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Peppa Pig Tales - Juice Factory (S2E18)

Peppa Pig Tales poster
No synopsis available.
Runtime (min)3
Air Date2023-07-15
GenresKids
Network(s)YouTube, France Télévisions Jeunesse

Storyline

Peppa and her family visit a juice factory where they learn how fruit juice is made from start to finish. The episode follows the Pig family as they tour the facility, observing the various stages of juice production including fruit sorting, washing, pressing, and bottling. The characters watch as fresh fruit arrives at the factory and is transformed into the juice they drink at home.

Throughout the visit, Peppa asks questions about the machinery and processes, while Daddy Pig and Mummy Pig help explain what's happening at each station. The episode emphasizes the journey from farm-fresh fruit to packaged juice, showing young viewers the industrial process in a simplified, age-appropriate way. The family enjoys sampling fresh juice at the end of their educational tour.

What kids learn

This episode introduces children to basic concepts about food production and where everyday items come from. By following the juice-making process from fruit to bottle, young viewers gain an understanding that the products they consume don't simply appear on store shelves but go through multiple steps involving real people and machines. This foundational knowledge helps children appreciate the work behind common household items.

The factory tour format encourages curiosity about industrial processes and how things work. Children learn to ask questions about their environment and seek explanations for everyday phenomena, modeling Peppa's inquisitive approach during the visit. The episode also reinforces sequencing skills as children observe the logical order of production steps.

Additionally, the episode subtly promotes healthy eating by focusing on fruit juice and fresh fruit as the central subject. Children see fruit in its natural state before processing, which can help them make connections between whole foods and the beverages they drink.

Parents' top 5 questions

QuestionAnswer
Is this episode accurate about how juice is actually made?The episode presents a simplified but fundamentally accurate overview of commercial juice production. While it omits complex details like pasteurization temperatures or quality control testing, the basic sequence of washing, pressing, and bottling reflects real factory processes. The portrayal is age-appropriate for preschoolers, giving them a general understanding without overwhelming technical information. Parents can use this as a starting point for deeper conversations with older children.
What age is best for understanding the factory concepts shown?Children aged three to five will grasp the basic idea that juice comes from fruit and requires several steps to make. The visual nature of the tour helps even younger preschoolers follow along, though they may not retain every detail. Four and five-year-olds typically begin understanding cause-and-effect sequences, making them particularly receptive to the step-by-step production process shown in the episode.
How can I extend this episode into a real-world learning activity?Consider making fresh juice at home using a manual citrus juicer or blender, letting your child help wash fruit, cut it with supervision, and observe the transformation from whole fruit to juice. You might also visit a local farmers market to see where fruit comes from before it reaches factories, or read picture books about food production. These hands-on experiences reinforce the episode's lessons about where food comes from.
Does this episode promote sugary drinks over whole fruit?The episode focuses on the production process rather than promoting juice consumption specifically. It shows fruit in its whole form before processing, which actually helps children understand that juice originates from real fruit. Parents can use this as an opportunity to discuss why eating whole fruit provides fiber and other benefits that juice alone doesn't offer, turning the episode into a nutrition conversation starter.
Will my child want to visit a factory after watching this?Many children do express interest in seeing real factories after episodes like this, which can be a wonderful educational opportunity. While juice factories rarely offer public tours, many communities have child-friendly facilities like bakeries, dairy farms, or orchards that welcome families. Even observing workers at a grocery store bakery or produce section can satisfy a child's curiosity about food preparation and connect screen content to real life.

Writing

Directing

Season
Season #Episode #Episode Name
21
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27
Miss Rabbit visits playgroup to teach the kids about teeth. Peppa pretends that she is a dentist.
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29
Peppas playgroup make volcanoes using newspaper and glue, then use them in a science experiment to make lava.
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The school holds a fun run to raise money for a new bell. Rain turns it into a very muddy race.
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Season #Episode #Episode Name
31
The Great Train Robbery is the 1st episode of Peppa Pig Tales Season 3.
32
Peppa and her family at the supermarket doing their weekly shop there using a special machine to beat their shopping as they go. but Miss Rabbit says the supermarket closed in 2 minutes the family better quickly. Mummy and Peppa race them but they are rushing. at lastly toilet paper is in the other end of the supermarket. but Miss Rabbit announce the supermarket is about to closed Mummy says they going too fast and crash in fact the toilet paper is lot. Peppa and her family love shopping at the supermarket, especially for toilet paper.
Season #Episode #Episode Name
530
Mummy goes for her first 'Baby Check' - and Peppa does her best to make it a fun experience she can share, by pretending she also has a baby in her belly.

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