The Real Life EnGLISh with gabby podcast
#57- 16 Words for Feuds & Fights
                                Episode Guide
 Hi there! Welcome to episode #57 of The Real Life English with Gabby Podcast! In this
 episode, I’ll be teaching you 16 phrasal verbs, slang words and idioms for talking about
  cooking, baking and being in the kitchen. Food is one of the most important topics in
English because of how common it is, so this topic focuses on food but more on cooking
and baking and being in the kitchen. It’s important to know how to talk about this topic in
English. After listening to this episode and using this Study Guide, you’ll be able to speak
                   about being in the kitchen in English with CONFIDENCE.
  Word List
          A bake-off                             Too many cooks in the kitchen
          Whip up                                Stir in
          Cooking up a storm                     Pop in the oven
          Chop up                                Set off the smoke alarm
          Whisk together                         Burn to a crisp
          Mix in
                                                 Cool down
          Heat up
                                                 Runny
          Boil over
                                                 Flop/Fail
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The Real Life EnGLISh with gabby podcast
 STory
 Maria was an amateur cook who loved watching baking shows on TV. So when she heard there
                     was going to be a bake-off in her town, she got excited.
            “I’m going to whip up the best chocolate cake ever!” she told her friends.
On the morning of the contest, Maria started cooking up a storm in her small kitchen. She quickly
   chopped up some nuts, whisked together eggs and sugar, and carefully mixed in the flour.
             “This is going great!” she smiled. But soon, things started to go wrong.
   When it was time to heat up the milk on the stove, she forgot to set a timer and it ended up
        boiling over, making a huge mess. “Oh no!” Maria panicked, trying to clean it up.
                     Then her little brother and sister came into the kitchen.
                                    “Can we help?” they asked.
 Maria sighed. “Hmm… okay.” But soon, it felt like there were too many cooks in the kitchen. The
                                kids were spilling flour everywhere!
   Next, Maria stirred in the chocolate chips and popped the cake in the oven. But she was so
                             distracted that she set the timer wrong.
                 Suddenly, beep! beep! beep! — she had set off the smoke alarm!
                          Maria ran to the oven and pulled out the cake.
                                   “Oh no! It’s burnt to a crisp!”
   Not giving up, Maria tried again. She whipped up a second cake and made sure to watch it
 carefully. But when it finally cooled down and she cut into it, she saw the middle was runny —
                      not cooked enough. “This is another flop,” she sighed.
 At the bake-off, Maria still brought her best attempt. She smiled and laughed, telling the judges
                                      about all her mistakes.
            “I may not be the best baker,” she said, “but I had fun, and I learned a lot!”
 And even though Maria didn’t win, she felt proud. She knew that every great cook starts with a
                         few fails — and next time, she’d do even better.
                                              The End
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The Real Life EnGLISh with gabby podcast
Vocabulary & Definitions
1- A bake-off: a baking competition where people compete to make the best dish
Maria signed up for a bake-off at her local community center to show off her cake recipe.
2- Whip up: to quickly prepare or make something, often food
I can whip up some pancakes in just 15 minutes for breakfast.
3- Cooking up a storm: making a lot of food or cooking very actively and energetically
Dad was cooking up a storm in the kitchen before the big family dinner.
4- Chop up: to cut something into small pieces
She chopped up the vegetables before adding them to the soup.
5- Whisk together: to beat or mix ingredients quickly using a whisk
He whisked together the eggs and sugar until they were light and fluffy.
6- Mix in: to combine one ingredient with another
After mixing in the chocolate chips, she poured the batter into the pan.
7- Heat up: to make something warm or hot
I’ll heat up the soup before we eat.
8- Boil over: when liquid in a pot or pan rises and spills over the edge
Be careful, or the pasta water will boil over and make a mess.
9- Too many cooks in the kitchen: when too many people are involved in one task,
making it confusing or unproductive
They couldn’t finish the project on time because there were too many cooks in the
kitchen.
10- Stir in: to gently mix an ingredient into a larger mixture
You should stir in the cream at the end so it doesn’t curdle.
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Vocabulary & Definitions
11- Pop in the oven: to put something into the oven to bake or cook
She popped the cookies in the oven and set the timer for 12 minutes.
