IELTS Speaking for Success - 🍳 Cooking (S08E11) + Transcript

Episode Date: November 21, 2022

Do you like cooking? What do you usually cook? Would you like to learn how to cook? Who usually does the cooking in your family? What do you usually do around the house? Do you like housework? Tune i...n and have a great day! - Watch the video version of the episode: https://youtu.be/4Si4-K0oYdo Get exclusive episodes on IELTS Speaking parts 1, 2, and 3: https://linktr.ee/sfspremium Our course on Phrasal Verbs: https://successwithielts.com/podcourses Transcript: https://successwithielts.com/s08e11 Our IELTS Writing podcast: https://linktr.ee/wfspremium Find an IELTS Speaking Partner: https://links.successwithielts.com/ieltspartner Our social media: https://linktr.ee/successwithielts © 2022 Success with IELTS Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, lovely. I'm Maria. And my name is Rory, and we're the host of the IEL Speaking for Success podcast. The podcast that aims to help you improve your speaking skills, as well as your listening skills along the way. We've started this podcast to give you gorgeous grammar and fabulous vocabulary for your high I-I-L-Skull, Vand-9th school. Rory, look at you. You look thin. Did you have any breakfast today? I did. I cooked an omelet earlier for breakfast. Oh, I see.
Starting point is 00:00:32 Shall we talk about cooking? Shall we? Yeah, cooking. It is, dear listener. Yes, in ILD speaking, part one, they can ask you questions about cooking. Do you like cooking? Well, I like whipping up things that I'm good at cooking, which is a painfully small number now that I think about it.
Starting point is 00:00:59 Otherwise, it's just ready meals, which aren't particularly healthy, are they? What do you usually cook? Well, I don't have much time to throw things together with lots of ingredients, so anything with eggs like scrambled eggs or omelets, it could be thrown into a pan or a microwave, and that brings everything together nicely in the space of just a few minutes. Would you like to learn how to cook? Well, I picked up a few recipes from my mum who did most of the cooking when I was younger, at least most of the cooking in our family when I was younger. Otherwise, these days when I even glance at a cookbook, my eyes just sort of slide off the page and I can't take any of it in. Who usually does the cooking in your family? Well, like I said, my mum was the first port of call back in the day when it came to cooking things.
Starting point is 00:01:45 Although laterally, my little brother, who isn't so little these days, became a pretty good cook as well. Actually, he's a better cook than me by far, to be honest with you. What do you usually do around the house? Well, probably just about all of the household chores you'd care to name, really, since I live by myself, which usually means they get done more quickly. However, it does mean that I have to do everything, so it's just me working my way down the tick list. Do you like housework? Does anyone?
Starting point is 00:02:13 If I could buy a robot or hire a housekeeper to do everything for me, then I would, although it's prohibitively expensive right now, which is always the deciding factor in these kinds of things. Dear listener, we have speaking part two and three episodes for you, our premium episodes, And this week, on our premium, Rory is describing a story or a novel that he's read, and in Speaking Part 3, we're discussing stories in general, the recent IOT's speaking part 3 topics. And two, the links are in the description. Go check them out. What's the secret ingredient in any dish? I knew you were going to say that.
Starting point is 00:03:04 It was just on the tip of my tongue, and then I was like, no, it couldn't possibly be anything quite so cheesy. Cheesy. It's a food metaphor or a food idiom. What's the secret ingredient of our podcast? Love. No, it's Maria making me do things that I don't want to do. Okay, let's carry on. Carrot on.
Starting point is 00:03:29 You understand, huh? Carrot cooking. It's going to be like this for the whole 20 minutes. So I'm sorry. We've got 10 more to go. And still, it's all just food references. Also, I've got the joke. Oh, go ahead.
Starting point is 00:03:44 You know, listener, when you understand English humor and all these like puns and stupid jokes, this means that you have a high level of English. You are this, you know, chef of English. Was that the joke? No, no, no, no. That's the chef of English. No. Okay.
Starting point is 00:04:01 I felt bad for not laughing there. Oh, oh, I have one more. So you listen to this podcast and you expand your horizons. Expand. Whereas I am expending all of my energy, not just dying on this. Let's carrot on and expand our horizons. Sorry. No, you're not.
Starting point is 00:04:29 You're not sorry. I know this is what you do. you spend time whipping things up, cooking up ways of making me cringe. So, Rory, you said that I like whipping things up. What did you mean by this? If you whip something up in the kitchen, it's just another way of saying you cook something just based on what's around you. But you could use it more generally to talk about cooking and the examiner will know what you mean.
Starting point is 00:04:52 Yeah, for example, we usually say whip up eggs. Whisk the eggs. Yeah, we say whisk the eggs. You don't whip them. If you whipped your eggs, they would break. That wouldn't be very nice. Yeah, but a whip is a... What do we usually whip?
Starting point is 00:05:08 Which ingredients, which products? Can we please add a whip sound effect for Maria doing the whip? Learn your grammar. Learn the vocabulary. Buy our premium. You can tell the different styles of teaching from this exchange. Where I'm quite laid back, Maria's just like, would you learn the grammar?
