Eating 50-year-old-stew ⏲️ 6 Minute English

8,032 views ・ 2025-01-09

BBC Learning English


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00:07
Hello, this is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English.
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I'm Phil, and I'm Beth.
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Most people have eaten
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some unusual food at least once in their life.
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What's the most unusual thing you've ever eaten, Beth?
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Oh, I ate camel in Australia, and I really didn't like it, to be honest.
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What about you?
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I ate caiman in northern Argentina, and it was delicious!
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Oh, OK. Good!
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Well, in this programme, we'll be discussing some very unusual food known
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as 'forever food' - dishes like stews and soups,
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which can be kept going day after day, year after year.
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We'll also be learning some useful new vocabulary, all
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of which you can download along with a worksheet for this program
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at our website bbclearningenglish.com.
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But let's get back to forever food, and a Bangkok restaurant called, 'Wattana Panich'
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that's famous for a soup which has been cooking for over 50 years!
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Here's radio listener, David Shirley, who called BBC World Service Programme,
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'The Food Chain', after tasting the soup himself:
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I had never heard of a perpetual stew before,
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but the first time I'd ever heard about it was when I was in Bangkok.
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I found a stew that had been simmering for 50 years.
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David tasted perpetual stew, a pot
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into which ingredients are placed and cooked continuously.
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The pot is never completely emptied.
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Instead, new ingredients and water are added when necessary and left simmering,
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- cooking at a temperature just below boiling so that the food bubbles gently.
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A 50-year-old soup might not be to everyone's taste,
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but forever foods are surprisingly common.
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And Phil, I have a question for you about
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Wattana Panich's 50-year-old soup.
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What do you think is the main ingredient?
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Is it a) beef? b) chicken? or c) vegetables?
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Oh, I think vegetables.
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I think that's probably safer.
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OK. Well, we'll find out the correct answer later in the program.
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It's not just Bangkok where people cook forever foods.
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Fuchsia Dunlop is a writer and cook specialising in Chinese food.
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Here, she tells BBC World Service programme 'The Food Chain',
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about a Chinese stew that is rumoured to be 100 years old:
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In China, they sometimes, you know, professionals talk
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about having a 'bǎinián laolu', which means like, a 100-year-old broth.
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So, I don't know if this is strictly true,
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but theoretically, as long as you have a good practice
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of hygiene, which is to say that you always skim it and boil it every day,
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and also replenish it as needed with more water, more salt, more spices, and
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you know, you keep tasting - then it just gets richer and richer.
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Cooks need to replenish a forever stew, to fill it up again
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with fresh ingredients
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before it's completely eaten. By being regularly replenished,
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some dishes are rumoured to last 100 years.
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Wow, that is a long time!
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Fuchsia doesn't know if it's strictly true,
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or completely true, that the same stew has really lasted 100 years,
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but she thinks it's possible in theory,
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as long as it's kept safe and hygienic through boiling.
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Professor Martha Carlin is a historian with a special interest
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in medieval cookery.
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Here, she explains to BBC World Service programme 'The Food Chain',
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why long-lasting foods could have been familiar to people in the Middle Ages.
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In theory, it would make sense to think
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that people who didn't have matches or fire starters,
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for whom starting a fire from scratch was quite a cumbersome process,
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would naturally want to keep a stew pot bubbling
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if they had the means to do that,
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and to avoid the labour of constantly restarting the fire,
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and also to make sure that they had a hot meal waiting at any time.
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Having hot food bubbling away
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on the fire means there's always something ready to eat,
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and avoids having to start a fire from scratch.
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When you do something, like cook food or make a fire, from scratch,
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you do it from the beginning
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without the help of anything that has already been made.
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Starting a fire is also cumbersome, an adjective meaning difficult to do,
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taking time and effort.
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But Professor Carlin says only rich families
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were able to afford enough wood to keep a fire going all day.
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Anyway, all this talk of food has made me hungry,
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Beth, so what
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was the answer to your question?
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Ah, I asked you what the main ingredient is in the Bangkok stew,
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and you said vegetables.
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And I'm afraid that's wrong,
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it was, in fact, beef.
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OK, let's recap the vocabulary we've learnt in this programme
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about forever foods such as 'perpetual stew', a pot of stew
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into which new ingredients are regularly added, allowing
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the dish to be eaten over a long time.
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When food is simmering, it's cooking at a temperature slightly below boiling
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so that it bubbles gently.
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The verb 'replenish' means 'to fill something up again'.
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If something is not strictly true, it's not completely or entirely true.
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When you do an activity such as cooking from scratch, you do it
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from the beginning without using anything that has already been made.
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And finally, if an activity is cumbersome, it's difficult to do
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and takes a lot of time and effort.
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Once again, our six minutes are up.
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Remember to visit our website bbclearningenglish.com,
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where you'll find a worksheet and a quiz related to this programme,
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and we'll see you again soon.
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For more trending topics and useful vocabulary here at 6 Minute English.
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06:04
Goodbye for now! Bye!
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