12- Set off the smoke alarm: to accidentally make the smoke detector ring, usually by
burning something
He burned the toast and set off the smoke alarm.
13- Burn to a crisp: to cook something so much that it becomes black and hard
I forgot the chicken in the oven, and it burned to a crisp.
14- Cool down: to let something become cooler after it’s been heated or cooked
Let the cake cool down before you put on the frosting.
15- Runny: too liquid or not set enough, often undercooked
The eggs were too runny for my taste, so I cooked them a bit longer.
16- Flop/Fail: something that goes wrong or is not successful
Her first attempt at baking bread was a total flop, but she tried again the next day.
                               © 2025 English with Gabby
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Practice activity #1- Matching Column
Instructions: Match the words and their definitions
Words                                Definitions
 1. A bake-off                       A. To quickly prepare a meal or dish, usually something
 2. Boil over                        simple
 3. Burn to a crisp                   B. A cooking competition, usually involving baking
 4. Chop up                           C. To cut food into small pieces using a knife
 5. Cool down                         D. To make something warmer, especially food
 6. Cooking up a storm                E. To add one ingredient to others while stirring
 7. Flop/Fail                         F. To combine ingredients by beating them together using
 8. Heat up                          a whisk
 9. Mix in                            G. When food boils so much that it spills out of the pot
10. Pop in the oven                   H. Food that is completely burned and black
11. Runny                             I. When a dish or project goes badly and doesn’t work out
12. Set off the smoke alarm           J. When there are too many people trying to help, causing
13. Stir in                          confusion
14. Too many cooks in the             K. To prepare a large amount of food with energy and
   kitchen                           excitement
15. Whip up                           L. To place food in the oven to bake or cook
16. Whisk together                    M. To let hot food or liquid become cooler
                                      N. To add another ingredient while blending or combining
                                      O. When food or liquid is still watery or not fully
                                     cooked/thickened
                                      P. When smoke causes the alarm to go off, often from
                                     burning food
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Practice activity #1- answers
Words
 1. B
 2. G
 3. H
 4. C
 5. M
 6. K
 7. I
 8. D
 9. N
10. L
11. O
12. P
13. E
14. J
15. A
16. F
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Practice activity #2- Multiple choice
Instructions: Choose the correct option. More than one correct option may be possible.
 1. The kids forgot the soup on the stove and it started to __________.
A) whip up B) boil over C) cool down
2. After baking, leave the cookies out for a few minutes to __________.
A) cool down B) chop up C) burn to a crisp
3. We need to __________ the vegetables before we add them to the stew.
A) runny B) chop up C) stir in
4. The cake looked great, but the inside was still __________.
A) mix in B) pop in the oven C) runny
5. I can __________ something quick for dinner—no problem.
A) whisk together B) whip up C) heat up
6. If you don’t set a timer, your food could __________.
A) burn to a crisp B) too many cooks in the kitchen C) mix in
7. She entered a local __________ and baked lemon tarts.
A) heat up B) bake-off C) flop
8. Don’t forget to __________ the chocolate chips after the batter is smooth.
A) set off the smoke alarm B) stir in C) burn to a crisp
9. First, let’s __________ the dry ingredients before adding the eggs.
A) whisk together B) chop up C) pop in the oven
10. It was chaos in the kitchen—definitely a case of __________.
A) cool down B) too many cooks in the kitchen C) cooking up a storm
11. He tried to make sushi for the first time, but it was a total __________.
A) flop B) runny C) chop up
12. Carefully __________ the casserole and bake it for 40 minutes.
A) burn to a crisp B) pop in the oven C) whisk together
13. My aunt is __________ in the kitchen—she’s making five dishes at once!
A) set off the smoke alarm B) mix in C) cooking up a storm
14. Just __________ this soup in the microwave and it’ll be ready in 2 minutes.
A) heat up B) whip up C) bake-off
15. Don’t forget to turn off the oven or you might accidentally __________ the smoke alarm.
A) set off B) chop up C) mix in
16. Don’t forget to __________ the herbs after the sauce is fully cooked.
A) whisk together B) mix in C) bake-off
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Practice activity #2- ANSWERS
Instructions: Choose the correct option. More than one correct option may be possible.
