes are up but if you’re hungry for more, then head over to our website, bbclearningenglish.com, where you’ll find a worksheet and quiz for this episode. See you again soon, but for now, goodbye!
 
Neil
Goodbye!

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