IELTS Speaking for Success - 🥡 Street food (S07E04) + Transcript
Episode Date: March 1, 2022Do you like to try street food? What kind of street food do you like? What street food do people usually eat? Do you like to buy street food when you travel to a new place? Tune in and have a great d...ay! - 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://bit.ly/transcripts07e04 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)
Hello, lovely, I'm Maria.
And my name is Rory, and we are the host of the AIL Speaking for Success Podcasts.
The podcast is the 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 school.
Your band nine score.
Yes.
What are you eating?
It looks like something from the street.
Oh, sorry.
It isn't.
but shall we speak about street food?
Dear listener, we have our premium episodes for you
where Rory and I are talking about speaking part two and three.
This week, Rory is going to describe someone he likes to spend time with
and in speaking part three we're going to talk about leisure.
We are using fresh Aiot speaking topics which are being used in the exam now.
For the last two weeks, I also had a horrible cold,
so it might have been a little bit difficult to understand me,
and you might have had to use our transcripts,
but you can still use the transcripts,
even though I'm feeling better,
and you can find them by clicking the link in the description of the episode.
You have a cold, you don't have a cold, Rory.
We still don't understand you, because you speak too fast.
You're so rude.
Oh, by the way, dear listener,
if Rory speaks too fast,
in the app that you are using to listen to this podcast,
you can slow it down.
So in the setting, there is a button to slow down the recording.
So you can slow Rory down.
So if in any episode you feel it's too fast for you, just go to the setting and slow it down.
It's going to be really helpful.
Rory, let's talk about street food.
Yum, yum, yum, yum, shall we?
Let's.
Do you like street food?
Not really, I'm afraid.
The last time I had some, I felt like I might die from dysentery.
My stomach complaint was so bad.
It's not my thing at all these days.
What kinds of street food do you like?
Well, none.
Now, I used to like the odd thing here and there,
but I never really got into it.
Well, at least not enough to build up a taste for it
or a regular set of things that I'd buy.
How often do you eat street food?
Well, like I said, almost never.
I don't think it's good for me.
I think I'm not used to the bacteria or whatever it isn't it.
Even if it was a one-off bad experience, I still wouldn't like to repeat it if I possibly can.
When was the last time you had street food?
I think the last time was almost 11 years ago in New York.
I bought a hot dog from a street vendor and I was really unwell.
I'm not sure the fine details are fit for public consumption.
So let's just say it wasn't the best of times.
I really didn't feel well at all.
What street food do people usually eat?
I think it depends on where they are.
in the world, really. In Thailand, there are markets where you can easily pick up crickets in various
styles, like you can have them sauteed, for example. While in America, I think it's things
like hot dogs and burgers, so there's a great variety there. I'm not actually sure what the
governing principle behind them is. Do you like to buy street food when you travel to a new place?
Absolutely not. It seems like a recipe for disaster in my case. It's far better to stick to what I know,
and I think at my age I've earned that right.
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So Rory spent eight or seven years of his life in Russia, and Russia,
has beautiful street food.
Just like think about this
juicy shwarma
or chaburek, which is this pastry
with this funny name,
chaburik. You can have that in a restaurant.
Or donuts, boiled corn,
pieraschi, no, blini.
No, the beauty of it is just you have it
on the street, in the open.
You enjoy food like it's a picnic.
You know, it's like an unplanned picnic.
Beautiful.
I love it.
street food. So everywhere I've been, I enjoyed street food like Italy, South America. Oh, yum, yum, yum, yum.
So, Rory gave us negative answers about street food, unfortunately. However, Coma, Rory did eat a dog.
Dog. It wasn't a dog. It was dog. No, no, no, I'm not referring to hot dogs. I'm referring to
the story when you ate dog. But that's not, that's not street food. That was in a restaurant.
Oh, you went to a restaurant to eat dog?
Okay, I see.
Yeah, dear listen, for this one, you should know the names of the street food,
perhaps in your country, and the names of your favorite street food.
So, Rory said that I felt like I might die from what?
From what did you say?
From dysentery.
It's like a really serious...
Well, you can have what's called amoebic dysentery,
which is when bacteria grows in your stomach, like, completely out of control,
and you're very, very unwell.
Oh, it's not. It grows in your intestine, sorry.
But the point is, you're really unwell because of food that you've eaten.
That's why you eat spicy street food.
So spices kill all the bacteria.
And in South America and perhaps in India, too, do you listen, if you're from India,
surely you have spicy street food.
That's not what spices are for.
Spices are for covering up the taste of rotting meat originally.
Not only, not only.
That is what they are originally for.
It doesn't have an antibacterial quality.
Yes, spices do.
That's why in South America, for example,
in southern countries, they eat spicy food also to kill the bacteria.
It's one of the reasons.
because street food is usually spicy.
You're off your head.
No, that is not...
No.
No, like seriously, so delessness.
Like, really, like, I'm telling the truth.
No, you're...
Well, you might be telling the truth,
but that's not what that is.
Educate Rory.
Send him messages on Instagram.
Anyway, anyway.
So, how do you pronounce this strange word?
Dissentery.
Dysentery or dysentery?
It doesn't matter because it's still the same
horrible feeling.
And then you can say that, okay, I don't enjoy street food because my stomach complains, my stomach complains.
Like, actually, your stomach complains.
No, you have a stomach complaint, which just means you're feeling sick.
Or you can say that I've got a stomach cake every time I eat street food or I've got an upset stomach.
But if you enjoy street food, like I do, you can say, oh, I'm.
fond of street food. It's yummy. It's delicious.