 1. The kids forgot the soup on the stove and it started to __________.
A) whip up B) boil over C) cool down
2. After baking, leave the cookies out for a few minutes to __________.
A) cool down B) chop up C) burn to a crisp
3. We need to __________ the vegetables before we add them to the stew.
A) runny B) chop up C) stir in
4. The cake looked great, but the inside was still __________.
A) mix in B) pop in the oven C) runny
5. I can __________ something quick for dinner—no problem.
A) whisk together B) whip up C) heat up
6. If you don’t set a timer, your food could __________.
A) burn to a crisp B) too many cooks in the kitchen C) mix in
7. She entered a local __________ and baked lemon tarts.
A) heat up B) bake-off C) flop
8. Don’t forget to __________ the chocolate chips after the batter is smooth.
A) set off the smoke alarm B) stir in C) burn to a crisp
9. First, let’s __________ the dry ingredients before adding the eggs.
A) whisk together B) chop up C) pop in the oven
10. It was chaos in the kitchen—definitely a case of __________.
A) cool down B) too many cooks in the kitchen C) cooking up a storm
11. He tried to make sushi for the first time, but it was a total __________.
A) flop B) runny C) chop up
12. Carefully __________ the casserole and bake it for 40 minutes.
A) burn to a crisp B) pop in the oven C) whisk together
13. My aunt is __________ in the kitchen—she’s making five dishes at once!
A) set off the smoke alarm B) mix in C) cooking up a storm
14. Just __________ this soup in the microwave and it’ll be ready in 2 minutes.
A) heat up B) whip up C) bake-off
15. Don’t forget to turn off the oven or you might accidentally __________ the smoke alarm.
A) set off B) chop up C) mix in
16. Don’t forget to __________ the herbs after the sauce is fully cooked.
A) whisk together B) mix in C) bake-off
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Practice activity #3- Gap Fill
Instructions: Choose the correct option to fill the gaps in each sentence
    A bake-off                        Heat up                          Set off the smoke alarm
    Whip up                           Boil over                        Burn to a crisp
    Cooking up a storm                Too many cooks in the            Cool down
    Chop up                           kitchen                          Runny
    Whisk together                    Stir in                          Flop/Fail
    Mix in                            Pop in the oven
 1.Be careful or the soup might ____________________ and make a mess on the stove.
 2.After you melt the butter, let it ____________________ before adding the eggs.
 3.Don’t ____________________ the onions too early, or they’ll dry out before the rest of the
   dish is ready.
 4.The brownies were still ____________________ in the middle because she took them out
   too soon.
 5.I’m ____________________ some pancakes for brunch—want to help?
 6.He forgot the timer and the pizza got ____________________.
 7.I entered a local ____________________ and made a triple-layer chocolate cake.
 8.If you ____________________ too many spices, the flavor can get overwhelming.
 9.Let’s ____________________ the flour and sugar before we add the eggs.
10.The kids were trying to help, but honestly, it felt like ____________________.
11.She tried to make a fancy soufflé, but it was a total ____________________.
12.First, ____________________ the dry ingredients in one bowl.
13.I need to reheat the lasagna, so let me ____________________ for 10 minutes.
14.All morning, he’s been ____________________ for tonight’s dinner party.
15.I just need to ____________________ this pasta from last night.
16.The toast got stuck in the toaster and ____________________!
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Gap Fill- Answers
 1.Be careful or the soup might boil over and make a mess on the stove.
 2.After you melt the butter, let it cool down before adding the eggs.
 3.Don’t chop up the onions too early, or they’ll dry out before the rest of the dish is
   ready.
 4.The brownies were still runny in the middle because she took them out too soon.
 5.I’m whipping up some pancakes for brunch—want to help?
 6.He forgot the timer and the pizza got burned to a crisp.
 7.I entered a local bake-off and made a triple-layer chocolate cake.
 8.If you mix in too many spices, the flavor can get overwhelming.
 9.Let’s whisk together the flour and sugar before we add the eggs.
10.The kids were trying to help, but honestly, it felt like too many cooks in the kitchen.
11.She tried to make a fancy soufflé, but it was a total flop.
12.First, stir in the dry ingredients in one bowl.
13.I need to reheat the lasagna, so let me pop it in the oven for 10 minutes.
14.All morning, he’s been cooking up a storm for tonight’s dinner party.
15.I just need to heat up this pasta from last night.
