Showing Off a Home-Cooked Feast
One friend shares photos of an impressive meal they cooked at home, describing the dishes and the cooking process, while others give compliments and ask for recipes.
Dialogue
Listen and follow along with the conversation
Vocabulary
Essential words and phrases from the dialogue
feast
A large and delicious meal with many different dishes, often shared with others. Use it when describing a special home-cooked meal.
outdid myself
Means you did something better than you usually do. It's a casual way to express pride in your achievement, like in cooking.
slow-roasted
A cooking method where food is cooked slowly in an oven at low heat to make it tender and flavorful. Common for meats like chicken.
marinate
To soak food in a mixture of flavors, like herbs and oil, before cooking to add taste. Often done overnight for best results.
juicy
Describes food, especially meat, that is full of natural juices and not dry. Use it to compliment how delicious something looks or tastes.
moist
Slightly wet and not dry, often used for cooked food like chicken to show it's tender and flavorful.
heavenly
Means extremely delicious or wonderful, like something from heaven. Use it to give strong compliments on food.
Key Sentences
Important phrases to remember and practice
Hey everyone, check out this feast I cooked last night! I totally outdid myself.
This is a casual way to share something exciting with a group, like photos of food. 'Check out' means 'look at,' and 'outdid myself' shows self-praise. Useful for starting conversations on social media.
Wow, Sarah! That looks absolutely incredible. What all did you make?
A common response to show amazement. 'What all' is informal for 'what everything,' asking for details. Use this to give compliments and ask questions about someone's creation.
So, I made a slow-roasted herb chicken, garlicky mashed potatoes, and these amazing grilled asparagus spears with parmesan.
This lists dishes with descriptive adjectives like 'slow-roasted' and 'garlicky.' The structure uses 'and' to connect items. Useful for describing meals when sharing experiences.
Oh my gosh, that chicken looks perfectly golden and juicy! Did you marinate it overnight?
Expresses surprise and compliments with 'Oh my gosh' (like 'wow'). 'Perfectly golden and juicy' describes appearance. The question uses past tense 'did you' for yes/no answers. Great for asking about cooking tips.
That's seriously impressive, Sarah. You should open a restaurant! Any chance you'd share the recipe for those mashed potatoes? They sound heavenly.
Gives strong praise with 'seriously impressive' and exaggeration 'open a restaurant.' 'Any chance' politely asks for something. Useful for complimenting and requesting recipes in friendly chats.
Of course! They're super simple, just a lot of butter and roasted garlic. I'll send it to you later. You guys definitely need to try making this.
Agrees to share with 'Of course!' and explains simply. 'You guys' is casual for 'you all.' 'Definitely need to' suggests strongly. Use this to respond positively and encourage others.