IELTS Speaking for Success - 🍰 Cake (S03E02) + Transcript

Episode Date: May 4, 2020

Tune in to hear Rory's sweet answers, find out about the most popular dessert (or desert?) in Scotland and whether Rory is a good cook (or cooker?). Tune in and have a great day! - IELTS Speaking f...or Success PREMIUM: https://linktr.ee/sfspremium Find an IELTS Speaking Partner: https://links.successwithielts.com/ieltspartner Episode transcript: https://successwithielts.com/s03e02 Our social media: https://linktr.ee/successwithielts © 2020 Success with IELTS Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello everyone, I'm Maria. And my name is Rory, and we are the hosts of the IEL Speaking for Success podcast, the podcast that aims to help you develop your speaking skills, as well as your listening skills along the way. We started this podcast to give you a look at how a native English speaker would answer some of the most common IOT speaking questions. I ask Rory questions, and he gives answers in using vocabulary and grammar for a high score. Ben 9 score, always.
Starting point is 00:00:31 Rory, do you think the answers? to the questions today will be difficult? No, it's going to be a piece of cake. What are we going to be talking about today? Cake! Cakes! Yay! Oh my God, I'm sorry.
Starting point is 00:00:43 Try not to die. That would be very inconvenient, for me. That would be very inconvenient, yes. Roy, do you like cakes? Yes. Actually, I like them perhaps a bit too much. I really need to improve my diet, to be honest with you. So you do have a sweet tooth?
Starting point is 00:01:02 Oh, for sure. I think everybody does. Have you ever baked a cake? Yes, once with my mum. Not since. I'm as terrible a cook as I am a baker as it happens. How often do you eat cakes? I don't know.
Starting point is 00:01:20 I suppose whenever they are present, I try not to buy them because I suppose I have a bit of self-control, sorry, a bit of a self-control issue when it comes to cakes and sweet things. But whenever they're at a party or something like that, then I'll definitely be eating the cake. I'll be hovering around. Do you like having desserts? I think I like it. I don't think I like it as much as I did when I was younger, actually.
Starting point is 00:01:47 I suppose just because I've been able to develop some self-control, I think when you're younger, you find it more difficult to control your urges to eat things. But if I do eat them now, then I have them at the end of a meal. I feel like that's the logical course of, well, course. Are cakes popular in your country? Well, I think if you look at the size of some of the people who live there, you could definitely say they're popular. People definitely to, or some people need to exercise some self-control in that respect. But seriously, I don't think they're any popular or any less popular or more popular than anywhere else.
Starting point is 00:02:26 I think the same proportion of people like them. What desserts are popular in your country? It's a good question, really. I think nothing that isn't popular elsewhere. So people have like just the normal sponge cakes, they'll have ice cream. I suppose one thing that might be particularly popular is sticky toffee pudding. That's something that seems to be quite a popular dish at weddings or parties when people have large gatherings. But other than that, I think that everything else is pretty normal, to be honest. Rory, thank you very much for your sweet answers.
Starting point is 00:03:10 Oh, God. I'm cracking the jokes now. Right, shall we go over the vocabulary? Yes. All right, so when we talk about cakes and desserts, now the listeners, we say desserts. Why is it an issue? Because if you say desert, then you mean the place. The Sahara Desert. So make sure that you say like, I love desserts. Deserts. They're much tastier than desserts. And Rory has used a nice, what kind of,
Starting point is 00:03:44 idiom, a piece of cake. Yes, a piece of cake. It's a piece of cake. It's a piece of cake. It means difficult or super easy? Oh, it means something is super easy. It's great. Yeah, it's a piece of cake. Or like, was this test difficult? No, it's a piece of cake. Or it was a piece of cake. Right. The question was, have you ever baked a cake?
Starting point is 00:04:05 So we can bake a cake or we can make a cake. Yes. And you said that I'm a terrible cook. Yeah, well, I made a comparison. I said, I'm as terrible a cook as I am a baker. So that just means that I'm a terrible cook and I'm a terrible baker. Yeah, we say a baker because a person who, who makes cakes, who makes cakes? Can we say a cooker?
Starting point is 00:04:28 No, you can't because a cooker is not a person. A cooker is a thing that you cook with. In some parts of the country, it's called, sorry, in some parts of my country, it's called a cooker and in other parts that's called an oven. Either way, it's the thing, not the person. Yeah, a piece of furniture. So the person who cooks is a cook or a chef. You've been talking about self-control issue, right? And some people should exercise their self-control? Yeah. So I guess if we talk about self-control, some people would say like I should control myself, but self-control is actually more flexible vocabulary and then you can use self-control, but if you want a higher score, it's got to be exercise self-control. The meaning is the same, but it's the collocation to exercise self-control. You also mentioned control your urges. Yes. So people's urge. What's the meaning of urges? Urges are really strong feelings when you want to do something.