16.The toast got stuck in the toaster and set off the smoke alarm!
                                   © 2025 English with Gabby
The Real Life EnGLISh with gabby podcast
                                              TRanscript
  [00:00:00] On today's episode of The Real Life English with Gabby podcast, I'll be teaching you 16 phrasal verbs,
slang words, and idioms for cooking and baking. You'll be learning vocabulary like whip up, whisk together, pop in the
                                    oven, burn to a crisp, and more. Let's get to it.
    Hey there. Welcome to The Real Life English with Gabby podcast. I'm your host, Gabby, your fun and friendly
 English teacher from the one and only New York City. My goal is to teach you phrasal verbs, idioms, and slang that
                will help you speak English confidently and understand real American conversations.
                           Are you ready to improve your English skills? Let's jump right in.
Hey, hey, hey. Welcome back to the podcast to all of the regular listeners, and welcome for the first time to all of the
                                                       newbies.
 [00:01:00] This is episode number 57, and it's all about cooking and baking and being in the kitchen. Food is a very
popular topic in the world of English. As a second language, you'll find the topic of food in every single course, study
            guide, textbook. It's one of the most foundational things that you can learn in any language.
      Episode number one of this podcast, the very first episode that I put out, which happens to be the most
downloaded episode, is food and drinks — eating and drinking. And that episode focuses more on eating vocabulary,
like pig out, for example, meaning to eat a lot of food. That episode has been downloaded over a hundred thousand
     times, which is really cool. But you know, since then I haven't really done any topics that are food-related.
                         [00:02:00] So I figured it's a good time to get this topic going again.
Today's episode is all about actually being in the kitchen — when you are the one preparing the food. Do you like to
                            cook? Are you a good cook? Do you prefer baking or cooking?
 Before we begin, I wanna review a bit of grammar. This is a very common mistake that I hear from my students. So
                                      first off, in English, we do not say cooker.
 Okay? A cooker, like a slow cooker, pressure cooker — these are machines, appliances that you'll find in the kitchen.
 A lot of Americans have slow cookers and we have pressure cookers to help us cook in a more convenient way. But
  cookers are things. They're not people. So we don't say, “My mother is a good cooker,” for example. We say, “My
                                                    mom is a good
   [00:03:00] cook,” or “My grandmother is a really great baker.” So again, we say good cook, good baker, but no
                                                        cooker.
There are two terms for people who cook professionally. So let's break down the difference here. First off, a cook is
anyone who prepares food. This can be at home, in a restaurant. You don't need formal training to be called a cook.
    So if you go to a pizzeria, if you go to a deli or a diner — a very casual eating environment, maybe a fast food
  restaurant — those people are usually cooks. They're just good at preparing food, oftentimes no formal training.
           For example: “My uncle is a great cook. He always makes delicious meals for the whole family.”
                                                Then we have the word
[00:04:00] chef. A chef is a trained professional. They work in the kitchen, usually in a restaurant or an official place
   for dining. Chefs often attend what we call culinary school. We don't really say cooking school, we say culinary
 school, and a lot of times they lead a team in the kitchen. They're the boss. So again, chef is usually very formal —
                  someone who has official skills, lots of experience, and maybe a leadership role.
 For example: “The head chef at the restaurant trained in France, and he creates all the recipes for the restaurant.”
         And then lastly, when it comes to baking, we have the term baker. So a baker is similar to a cook —
 [00:05:00] it's a person who prepares and cooks, but specifically pastries and desserts — so bread, cookies, cakes,
pies — by baking them. This can be someone who's trained or not. However, if someone has been trained to bake, we
                            typically call them a pastry chef. We don't typically say baker.
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                                                 TRanscript
  All right, so let's go back to my earlier question. Do you like to cook? Are you a good cook? Do you prefer baking?
           Maybe some of you out there listening are professional chefs, professional bakers, culinary chefs.
  I personally love to cook — much more than bake. Baking is more challenging for me. I'm a much better cook than
baker. I pretty much cook breakfast and dinner every day for my family. Maybe we order out once per week, but we
                                                prefer home-cooked food.
 [00:06:00] So I cook all the time. It's not only healthier, but it's cheaper. You know, American food — the quality is
not so good. I'm sure you've seen in the news — we have a lot of chemicals in our food, unfortunately. Some of that is
                         changing, but we prefer to buy high-quality food and cook it ourselves.
