Do you enjoy cooking Neil? |
Yes, I do enjoy cooking. |
I think it’s quite relaxing, especially after a busy day. |
How about you, Becca? |
I enjoy cooking when I’m feeding other people, but usually after a busy day at work, I don’t enjoy cooking for myself. |
Well, we’re talking about cooking today, and most of us can at least boil an egg, but not everyone could make it as a professional chef in a world-famous restaurant. |
Mmm. Being a top chef requires passion, dedication, and hard work. |
Many chefs work 15 hours a day, six days a week, and busy kitchens cooking expensive food are very stressful places to work. |
So, why do they do it? |
In this episode, we’ll hear from one South African chef who started her own award-winning restaurant in the country known as the home of fine dining -- France. |
As usual, we’ll be learning some useful new words and phrases. |
But first, I have a question for you, Neil. |
The top prizes for any professional chef are Michelin stars, awards given to restaurants offering outstanding cooking. |
But who is the winner of the most Michelin stars ever? |
Is it: a) Italian chef Enrico Bartolini, b) French chef Joel Robuchon, or c) British chef Gordon Ramsay? |
I’m going to say a) the Italian chef Enrico Bartolini, because I went to Italy recently and the food was amazing! |
Mmm! OK. We’ll find out the answer later in this episode. |
Born in South Africa, chef Chantel Dartnall started her culinary career at a three-Michelin-star restaurant in the exclusive Mayfair area of London. |
Here, she tells Ruth Alexander, presenter of BBC World Service programme The Food Chain, how it all got started: |
What happened is I had graduated from the Prue Leith College of Food and Wine and decided to send my CV to all the three-Michelin-star restaurants that I could find at that moment in the Michelin Guide. |
So, you aimed high from the off. |
I aimed high. |
The only thing that they could say was no, and what would I lose? |
I received a call from chef Paul Rhodes to say, "When can you start?" |
Wow. |
And this, sort of, just catapulted my career. |
Chantel sent her CV to the world’s top restaurants. |
CV is short for curriculum vitae, a document listing someone’s education, qualifications and work experience, which they write when looking for a job. |
In American English, it’s called a resume. |
Chantel applied to only Michelin-star-winning restaurants. |
She aimed high, meaning she was ambitious. |
Chantel says, "The worst they could do is say no," |
a phrase which means you shouldn’t be afraid of trying to do something because the worst outcome is being rejected. |
Luckily for Chantel, the answer was yes, and learning her trade in a top London restaurant catapulted, meaning accelerated, her career. |
At the age of 26, Chantel left London and returned home to open her own restaurant, Mosaic, near Pretoria in South Africa. |
She’d been inspired by botanical cuisine, the use of edible flowers and herbs to decorate and flavour food. |
Here, Chantel tells more to BBC World Service programme The Food Chain: |
When I opened Mosaic in South Africa, I knew I wanted something entirely different and something which diners had not seen. |
I wanted to have my own signature and to stand out, and I think especially for botanical cuisine in South Africa, it was very much unknown. |
Chantel developed her own signature. |
A signature item is something that is typical of, or strongly associated with, a particular person or place. |
For example, whisky is Scotland’s signature drink. |
Chantel’s signature is cooking botanical food. |
Chantel’s Mosaic restaurant is currently at the Chateau des Tesnieres in northern France, where it’s listed among the top 200 restaurants in the world. |
And in 2017 she won the title Best Female Chef in the World. |
These achievements have helped Chantel stand out -- to be more noticeable and better than other chefs. |
Chantel is still waiting, but surely it’s only a matter of time until she wins those coveted Michelin stars. |
Speaking of which, what was the answer to your question, Becca? |
Ah yes, I asked you earlier, "Who is the winner of the most Michelin stars ever?" |
I said that it was the Italian chef Enrico Bartolini... |
...but unfortunately, it was incorrect. |
Oh no! |
The right answer is b) Joel Robuchon, our French chef with 31 stars -- the most decorated chef in history. |
OK. Let’s recap the vocabulary we’ve learned, starting with curriculum vitae, CV, or resume in American English |
-- a document outlining someone’s education, qualifications and work experience, which they prepare when looking for a job. |
To aim high means to be ambitious and set high goals. |
The phrase the worst they can do is say no means ’don’t be afraid of trying to do something for the fear of rejection’. |
If something is catapulted, it’s suddenly accelerated or launched forward. |
A signature item is something that a person or place is known for. |
And finally, to stand out means to be more noticeable or better than other similar things. |
Once again, our six minutes are up. |
See you again soon. |
But for now, it’s goodbye. |
Goodbye! |

BBC六分钟英语
BBC六分钟英语


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