Classroom lesson · Tapas · 🇪🇸 Spain

Tapas

Spanish food works differently - lots of little plates, shared with friends

A bar counter covered in colourful Spanish tapas, including tomato bread, jamón and croquetas

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Tapas are small plates of food, usually shared between friends. In Spain, instead of one big meal each, a group of people will order lots of little dishes and put them in the middle of the table. Everyone helps themselves with little forks or pieces of bread.

Tell me more

The word 'tapa' means 'lid' or 'cover'. The most popular story says that long ago, drinks were served with a slice of bread balanced on top to keep flies away. Eventually people started putting little bits of food on the bread - ham, cheese, an olive - and the snack became more important than the lid.

Tapas come in all sorts. Patatas bravas are crispy chunks of potato with a smoky tomato sauce. Croquetas are little fried parcels of creamy ham or cheese. Tortilla española is a thick omelette made of potatoes and eggs (it's called a Spanish omelette in English). Pan con tomate is just toasted bread rubbed with fresh tomato. Each region of Spain has its own.

Eating tapas is very social. People walk from bar to bar through the evening, having one or two tapas in each place, talking with friends. This is called 'ir de tapeo' - 'going for a tapas walk'. By the end of the evening, you've eaten dinner without ever sitting down for a long time.

Spain's eating times are unusual compared to many countries. Lunch is the big meal of the day, often eaten at 2 or 3 in the afternoon. Dinner can be as late as 10pm. Tapas in between help keep everyone happy until then.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Spain eats lunch at 2-3pm and dinner at 10pm. How would your school day need to change if you lived in Spain?
  2. 02Is it easier to share lots of small dishes or to have one plate each? Which would you choose?
  3. 03What is one food from your home you would put on a tapas plate for a Spanish friend to try?
Try this

Classroom activity

Design a class tapas board. Each pupil draws or describes one small dish they'd bring - it can be from any country. Lay them all out on a big piece of paper as if on a tabletop. Label each one and the country it comes from.