   All right, so let me tell you the 16 new vocabulary words and expressions that you'll be learning in this episode:
  A bake-off, whip up, cooking up a storm, chop up, whisk together, mix in, heat up, boil over, too many cooks in the
         kitchen, stir in, pop in the oven, set off the smoke alarm, burn to a crisp, cool down, runny, flop or fail.
                                                Before we get to the story,
 [00:07:00] I just wanna remind you that there's a free study guide waiting for you that has everything you need to
remember what you learn in the episode. The study guide has all the words, definitions, example sentences, the full
                                transcript, and practice activities that are waiting for you.
                                  Remember that the best way to truly learn English is:
 1.                    Repetition — hearing the same thing multiple times. Using it and practicing it.
To get the study guide, click the link in the episode description, and then you'll get access to the folder that has the
                             study guides from every episode for you to access at any time.
All right, so let's get to the story. Listen as I read a story that has all of the vocabulary in real-life context. See if you
                                     can guess the meanings by hearing the words in
                  [00:08:00] context, and then afterwards we’ll review all of the definitions together.
                                                        Here we go.
Maria was an amateur cook who loved watching baking shows on TV. So when she heard that there was going to be a
      bake-off in her town, she got excited. “I'm gonna whip up the best chocolate cake ever!” she told her friends.
On the morning of the contest, Maria started cooking up a storm in her small kitchen. She quickly chopped up some
                         nuts, whisked together eggs and sugar, and carefully mixed in the flour.
                                             “This is going great,” she smiled.
  But soon, things started to go wrong. When it was time to heat up the milk on the stove, she forgot to set a timer,
                                    and it ended up boiling over, making a huge mess.
  [00:09:00] “Oh no!” Maria panicked, trying to clean it up. Then her little brother and sister came into the kitchen.
  “Can we help you?” they asked. Maria agreed because she was a little bit overwhelmed, but soon it felt like there
                      were too many cooks in the kitchen. The kids were spilling flour everywhere.
 Next, Maria stirred in the chocolate chips and popped the cake in the oven. But she was so distracted that she set
 the alarm wrong. Suddenly—beep, beep, beep! She had set off the smoke alarm. Maria ran to the oven and pulled
out the cake. “Oh no, it's burnt to a crisp!” Not giving up, Maria tried again. She whipped up a second cake and made
                      sure to watch it carefully. But when it finally cooled down and she cut into it,
                          [00:10:00] she saw that the middle was runny — not cooked enough.
  “This is another flop,” she sighed. At the bake-off, Maria still brought her best attempt. She smiled and laughed,
 telling the judges all about her mistakes. “I may not be the best baker,” she said, “but I had fun and I learned a lot.”
  And even though Maria didn't win, she felt proud. She knew that every great cook starts with a few flops, and the
                                              next time, she'd do even better.
                                                          The end.
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                                               TRanscript
                       All right, so now let's talk about the definitions and example sentences.
  Firstly, I'm gonna tell you something that's not one of the official vocabulary words or expressions, but let's talk
                                  about it. So it says that Maria is an amateur cook.
         [00:11:00] The word amateur typically means that someone doesn't do something professionally.
So like an amateur photographer is someone who is good at taking photos, but it's not their job. So an amateur cook
is someone who enjoys cooking as a hobby — something that they're personally interested in — but they don't do it
                                                     professionally.
  It could be that someone is a beginner or they're really, really experienced, but they haven't had formal training.
                               They haven't worked in a restaurant or culinary setting.
So if you have a family member who cooks all the time and they're really good at cooking — for example, I think most
of our grandmothers can probably call themselves amateur cooks. It's something that they really love to do, they're
                                      really good at. So that's an amateur cook.
 Alright, so now let's get on with the rest. First up, we have a bakeoff. So there was a bakeoff in [00:12:00] town. A
bakeoff is a baking competition where people compete to make the best dishes. In English, this is very common. We
  put off after a verb when it's a competition. For example, we have a cookoff, a bakeoff, a sing-off. These types of
competitions are just people versing each other and seeing who the best one is. And so that's what this bakeoff was.