Starting point is 00:05:29 So what do you whip? You whip up food, or you whip up a meal from what you have available. You whisk eggs when you have this beater and you whisk them around. So you whip up a meal means you make a meal. You cook a meal. Whip up a meal. It could be cooking. Maybe you have things that are already cooked.
Starting point is 00:05:49 Yeah, also you can use some nice verbs. Like, I enjoy whisking the eggs. This makes me cut. Oh, you beat the eggs as well, don't you? You beat the eggs up. You beat and then you whisk them. You can do that with a fork too, not just with a whisk. I'm good at cooking.
Starting point is 00:06:11 I'm not good at cooking. I am not good at cooking. Ask anyone I have ever cooked for, the survivors. And dear listener, you can also say that I don't usually cook, but if I do, it helps me relax. Cooking is a stress reliever. I find it therapeutic. So cooking is therapy. Or in my case, it's antitherepyrapy and I find it extremely stressful.
Starting point is 00:06:33 Just because I know lots of cooking words does not make me a good cook. In fact, it maybe replaces all the information I should have to make me a good cook. Well, you can say I focus on the ingredients. Do you focus on the ingredients? Oh yeah, absolutely. First I buy them, then I kind of mix them all together and I focus only on the task at hand. I get my hands dirty. It's kind of it gets more physical.
Starting point is 00:06:57 You know, all this is whooshing and whisking. and whipping. Rory, you mentioned scrambled eggs. Yes, there are different kinds of eggs, or different kinds of things we can do with eggs. Scramble eggs, when you whisk them up with other things. You can make them in a pan, but I cook mine in a microwave
Starting point is 00:07:14 because I'm a complete Philistine and I don't have time to sit around cooking eggs. Excuse me, you cook eggs in a microwave? Yes. Rory style eggs. You don't look very happy with me. No. Sorry.
Starting point is 00:07:29 Hold on, what's wrong with cooking eggs in the microwave? Why does everyone always look at me like I'm, you know, personally responsible for the death of Princess Diana when I say that? What's the problem with that? Because you have a frying pan and you fry your eggs and you use a frying pan. You don't use a frying pan always to scramble your eggs. You can use a sauce pan to scramble your eggs if you wanted to do it. No, this is really weird.
Starting point is 00:07:55 Deal, listen, if you think that cooking eggs in a microwave is a, is a little bit crazy. Could you write down here in the comments? What do you think about this? I don't understand. Why is it crazy? We can say cook a dish. Oh, no, we cannot.
Starting point is 00:08:11 Get back to the point. So, cook up a dish, right? Or make a meal, right? So I usually make lasagna or pasta or different kinds of omelets, so make or cook. These verbs are all fine. You said that. you picked up a few recipes.
Starting point is 00:08:31 Yeah, so you picked up, like, you learned a few recipes. Yes, and you publicly criticized me for cooking my eggs in the microwave, and I demand an explanation why that's weird. Because you see, Rory, when we have a frying pan, we have a little bit of olive oil, and how olive oil connects to the eggs in a frying pan, right? So it's just, the chemistry happens, the magic happens. Magic can happen in a microwave.
Starting point is 00:08:58 In a microwave, it's artificial, you know, the air is everything is like, ooh, electricity, oh, scramble that's electricity. Oh, no, electricity. The thing that enables us to record this podcast. Like, come on, I have a very busy life. And when the eggs are cooking in the microwave, I can go and take my bins out. I can tidy the kitchen. Why do I have to stand at the stove and do everything there?
Starting point is 00:09:24 Takes two minutes. Actually, it takes four minutes. No, it doesn't. Take six, but that's not the point. I just like to get everything's done, and I don't like to stand still. So when you learn some recipes from somebody, you say I picked up a few recipes from my mom, from my father, from my friends. And I do most of the cooking. So do the cooking.
Starting point is 00:09:47 I picked up some tips from Maria, but not cooking with a microwave. You can also say that I use a cookbook or a recipe book, so a recipe, yeah, recipes. We follow a recipe. Or, for example, you can say I sometimes come up with recipes myself. So I kind of make them myself. I create them. So I come up with some recipes myself to create special dishes. What did you mean when you said that your mom is the first port or the first port of call?
Starting point is 00:10:22 The first port of call is the first person that you speak to or go to to do something or to help with something or to ask. questions about something. So my mum is the first port of call for me when it comes to cooking. Maria is the first port of call for me when it comes to silly questions about conditionals because I know nothing about them. And Vanya is the first port of call for me when I make a huge mistake when we're recording the podcast and we have to fix it. Yeah. We also use words a cook and a chef. Rory, what's the difference? A chef is a job and a cook is just you're a cook and you're a cook in your golden kitchen, for example. So you can say, I'm not a good cook.
Starting point is 00:11:01 I'm a good cook. My mother is by far the best cook in our family. But a chef is like Gordon Ramsey, Jamie Oliver, they are famous chefs. In some languages, is it not the same word that's used to describe both? Yeah, for example, in Russian we say... Pavar? Yeah. But we also say chef.
