Food Idioms
Food Idioms
Food Idioms
22 April, 2023
Name:……………………………
UNIT 5: FOOD
I. Vocabulary.
1. dine (v) /daɪn/: to eat dinner.
2. dine in: dine at home.
We're dining in tonight.
3. dine out: dine at a restaurant.
We're dining out tonight.
4. fussy /ˈfʌsi/: too concerned about having things exactly as you want them; hard
to please
5. fussy eater: someone who is very picky about the food and doesn't eat
everything.
BeBi is a fussy eater, and she's never pleased with my cooking.
6. home-cooked food: food cooked at home, usually implies that food is healthy.
Preparing home-cooked food is a good way to make a balanced meal.
7. in a walking distance of: close to
I usually dine at a restaurant that's in a walking distance of my home.
8. Vietnamese cuisine: traditional Vietnamese food. You can also say French
cuisine, Italian cuisine, Chinese cuisine and so on.
13. quality justifies the bill: when a product is worth buying due its good quality,
even if it's expensive.
I first thought those strawberries were too expensive, but when I tasted
them I understood that their quality justified the bill.
Eating quick snack instead of main meal can be harmful for your
stomach.
15. ready meal: a meal that you buy already cooked, which only requires reheating
to be eaten.
16. restrain one's hunger: to avoid eating when you really want to. Usually practiced
/rɪˈstreɪn/
during diets.
Kevin couldn't restrain his hunger anymore and went to the nearest
fast-food restaurant. (restrain: to stop somebody/something from doing
something, especially by using physical force)
17. slap-up meal: a quick and fatty meal. To slap up means to cook something very
quickly.
I feel like making a slap-up meal tonight.
Slap-up /ˈslæp ʌp/ [only before noun] (British English, informal): (of a meal) large and
very good
I woke up starving hungry yesterday and ate the whole roast chicken.
20. the main meal: the most important meal of the day.
21. to be dying of hunger: an exaggerated way of saying you are really hungry.
22. to be full-up: to eat to the point that you can't eat anymore.
24. to bolt /bəʊlt/something down: to eat a large amount of food very quickly.
Don't bolt your food down like that, it's very rude!
Although she had never cooked a jugged hare before, she followed a
recipe and made a fantastic meal.
You paid for dinner last time. Let me foot the bill for lunch today.
I won't eat the whole cake, just let me grab a bite to eat.
Dave eats candy all the time. He must have a sweet tooth.
33. to play with your food: to push food around the plate without eating it.
34. to spoil one’s appetite: to do something that would hinder one’s desire to eat.
After not eating the whole day, Irene tucked into the ham like a savage.
36. to wine and dine: to banquet /ˈbæŋ.kwət/, to "entertain with good food". If you
wine and dine someone, you usually take the person out to dinner at a fancy
restaurant.
The company wined and dined us, hoping to convince us that we should
accept the job.
2. Different as chalk and cheese: if two people or things are like chalk and
cheese or as different as chalk and cheese, they are completely different
from each other.
Milu & Sori are like chalk and cheese.
C. Banana
1. One-banana problem: A problem, project, or task that requires little to
no effort, expertise, or intelligence to solve or complete.
It’s only a one-banana problem, even kids can solve it. I can’t
understand why people get stuck there.
2. Going bananas: Go crazy
I will go bananas if you still acts like this.
3. A banana skin: something that could cause somebody to have problems or
feel embarrassed, especially somebody in a public position
The new tax has proved to be a banana skin for the government.
D. Apples
1. Apples and Oranges: Completely different
They are both great but you can't compare apples and oranges.
2. The apple of sb’s eye: the person who someone loves most and is very
proud of
Her daughter is the apple of her eye.
3. Upset the apple cart: to mess up or ruin something.
I always knew he’d tell secrets and upset the apple cart.
4. A bad/rotten apple: one bad person in a group of people who are good
In every organization, you can find a bad apple who can damage their
prestige. (prestige /preˈstiːʒ/: uy tín)
5. Put something in apple-pie order: in very good, well organized order
Example: I’ve put my entire life into apple-pie order.
E. Pie
1. eat humble pie: to make an apology and accept humiliation
I will not break my promise to eat humble pie and admit that I have
made a mistake if you can prove it.
2. piece of the pie: A share or part of something.
The business owner wanted all of his employees to have a piece of the
pie, so he gave them all stock in the company as a holiday bonus.
3. (as) easy as pie: very easy
You make everything sound as easy as pie, Ged map.
4. Pie in the sky: an event that somebody talks about that seems very
unlikely to happen.
This talk of moving to Australia is all just pie in the sky.
F. Beans
1. Full of beans: having a lot of energy
The children were too full of beans to sit still.
2. Spill the beans: To tell somebody something that should be kept secret or
private.
They are looking into who spilled the beans about the voting results?
G. In a nutshell: In a few words; concisely
The explanation is long and involved, but let me put it in a nutshell for you.
To put it in a nutshell, we're bankrupt.
H. Egg
1. Walking on eggshells: taking great care/try hard not to upset someone.
Everyone at the company was walking on eggshells until we heard that
no one would be fired.
2. (To) have/put all your eggs in one basket: put too much faith in one thing,
to rely on one particular course of action for success rather than giving
yourself several different possibilities.
Don’t put all your eggs in one basket! You should always have Plan B
3. Egg someone on: urge someone to do something
My parents tried to egg me on studying abroad. However, I didn’t
manage to pass the IELTS test with a high score to study overseas.
I. Butter
In a nutshell, I hope you go bananas for food idioms. Whether they’re your
cup of tea or not, these terms are easy as pie to use in the IELTS Speaking
test and they’ll make you the big cheese of any conversation! So go ahead
and spill the beans, it’s just like apples and oranges.