Objective Proficiency p 32. Breakfast. Extra Listening



In Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner Clarissa Dickson Wright explores the history of breakfast and its best-known ingredients.

What do you know about the English breakfast?

hash browns: (plural) a dish of chopped potatoes and onions, fried until they are brown.



hearty: (of a meal or somebody’s appetite) large; making you feel full. E.g. a hearty breakfast. to have a hearty appetite.

Listen and fill in the gaps: 

Our food traditions are what connects us most directly to the past. We take the rituals of breakfast, lunch and dinner for 1___________ as if they have always been there as we know them. But 2__________ the stories of our three main meals and you discover gastronomic revolutions, technological 3________ and sometimes, 4___________ realities. "5_________, that would cause really bad breath". Food is about more than just 6__________/ __________. The history of our meals is rich and complex and this is what I am 7_________/ ________/ __________/ explore. "Right, 8____________/ ________!
Breakfast is the meal that has the most 9_____________ history. The origins of the ingredients are 10________/ _________/ in our collective past. I have come to the kind of 11______________ where it still takes 12___________/ _________/ __________- the British 13___________. The full English breakfast is the best-known contribution to international 14_________. It is what most of the people think of as the 15_______________ morning meal. However, we can even find people having it in a biker's café on a Friday night. "You can't 16__________ a full English just after a long ride". "You can eat it during the day. Most weekends, we have a 17__________ of some kind". "I was accused by my wife of 18________/ _________/ ________ at one point.
The full English has become so 19___________, that people have it at any time. The story of having bacon and eggs for breakfast is 20___________/___________/ up with the customs of the past. Only after the morning mass could you break your 21_________. Having bacon and eggs has also a religious history although it 22________/ _________ almost by accident because for 23___________ half the days of the year, the church 24______________ people to eat meat.
When you could not eat meat, you would have to face something like for example 25________/ ________ which has been 26___________. "Do you think that 27_____________ would improve the smell?"
Father Tim Gardner is an expert on mediaeval religious 28____________.
"That is fascinating. I never actually thought of the 29_______________ on meat eating as being because meat was actually the product of obvious reproduction"
The most intensive period of 30______________ was 31_________. The traditional thing to do was to eat what you would not be allowed to, like pancakes, and bacon and eggs. "It is not just the butter, milk and eggs that we 32__________/ ___________ on 33______________ Tuesday. The day before used to be known as 34__________ Monday. Therefore everything began with a single day of 35_____________


KEY
1. granted  
Take something for granted: to expect something always to happen or exist in a particular way, and to not think about any possible problems or difficulties. E.g. Losing my job taught me never to take anything for granted. Take it for granted (that): You can't take it for granted that they'll behave themselves.


2. unpick: 1. undo the sewing of. E.g. I unpicked the seams of his trousers. 2. Carefully analyse the different elements of (something). E.g.  Elisabeth did not want to unpick the past.


3. leaps (leap: a long or high jump. E.g. a leap of six metres. (Figurative) Few people successfully make the leap from television to the movies.


4. gruesome: /ˈɡruːsəm/ very unpleasant and filling you with horror, usually because it is connected with death or injury. Sp. repelente, horripilante, espantoso. E.g. a gruesome murder. Gruesome pictures of dead bodies (humorous) We spent a week in a gruesome apartment in Miami.

dingy:


/ˈdɪndʒi/ dark and dirty. E.g. a dingy room/hotel. dingy curtains/clothes.

seedy:  


dirty and unpleasant, possibly connected with immoral or illegal activities. E.g. a seedy bar. the seedy world of prostitution. A seedy dive.


dive:
 

a bar, music club, etc. that is cheap, and perhaps dark or dirty. E.g. The band played in every smoky dive in town.



5. Decay: /dɪˈkeɪ/ the process or result of being destroyed by natural causes or by not being cared for. Sp. descomposición. E.g. tooth decay (Sp. caries). The landlord had let the building fall into decay. The smell of death and decay hung over the town. The decay of the wood will spread if it is not removed.


6. filling up (fill up (with something)/ fill something up (with something) to become completely full; to make something completely full. E.g. The ditches (channel at the side of a road) had filled up with mud. To fill up the tank with oil.


