May 14, 2026

Short-Order Cooks

What are Short-Order Cooks?

A short-order cook is a kitchen helper who makes quick, simple foods very fast. Think of things like pancakes, eggs, burgers, and grilled cheese. They cook these dishes in just a few minutes so hungry people don’t have to wait long.

Kitchen English

10 Realistic Dialogues for Adult English Learners

Working in an American Restaurant Kitchen

How to Use This Resource

Each dialogue in this educational resource is based on real situations in American restaurant kitchens. Read the dialogue with a partner. Then study the vocabulary table. Finally, try the practice tip to build your confidence. These dialogues will help you communicate clearly with coworkers, supervisors, and servers.

Dialogue 1: Taking a Food Order from a Waitress

Scene: A busy lunch rush. Maria, a cook, receives a ticket from the waitress.

Waitress (Lisa): Order up! I need two burgers — one medium, one well-done. The medium gets Swiss cheese and no onions. The well-done gets everything.

Maria (Cook): Copy that. Two burgers — one medium, Swiss, no onions. One well-done, all the way. Got it.

Waitress (Lisa): And I need a side of fries with both. Can you add a fruit cup instead of fries for table 7? She’s watching her diet.

Maria (Cook): No problem. One fries, one fruit cup. How long for the drinks?

Waitress (Lisa): Drinks are ready. Just waiting on the food. Can you fire it when you can?

Maria (Cook): Firing now. About eight minutes.

Key Vocabulary

TermMeaning
Order upthe food order is ready to be cooked
Copy thatI understood
All the waywith all toppings
Fire itstart cooking it now
Firingstarting to cook right now

Practice Tip: Practice saying the order back clearly. This is called ‘repeating the order’ and helps avoid mistakes.

Dialogue 2: Communicating During a Rush

Scene: The kitchen is very busy. Carlos, the line cook, needs help from his coworker.

Carlos (Cook): Hey, I’m in the weeds over here. Can you plate the salads for table 4?

Deng (Cook): On it. Caesar or house?

Carlos (Cook): One Caesar, one house — house gets no croutons, dressing on the side.

Deng (Cook): Got it. Where do you need me next?

Carlos (Cook): I need eggs on the flat top. Three scrambled, two over easy. Can you handle that?

Deng (Cook): I’m on it. What’s the ticket time on those?

Carlos (Cook): About three minutes. Table 2 has been waiting.

Key Vocabulary

TermMeaning
In the weedsvery busy, behind on orders
On itI will do it right away
Plateto put food on a dish, ready to serve
Flat topa flat metal grill for cooking
Ticket timehow long the order has been waiting

Practice Tip: When you need help, speak clearly and give specific details. Say what you need and for which table.

Dialogue 3: Handling a Special Dietary Request

Scene: A server comes back with a special request from a customer.

Server (Jake): Hey, I have a modification. Table 9 has a gluten allergy. She ordered the chicken sandwich but needs it on gluten-free bread.

Ana (Cook): Okay, is it a preference or a serious allergy? I need to use a clean surface and separate tools if it’s serious.

Server (Jake): She said it’s a real allergy — celiac disease. Please take extra care.

Ana (Cook): Understood. I’ll use fresh gloves, a clean cutting board, and the gluten-free bread from the back. No cross-contamination.

Server (Jake): Thank you. Can you put an allergy flag on the plate so I know which one it is?

Ana (Cook): Absolutely. I’ll mark it. Give me about six minutes.

Key Vocabulary

TermMeaning
Modificationa change to the order
Celiac diseasea serious condition where gluten makes you sick
Cross-contaminationwhen one food touches another, spreading allergens
Allergy flaga marker or toothpick that alerts the server
Separate toolsusing different utensils so allergens don’t mix

Practice Tip: Food allergies are very serious. Always ask if it is a preference or a true allergy. Your response must be different for each.

Dialogue 4: Calling Out Food Temperatures

Scene: The expediter checks on the steak orders before plating.

Expediter (Tony): I’ve got three steaks on the line. What temperature is the first one?

Rosa (Cook): That one is medium-rare — red in the middle, warm. Should be about 135 degrees.

Expediter (Tony): Good. The second ticket says medium-well. How’s that one looking?

Rosa (Cook): Almost there — it needs two more minutes. Medium-well is mostly brown with just a little pink.

Expediter (Tony): And the third?

Rosa (Cook): The third is well-done. Fully cooked, no pink. It just came off the grill.

Expediter (Tony): Good. Let them rest for three minutes before you plate them.

Key Vocabulary

TermMeaning
Expediterthe person who organizes food going out to the tables
Medium-rarecooked so the inside is red and soft (around 135°F)
Medium-wellmostly cooked, a little pink inside (around 155°F)
Well-donefully cooked, no pink (around 165°F+)
Let them restwait before cutting so the juices stay inside

Practice Tip: Learn all five temperatures: rare, medium-rare, medium, medium-well, and well-done. Customers ask for these every day.

Dialogue 5: Stocking and Prepping in the Morning

Scene: It is 7:00 AM. The kitchen opens in two hours. The head cook gives instructions.

Head Cook (Bill): Good morning. Before we open, I need you to prep the mise en place. Start with the vegetables.

Yuki (Cook): Okay. Do you want the onions diced or sliced today?

