AA: I'm Avi Arditti with Rosanne Skirble, and this week on WORDMASTER: Our theme is food, or more precisely, slang having to do with food. After all, Thanksgiving is just a day away, and the traditional way to celebrate the holiday is with a big, festive meal.
So we're dusting off a vintage WORDMASTER, a segment we did with our  old friend David Burke, better known as "Slangman." It's a story he  wrote for our listeners based on the children's classic "Jack and the  Beanstalk." 
DAVID BURKE: "Once upon a time, there lived a woman who was as American as apple pie. She lived in the Big Apple."
RS: "Where else."
AA: "New York."
DAVID BURKE: "New York. With her only son Jack, the apple ...
AA/RS/DAVID BURKE: " ... of her eye!"

DAVID BURKE: "The most important thing to her. Unfortunately, she  just couldn't cut the mustard in the working world. And to cut the  mustard means to succeed. So she could not cut the mustard in the  working world, and Jack was such a couch ... "
RS: "Potato!"
DAVID  BURKE: "Very good. A coach potato, a lazy person who does nothing but  sit on the couch and usually just watch television. He was such a couch  potato that there was no one to bring home the bacon, which means to  earn money for food. For now, selling milk from their cow was their  bread and butter, which means the only way they could earn money. But  the cow they bought turned out to be a lemon, defective. [laughter]  That's something you buy then you discover later that it just doesn't  work."
AA: "Like a car."
DAVID BURKE: "Right, we hear that  a lot, especially of course with cars. If a car doesn't work after you  bought it, it's a lemon.
"But in this case, the cow was a lemon  and stopped producing milk! They were certainly in a pickle -- a bad  situation. I have no idea why we say that, although we do. That's the  interesting thing about some of these expressions. If you ask an  American 'why do you say that, where does it come from?' we don't know,  we just use it. So, 'Jack,' said his mother. "I'm not going to  sugar-coat this.' That means to tell it like it is, even though it may  be painful for the other person to hear. Well, the mother said, 'We have  to sell the cow.' 'Sell the cow?!' Jack exclaimed. 'Mother, I think  your idea is half-baked!'"
RS: "Not a great idea."
DAVID  BURKE: "Right, not carefully considered. It's half-baked. But Jack's  mother kept egging him on, which means pushed him to do something, to  encourage him. And the next morning, Jack took the cow to the city to  sell it. Well, on his way to the market, Jack was stopped by a man who  said 'I'd like to buy your cow, and I'll give you five beans for it.'
"And  Jack said: 'What are you, some kind of a nut?' -- somebody who's crazy.  We can say nutty. In fact, the movie 'The Nutty Professor' means the  crazy professor. 'Ah, but these are magic beans!' said the man, 'and  that's no baloney!' And baloney, which is ... "
AA: "Processed meat."
DAVID  BURKE: "Processed meat. I was going to say it's a food, but it simply  means in this case nonsense, 'that's baloney.' The man told Jack that if  he planted the beans, by the next morning they'd grow up tall, tall,  tall and reach the sky. Well, since Jack really didn't know beans about  ...
SLANGMAN/RS: " ... beans!"
DAVID BURKE: "If you don't  know beans about something, it means you don't know anything about it.  Well, he did agree, and took the beans, then ran home to tell his mother  the good news. When his mother discovered what Jack had done, she  turned beet red. Now a beet is a vegetable that is really deep red. She  turned beet red and went bananas, and threw the beans out the window.
"When  he woke up the next morning, to Jack's surprise, there was growing an  enormous beanstalk. 'Hmm, I'll see where it goes,' thought Jack, and  with that he stepped out of the window on to the beanstalk to climb up  and up and up.
"In the distance, he could see a big  castle. When he walked in, Jack tried to stay as cool as a cucumber --  which means very calm, very relaxed. Well, it was difficult to stay as  cool as a cucumber, because sitting there at the table was a giant who  was rather beefy."
AA: "A big guy."
DAVID BURKE: "A big  guy. Big and muscular, that's beefy. And the giant was definitely what  you would call a tough cookie, a stubborn and strict person. The giant  placed a goose on the table and said, 'Lay three eggs!' and out came  three golden eggs!
"The giant took the eggs, and left the room.  'Wow!' thought Jack. 'If I borrow the goose, my mother and I will have  no more money problems! This is going to be as easy as pie!' he thought.  Which means something extremely easy to do, which is kind of strange  because pie is not that easy to make. Have you ever tried to make a  pie?"
AA: "That's true."
DAVID BURKE: "So he climbed up  the table and grabbed the goose. The giant came running after Jack. Jack  quickly climbed all the way down the beanstalk, took an ax, and chopped  it down. And that, my friends, is the whole enchilada."
RS: "Enchilada."
DAVID  BURKE: "That's a Mexican dish, meat and cheese, that's wrapped in a  tortilla which is made of flour and water. 'The whole enchilada' -- that  means that's the whole story."
AA: For more of a taste of how  you can learn English with help from Slangman David Burke, you can visit  his website, slangman.com. With Rosanne Skirble, I'm Avi Arditti.