Starting point is 00:05:32 And it's not usually something that lasts for a long time. It's usually a short time. So it's a very short, intense time when you really want something. Like when I'm hungry, I always have an urge to eat fish. I'm a big fan of seafood. Have an urge to eat fish, right? Or we should control our urges. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:53 I'm a smoker. for example, so I should control my urges to smoke and be a healthier person. Right, that's true. When I asked you how often you have cakes, you said that I'll be hovering around. Hovering like a helicopter? Basically, yeah. So it's like if there's a small part of the room where something is
Starting point is 00:06:11 and you are either standing there not doing much or you're just moving around, not really leaving that area, then you're hovering. Can we just imagine that in the room there are some cakes and Rory is hovering around them or just hovering. Exactly. Right? Like a Rory helicopter. It is exactly like that.
Starting point is 00:06:31 People should be careful when I'm near cake. And it's interesting that we can use cake without any articles, right? So, like, I want cake. It's not just I want a cake, a slice of cake, but it's just like, or cake is important. Cake gives you enderphins. Cake makes you happy. It does. So that's why we should have.
Starting point is 00:06:52 as much of it as possible, in my opinion. Well, control your urges, Rory. I will try. Exercise your self-control, right? Rory told us that he prefers desserts at the end of the meal, right? At the end of the meal, what we say. Usually people say, in the end, but usually at the end of something. Yes, make sure that you don't make that mistake with your prepositions.
Starting point is 00:07:18 Otherwise, that's going to get you in trouble. So always at the end of a meal. but in the end of the story. Yes. In the beginning. Yeah. Yes. In the middle.
Starting point is 00:07:30 In the middle. When you talk about cakes, you can mention specific words for cakes. For example, Rory has told us about sponge cakes, right? Like SpongeBob. Yes. Sponge cakes. They're kind of similar. A sponge cake is just a normal cake, to be honest with you.
Starting point is 00:07:49 You'll know it if you press down on it. And it goes down, but then when you take your hand off, it comes back up. As long as you wash your hands before you do that. Yeah, wash your hands. Wash your hands, people. Yeah, several times a day. Okay. Sponge cakes, then we can have cupcakes, we can have cheesecakes, pudding.
Starting point is 00:08:07 Yes. Right, pudding is an essential part of English cuisine. So I'm told. Pudding. So make sure that you know the name of your favorite cake. Also, we discussed having a sweet tooth. So I have a sweet tooth. Roy, do you have sweet teeth? Oh, absolutely. I have a sweet mouth.
Starting point is 00:08:30 But on the subject of talking about specific cakes and desserts and knowing your favorite, so you need to remember to talk about things like sponge cake or in my case it's sticky toffee pudding or in other people's cases it could be marangs. Make sure you know the specific vocabulary. Don't just say I like cake. Cake is great. Cake is amazing. If you keep saying cake, people are going to get very bored very quickly.
Starting point is 00:08:54 Yeah, so cupcakes, puddings, marang, ice cream, gelato, right? But make sure that you have cake in moderation. Yes. Or try to. Yeah, try to. Again, cake is a great thing. It gives us energy. What else? It makes us happy.
Starting point is 00:09:16 Yes, it makes us happy. It's just a happy food. Yes. we can have a slice of cake or the whole cake. Have you ever actually eaten the whole cake? Yes. Just to yourself. Yeah, I shouldn't share that widely, but I have sat and eaten the whole thing off by myself.
Starting point is 00:09:33 How did you feel? Great. Oh, yes. Bliss. What a bliss. Dear listeners, thank you very much for listening. Now you can listen to Rory's answers again, and this time notice all the grammar and vocabulary is just used.
Starting point is 00:09:47 Roy, do you like cakes? Yes, actually, I like them perhaps a bit too much. I really need to improve my diet, to be honest with you. So you do have a sweet tooth? Oh, for sure. I think everybody does. Have you ever baked a cake? Yes, once with my mum. Not since. I'm as terrible a cook as I am a baker as it happens.
Starting point is 00:10:15 How often do you eat cakes? I don't know I suppose whenever they are present I try not to buy them because I suppose I have a bit of self-control a bit of a self-control issue when it comes to cakes and sweet things but whenever they're at a party or something like that
Starting point is 00:10:32 then I'll definitely be eating the cake I'll be hovering around Do you like having desserts? I think I like it I don't think I like it as much as I did when I was younger actually I suppose just because I've been able to develop some self-control, I think when you're younger,
Starting point is 00:10:51 you find it more difficult to control your urges to eat things. But if I do eat them now, then I have them at the end of a meal. I feel like that's the logical course of, well, courses. Are cakes popular in your country? Well, I think if you look at the size of some of the people who live there, you could definitely say they're popular. People definitely to, or some people need to exercise some self-control. in that respect. But seriously, I don't think they're any popular or any less popular or more popular
Starting point is 00:11:24 than anywhere else. I think the same proportion of people like them. What desserts are popular in your country? It's a good question, really. I think nothing that isn't popular elsewhere. So people have like just the normal sponge cakes, they'll have ice cream. I suppose. One thing that might be particularly popular is sticky toffee pudding. That's something that seems to be quite a popular dish at weddings or parties when people have large gatherings. But other than that, I think that everything else is pretty normal, to be honest.

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