You can, I know, taste
the culture when you eat
street food. So
you can say, I'm
into street food, I like it,
I enjoy it, I'm a big fan of street food,
so all these expressions.
But this is a good time to highlight
ways of talking about things you don't know
much about, or don't like.
I never really got into it.
And yeah, you can say,
I never really got into it.
And it's like, ah, not really, I'm afraid.
It's not my thing these days.
I never got into it.
I'm not used to it.
I haven't built up a taste for it.
Build up a taste for it.
That's a nice one.
So if you don't like something, then you say,
I know.
I never really got into it enough to build up a taste for it.
For it, for it, for it.
And then the examiner continues asking you these crazy questions.
about street food.
It doesn't matter.
You like it or no?
The examiner will keep going.
Yeah, it's like, do you like street food?
No.
Oh, what kind of street food do you like?
Well, the shame, because we're going to keep talking about it.
Yeah.
But you can refer back to your previous answers.
It's just like, like I said, I'm not interested.
And how often do you eat street food?
If you like street food, you can say, oh, pretty often, or once a week,
or not quite regularly, to be honest with you, quite often.
Rory talked about a one-off experience.
So he just ate it once and it was a one-off experience.
And then when was the last time you had street food?
Can I say, like, I ate street food or I should say I had street food?
Which verb should I use?
I ate or I had it last week.
Mm-hmm.
I enjoyed it last week.
Mm-hmm.
So, street food, like a hot dog, and you buy street food from a street vendor.
So who is this vendor?
Well, it's like the people you see selling food on the street.
So a vendor is someone who sells things, and street vendor is someone who sells things on the street.
Mm-hmm.
So a vendor is a person, right?
So from a street vendor.
And what do you call this thing where they cook the street food to this kind of trolley?
Might be a trolley.
I think it is a trolley, isn't it?
Trolley, right?
Oh, a cart, maybe.
Cart.
Mm-hmm.
And usually you eat with plastic cutlery,
plastic spoons or forks.
Or you could just eat it with your hands?
Usually, yeah, because it's street food.
And then what street food do people usually eat?
Again, yeah, Rory said it depends on where you are in the world.
So, and in Thailand,
Hello, if you are my listener from Thailand,
I've always said that people eat crickets,
street, popular.
It's not just crickets, they're a different insect.
And I imagine Thai people would probably want to point out
that you can have like chicken or other meat products as well.
Yeah, but also you can say something about hamburgers or fried corn, right?
So sandwiches, baked potato.
different potatoes or something like fried, fried vegetables.
Oh, in Turkey, oh, pizza, yeah, there we go, pizza.
Yeah, so Rory thinks that eating street food is a recipe for disaster.
I disagree.
With me?
With you, with you, yes.
Yeah, with you.
Or I'm talking about other people that can do what they like.
They can have a recipe for success.
True, true.
But again, it's a sin.
It's a sin, dear listener, to go to Italy and not.
not to try street Italian food.
So it's a sin.
It's a sin.
It's really bad to go there and not to try Italian street pizza.
But if you are not into street food, you can say,
it's far better to stick to what I already know.
Like McDonald's, for example.
It's the same everywhere.
So they guarantee quality.
And you know what you're going to be eating.
So instead of trying out some wicked street, local street,
street food, I prefer to stick to something I know.
Yes, Rory, is this the case? Oh, what about in Scotland? Do you have any special
street food in Scotland? No, I can think of. There's probably
things that you can get on the street. I remember we went to a fair once and they had
like pancakes. That was fun. Oh, there you go. Shrimp rack.
What? Or seafood, something. Or the humble
burger. I'm Googling street food in Scotland.
Is there anything uniquely Scottish?
Smoke and soul food, Aberdeen locations.
Yes, but Aberdeen's like an isolated city in the north.
Yeah, they have their local street food.
Can we say that fish and chips?
Is it street food?
If you buy it from a street vendor, then it's street food.
If you buy it from a fish and chip shop, then it's just fish and chips.
Now we should all go and have some food.
Maybe fast food.
Oh, yeah, yum, yum, yum.
Thank you very much for listening.
We love you.
We hug you.
Bye.
Say goodbye to the world.
I don't like street food, but I do love the world.
Bye.
Bye.
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Do you like street food?
Not really, I'm afraid.
The last time I had some, I felt like I might die from dysentery.
My stomach complaint was so bad.
It's not my thing at all these days.
What kinds of street food do you like?
Well, none. Now. I used to like the odd thing here and there, but I never really got into it.
Well, at least not enough to build up a taste for it or a regular set of things that I'd buy.
How often do you eat street food?
Well, like I said, almost never. I don't think it's good for me. I think I'm not used to the bacteria or whatever it isn't it.
Even if it was a one-off bad experience, I still wouldn't like to repeat it if I possibly can.
When was the last time you had street food?
I think the last time was almost 11 years ago in New York.
I bought a hot dog from a street vendor and I was really unwell.
I'm not sure the fine details are fit for public consumption.
So let's just say it wasn't the best of times.
I really didn't feel well at all.
What street food do people usually eat?
I think it depends on where they are in the world, really.
In Thailand, there are markets where you can easily pick up crickets in various styles.
like you can have them sauteed, for example.
While in America, I think it's things like hot dogs and burgers.
So there's a great variety there.
I'm not actually sure what the governing principle behind them is.
Do you like to buy street food when you travel to a new place?
Absolutely not.
It seems like a recipe for disaster in my case.
It's far better to stick to what I know,
and I think at my age I've earned that right.