 Bakeoffs are very common, especially in small towns. They'll have a pie bakeoff. Who can make the best apple pie,
               blueberry pie, for example. After I took baking lessons, I signed up for my local bakeoff.
    Next up, we have a phrasal verb: whip up. Whip up means to quickly prepare or make something—often food.
  [00:13:00] This is a really interesting one. We use this all the time. So if you're hungry and you just wanna quickly
prepare a kind of dish, you'll say, "Oh, I gotta go whip something up." For example: I can whip up some pancakes in 15
                       minutes for breakfast if you're hungry. Very, very common phrasal verb.
  Next up, we have the idiom cooking up a storm. Anytime we're doing something "up a storm," it means that we're
doing a lot of it. So cooking up a storm is making a lot of food, cooking very energetically, actively—you’re doing a lot
           of it. So you could say, "My mom is cooking up a storm in preparation for Thanksgiving dinner."
                For example: Dad was cooking up a storm in the kitchen before the big family dinner.
   Next up, we have chop up. Chop up is to cut something into [00:14:00] small pieces. So if you're just chopping,
  you're cutting, right? You're chopping a tree. You're cutting a tree. But chop up specifically is when we're doing it
          into small pieces. For example: She chopped up the vegetables before adding them to the soup.
Next up, we have the phrasal verb whisk together. Whisk together is to beat or mix ingredients using a whisk. A whisk
  is this kitchen utensil that you use when you are, for example, scrambling eggs. Or when you're mixing flour and
 water and oil—a lot of different wet ingredients—you use a whisk. And whisk is a noun, but it's also a verb. If you're
                                 following a recipe, it'll say, "Whisk this," for example.
So whisk together—you're mixing a [00:15:00] whole bunch of things. "He whisked together the eggs and sugar until
                                              they were light and fluffy."
Next up, we have mix in. Mix in is typically when you have a bowl and you're adding one thing to another to create a
  nice mix. For example: After mixing in the chocolate chips, she poured the batter into the pan. The batter is the
    completed wet mix that you use right before baking. So we say cake batter, cupcake batter, brownie batter.
 Typically, you have flour, water, different ingredients—you mix it all together right before you bake it. That's called
               the batter. So: After mixing in the chocolate chips, she poured the batter into the pan.
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                                                 TRanscript
 Next up, we have [00:16:00] the phrasal verb heat up. Heat up means to make something warm or hot. Heat up is
typically quick, so you don't really say, "I'm gonna heat my food." We typically say, "I'm gonna heat up my food in the
   microwave," because we're gonna make it warm, we're gonna make it hot, and it's typically gonna be quick. For
                                       example: I'll heat up the soup before we eat.
Next up, we have boil over. So if you don't know, the word boil is when you heat water and it slowly goes from liquid
 to gas. So there's lots of bubbles in the water. Once the bubbles appear, we say it's boiling. Boil over is when liquid
  that's being heated in a pot or pan rises and spills over the edge. So you're cooking something, you're not really
 paying attention, [00:17:00] and next thing you know, the boiling water is spilling out of the pot or the pan. And so
             we say boil over. For example: Be careful or the pasta water will boil over and make a mess.
Next up, we have the idiom too many cooks in the kitchen. Now here I use this in a literal setting. But too many cooks
    in the kitchen is when too many people are involved in one task, making it confusing, unproductive, bringing
frustration. So let's say that you are in a business meeting—and this happens often. You're working on a project and
                                               too many people are involved.
 Sometimes it's really unhelpful. And so you say, "Okay guys, there's too many cooks in the kitchen." It's kind of like
  you're trying to cook dinner and there's five people in the kitchen with you. It can often be overwhelming. And so
  this [00:18:00] expression is used in the kitchen, but it's also used in a lot of different kinds of environments. For
        example: They couldn't finish the project on time because there were too many cooks in the kitchen.
Next up, we have the phrasal verb stir in. Stir in is to gently mix an ingredient into a larger mixture. Earlier we had mix
  in, right? We have whisk together. These all mean to mix different things to some extent, just differently. Stir in is
                  very similar to mix in—almost the same—except stir is typically with liquids, right?