Starting point is 00:11:24 Oh. I don't speak my own language. I don't know. Great. Well, in some languages, it's one word, and in English it's two for different things. Things around the house could be called chores, household chores, C-H. Yeah, a bit strange. Or housework.
Starting point is 00:11:45 And Rory works his way down the tick list. A tick list. Basically, it's a big list of jobs to do that I have for every day. And when I do it, I tick them off. and it is a family tradition that I didn't think I would find myself living up to or I would find myself living through, but there you go, I'm doing it, it's now part of my life. And you can also say that some chores, some housework, takes up a lot of time, and some chores take up less time. So take up time. A lot of time, less time.
Starting point is 00:12:21 But if it's just you, then it should take up less time. and because like how much mess does one person generate? If you're me, not that much. If you're Maria, you generate a lot of mess. Mental mess, physical mess. Hot mess. All possible mess. Do you like housework?
Starting point is 00:12:40 What a crazy question. Rory, you used a really nice structure. If I could buy a robot or hire a housekeeper, a housekeeper is the person who does housework. And then you said that robots are prohibitively expensive. So use the strategy. If I could, I'd hire a housekeeper or I'd buy a robot to do the housework. We do housework, right?
Starting point is 00:13:09 We do the housework. Cooking ads in dolphins in our life, but housework, I don't think so. Housework doesn't give us this, you know, positive vibes. Or maybe some people enjoy housework. You clean for one hour and then everything is clean and then you're high, a sense of achievement. And then everything gets messy again. And Rory, are you ready for another joke?
Starting point is 00:13:31 I've not been ready for any of them. And now you're waving a spoon at me. Okay, so what did the French chef give his wife for St. Valentine's Day? A hug and a kiss. A kiss. A kiss. A kiss. So a French chef gave a kish.
Starting point is 00:13:55 That was relatively funnier than the other jokes. And speaking of things that are relative, shall we comment on the relative clauses so that we can distance ourselves from this joke? Yeah, go ahead. I'm going to eat some rosemary. So relative clauses are for building on what you've already said. So, for example, when I talked about being, well, when Maria asked me about whether I can cook
Starting point is 00:14:18 or whether I like cooking, I said I can cook the things that I know how to cook, which is painfully few. So that was just adding some more information to what I said about what I can cook, which is not much. And the same thing, when I talked about my little brother, I added a bit more information about him. I said to my little brother, who is not so little anymore. And then when we were talking about household chores, I said, it's just me who's doing it, which takes up less time because it's just me. So all of this used to add extra information about.
Starting point is 00:14:49 but something I'm already talking about. And, dear listener, relative clauses are cool. They are like high-level stuff, and they help us to build up complex sentences. So make sure you use some of them in your speaking, in any speaking parts. Okay, so they are kind of, they boost, they're your score boosters.
Starting point is 00:15:09 They expand your range of grammar structures. Thank you very much for listening. hopefully your inner chef was really happy when you were listening and watching this episode. Please let us know what you think about cooking, about Rory's special way of making eggs in a microwave. So keep cooking, keep listening to us and keep writing your comments, okay? Bye! Rory, I've got a question for you. What's the easiest way to improve?
Starting point is 00:15:50 my English vocabulary and make it natural and band nine like. Is it by listening to our premium podcast? Well, yes. Another way is to learn phrasal verbs. And phrasal verbs, Rory, are... Frazal verbs are exactly what IELT examiners are looking for. They're idiomatic expressions. Idioms might be very tricky to learn and very tricky to use,
Starting point is 00:16:20 but phrase of verbs are super easy we've got a course on phrase of verbs for you where rory and i provide you with a framework that will help you learn and understand what phrase of verbs are how they work how you can use them to get a higher score for vocabulary and to make your speech more natural. All while having quality fun along the way. You can go to Successfulriots.com forward slash podcourses or click the link in the description of this episode to find out more. Do you like cooking? Well, I like whipping up things that I'm good at cooking, which is a painfully small number now that I think about it. Otherwise, it's just ready meals, which aren't particularly healthy, are they? What do you usually cook? Well, I don't have much time to throw things together with
Starting point is 00:17:16 lots of ingredients, so anything with eggs like scrambled eggs or omelets, it could be thrown into a pan or a microwave, and that brings everything together nicely in the space of just a few minutes. Would you like to learn how to cook? Well, I picked up a few recipes from my mum who did most of the cooking when I was younger, at least most of the cooking in our family when I was younger. Otherwise, these days when I even glance at a cookbook, my eyes just sort of slide off the page and I can't take any of it in. Who usually does the cooking? in your family? Well, like I said, my mum was the first port of call back in the day when it came to cooking things, although laterally my little brother, who isn't so little these days,
Starting point is 00:17:57 became a pretty good cook as well. Actually, he's a better cook than me by far, to be honest with you. What do you usually do around the house? Well, probably just about all of the household chores you'd care to name, really, since I live by myself, which usually means they get done more quickly. However, it does mean that I have to do everything, so it's just me working my way down the tick list. Do you like housework? Does anyone? If I could buy a robot or hire a housekeeper to do everything for me, then I would, although it's prohibitively expensive right now, which is always the deciding factor in these kinds of things.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.