7. setting out to (set out: to begin a job, task, etc. with a particular aim or goal. E.g. She set out to break the world record. They succeeded in what they set out to do.)


8. Dig in (dig in (informal) used to tell somebody to start to eat. Sp. al ataque. E.g. Help yourselves, everybody! Dig in!)



tuck in / tuck into something
(British English, informal) to eat a lot of food, especially when it is done quickly and with enthusiasm. E.g. Come on, tuck in everyone! He was tucking into a huge plateful of pasta.




9. mysterious


10. buried deep 
bury: /ˈberi/

11. establishment (/ɪˈstæblɪʃmənt/ an organization, a large institution, a business or a hotel. E.g. an educational establishment. A research establishment. The hotel is a comfortable and well-run establishment. There are many eating establishments nearby.)


12. pride of place (take/have/give pride of place: in the place that is most central or important. Sp. en el puesto de honor. E.g. The photo was given pride of place on the mantelpiece. The certificate has pride of place on my wall. Pride of place in her collection goes to the gold medal she won at the 1996 Olympics)


13. caff (/kæf/ a café serving simple, basic food. E.g. a transport caff)


14. cuisine (/kwɪˈziːn/ a style or method of cooking. E.g. we spent the evening sampling the local cuisine)


15. quintessential (/ˌkwɪntɪˈsenʃl/ representing the most perfect or typical example of a quality or class. Sp. por excelencia, por antonomasia. E.g. he was the quintessential tough guy—strong, silent, and self-contained)


16. beat


17. fry-up (a meal of fried food, such as bacon and eggs. E.g. It's not good for your heart to eat too many fry-ups.)


18. living on them (live on something (often disapproving) to eat only or a lot of a particular type of food. E.g. She lives on burgers.


19. iconic /aɪˈkɒnɪk/ acting as a sign or symbol of something. E.g. His photographs have become iconic images of war.


20. intricately bound 
Intricately: /ˈɪntrɪkətli/ very complicated or detailed.
Bound up with something closely connected with something. E.g. From that moment my life became inextricably (impossible to separate) bound up with hers.


21. fast (a period during which you do not eat food, especially for religious or health reasons. E.g. to go on a fast. To break (= end) your fast.


22. came about (come about to happen. E.g. Can you tell me how the accident came about?)


23. roughly (/ˈrʌfli/ approximately but not exactly)


24. forbade /fə ˈbæd / /fəˈbeɪd/  (forbid, forbade, forbidden)


25. salt fish (fish that has been preserved in salt) 


26. soaked /səʊkt/ (soak to put something in liquid for a time so that it becomes completely wet. E.g. I usually soak the beans overnight.


27. grace ( a short prayer that is usually said before a meal to thank God for the food. Let's say grace.) 


28. strictures (stricture /ˈstrɪktʃə(r)/ a rule or situation that restricts your behaviour. Restriction. E.g. strictures against civil servants expressing political opinions. The strictures imposed by the British Board of Film Censors


29. constrictions /kənˈstrɪkʃn/ (limitations, restrictions)


30. abstinence


31. Lent 


32. use up (use something up: to use all of something so that there is none left. E.g. Making soup is a good way of using up leftover vegetables.)


33. Shrove /ˌʃrəʊv/ (Shrove Tuesday the day before the beginning of Lent. Mardi Gras /ˌmɑːdi ˈɡrɑː/. Pancake Day
Shrove Tuesday 
Origin: (c. 1500) is from practice of celebration and merrymaking before going to confession at the beginning of Lent. Related to shrive:

shrive: (shrive, shrove/shrived, shriven/shrived)(of a priest) hear the confession of, assign penance to, and absolve.E.g. ‘none of the priests knew English or French enough to shrive the king’


34. Collop /ˈkɒləp/ a slice of meat E.g. three collops of bacon.

rasher



a thin slice of bacon (= meat from the back or sides of a pig). E.g. a fried egg and two rashers of bacon. a thick rasher of bacon.


35. indulgence /ɪnˈdʌldʒəns/ the state or act of having or doing whatever you want; the state of allowing somebody to have or do whatever they want. E.g. to lead a life of indulgence. Avoid excessive indulgence in sweets and canned drinks. The menu offers a temptation to over-indulgence. There is no limit to the indulgence he shows to his grandchildren.


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