 So I have cake batter, but I wanna add a little bit of milk, so I stir it in. I put it in, but I'm stirring or mixing it around
with a spoon or a utensil [00:19:00] while I'm doing it. Mix in means that you add them all together. You might not be
 stirring while you're doing it. Maybe you're waiting till the end. So you're mixing all the ingredients, and then at the
end you mix it with your hands. Specifically, stir in—you're pouring milk in with one hand, and then you're stirring the
     mixture with the other hand. For example: You should stir in the cream at the end so it doesn't get spoiled.
   Next up, we have the expression to pop something into the oven. So anytime you hear pop, typically it means
                                            quickly—pop in, pop out, pop over.
So to pop something in the oven means to put something in the oven to bake or cook. For example: She popped the
cookies in the oven and set the timer for 12 minutes. So typically this means you're gonna do something [00:20:00]
 quickly, not gonna take a long time. So for example, if I'm cooking a turkey for Thanksgiving, I'm not gonna say, "Let
     me pop this in the oven." You can, but typically it's referring to something that you're gonna cook quickly.
 Next up, we have set off the smoke alarm. So by law, every home in the United States has to have a fire alarm. And
when we accidentally make the smoke alarm or smoke detector ring, we say set off. So when you set something off,
   you accidentally cause it to go—to ignite. And so usually this happens while we're cooking or baking. It happens
   because we burn something, and the smoke hits the smoke alarm. And we say, "Oh no, I just set off the smoke
                  alarm." For example: He burned the toast and set off the smoke [00:21:00] alarm.
Next up, we have the expression to burn something to a crisp. To burn something to a crisp is to cook something so
much that you burn it—but not slightly burn it. It becomes black and hard. It is a crisp. It is completely crispy. A lot of
  times it falls apart. But you are not able to eat it. For example: I forgot the chicken in the oven and it burned to a
                                                             crisp.
   Now in English, you might hear burned with –ED, or you might hear burnt with a –T. Burnt is British English, and
burned with –ED is American English. But ultimately, it doesn't matter. You can use either one wherever. Next up, we
    have cool down. This is to let something become cooler [00:22:00] after it's been heated or cooked. You take
 something outta the oven, you want to eat it, but it's really hot. So we say, "I wanna let it cool down." For example:
                                 Let the cake cool down before you put on the frosting.
                                                 © 2025 English with Gabby
The Real Life EnGLISh with gabby podcast
                                              TRanscript
            The frosting or the icing—that's what goes on top of cakes and cupcakes to make them good.
  Alright, then we have runny. Runny means that it's too liquidy. It's not set enough. It's undercooked. If someone
  gives you eggs and the yolk—the yellow part—is very liquidy, we say, "Oh, these eggs are too runny. Can you cook
 them a little bit more?" But cake—if you open it in the middle—it could be too runny, too liquidy, undercooked. For
                 example: The eggs were too runny for my taste, so I cooked them a little bit longer.
  And lastly, we have flop or fail. [00:23:00] Now to fail, to flop—these can be verbs. They can also be nouns. "That
 movie was a flop." It did poorly in the box office. But flop or fail in general—something that goes wrong, something
  that's not successful. And we use this very, very often. For example: Her first attempt at baking bread was a total
                                        flop, but she tried again the next day.
 Well, guess what you just learned? 16 very popular phrasal verbs, idioms and slang words that you can start using
today. Literally right now, after the podcast is done, you can start using these words. So now let me give you a little
homework assignment for today. At some point this week, when you're in the kitchen cooking or baking, I want you to
out loud in English, talk about what you're doing and [00:24:00] use some of the vocabulary from this episode or. If
 you don't like to cook or you're not gonna have time to cook, I want you to put on a recipe video from YouTube and
                              put it on mute so that you can't hear what they're saying.
  What I want you to do is. Describe what's happening. Describe what the person is doing. What is the cook or chef
 doing? Are they stirring in something? Are they whipping up something? What is happening? This is a great way to
  build your confidence and to use the vocabulary. In context, don't forget to download the study guide as part of
                      your homework so that you can really study what these definitions are.
  Well, that's a wrap for today's episode of The Real Life English with Gabby podcast. Be sure to download today's
  study guide so that you can [00:25:00] learn how to use this vocabulary confidently. If you enjoyed this episode,
 don't forget to subscribe for more weekly adventures in English learning. Also, I'd love to hear from you, so please
                                                  leave me a review.
                                            Thanks so much for tuning in.
                                             © 2025 English with Gabby