Head Cook (Bill): Diced for the soup, sliced for the burgers. And I need the lettuce washed and the tomatoes sliced thin.

Yuki (Cook): Got it. Should I also portion the chicken?

Head Cook (Bill): Yes — six ounces each. Wrap and label them with today’s date. And check the walk-in to see if we’re low on anything.

Yuki (Cook): I’ll check now. Should I write it on the prep list if something is low?

Head Cook (Bill): Yes. Write it down and leave the list on my station. We’ll order this afternoon.

Key Vocabulary

TermMeaning
Mise en placea French phrase meaning ‘everything in its place’; all your prep work done before cooking
Diceto cut into small square pieces
Sliceto cut into flat pieces
Portionto measure and cut into the right serving size
Walk-inthe large refrigerator you can walk inside

Practice Tip: Morning prep is very important. Work quickly and in order. If something is missing, always tell your supervisor.

Dialogue 6: Receiving a Complaint About Food

Scene: A server returns a plate because the customer is not happy.

Server (Maria): I’m so sorry — table 5 says the burger is undercooked. They ordered medium but it looks rare.

Felix (Cook): Okay. I apologize. Bring it back and I’ll re-fire it right away.

Server (Maria): She also said it seemed cold in the middle.

Felix (Cook): Understood. I’ll cook a new one — not just reheat this one. A new patty, done properly this time.

Server (Maria): Thank you. She has been waiting. How long will the new one take?

Felix (Cook): Seven to eight minutes. I’ll make it a priority. Please tell her I’m sorry for the wait.

Key Vocabulary

TermMeaning
Undercookednot cooked enough, still raw inside
Re-fireto cook the food again
Reheatto warm up food that was already cooked (not the same as re-fire)
Priorityto do something before other things
Pattythe round piece of ground beef in a burger

Practice Tip: Mistakes happen. The most important thing is to stay calm, apologize quickly, and fix the problem fast. Never argue with the server.

Dialogue 7: Communicating About Safety and Hygiene

Scene: A new cook is about to make a mistake. A coworker steps in.

Priya (Experienced Cook): Hey — wait. Don’t use that cutting board for the chicken. That one is for vegetables only. See the color? Green is for vegetables, red is for raw meat.

Sam (New Cook): Oh, I didn’t know. Thank you. Where is the red cutting board?

Priya (Experienced Cook): It’s hanging on the rack over there. And make sure you wash your hands after you handle raw chicken.

Sam (New Cook): Of course. Should I also change my gloves?

Priya (Experienced Cook): Yes — always change gloves when you switch between raw meat and other foods. It prevents cross-contamination.

Sam (New Cook): Good to know. I will be more careful. Thank you for telling me.

Key Vocabulary

TermMeaning
Color-coded cutting boardsboards of different colors used for different foods (green = vegetables, red = raw meat, etc.)
Raw meatmeat that has not been cooked yet
Cross-contaminationwhen bacteria from one food spreads to another
Hygienekeeping yourself and the kitchen clean
Switchto change from one thing to another

Practice Tip: Kitchen safety protects your customers. Know the color-coded system and always wash your hands. It is not optional — it is the law.

Dialogue 8: Breakfast Rush — Short-Order Cooking

Scene: It is 8:30 AM. Orders are coming in fast at the breakfast counter.

Customer (Bob): I’ll have two eggs over easy, bacon — crispy — wheat toast, and a short stack.

Cook (Elena): Two over easy, crispy bacon, wheat toast, short stack. Coming right up.

Customer (Bob): Can you make sure the eggs don’t break? Last time they were all broken up.

Cook (Elena): I’ll be careful. Over easy means we flip them gently and the yolk stays runny.

Customer (Bob): Exactly. And can I get the butter on the side for the pancakes?

Cook (Elena): Sure thing — butter on the side. Your order will be up in about five minutes.

Key Vocabulary

TermMeaning
Over easyfried egg flipped once; the yolk is still runny
Crispycooked until it is crunchy and brown (opposite of soft)
Short stacktwo or three pancakes (a full stack is usually four or five)
Yolkthe yellow part of the egg
Butter on the sidethe butter is served separately, not on the food

Practice Tip: In a short-order kitchen, speed and accuracy matter. Repeat the order back every time. If you make a mistake, tell the customer right away.

Dialogue 9: End-of-Shift Cleanup and Communication

Scene: It is closing time. The cook and the shift supervisor do a walkthrough.

Supervisor (Grace): Okay, let’s do the closing checklist. Did you cover and date all the leftovers?

Hector (Cook): Yes. Everything is labeled with today’s date and wrapped tightly. I put the chicken in the walk-in on the bottom shelf.

Supervisor (Grace): Good. Raw chicken always goes on the bottom to prevent dripping. Did you wipe down the grill?

Hector (Cook): Yes, I scraped it and wiped it with the grill brick. It’s clean.

Supervisor (Grace): What about the fryer? Did you filter the oil?

Hector (Cook): I filtered it. The oil looked okay — I think it’s good for one more day. Should I change it tomorrow?

Supervisor (Grace): Yes, let’s change it tomorrow morning. Good work tonight.

Key Vocabulary

TermMeaning
Closing checklista list of tasks to complete before leaving
Labelto write the name and date on food containers
Bottom shelfthe lowest shelf in the refrigerator (for raw meats)
Grill bricka rough block used to clean the grill
Filter the oilto clean the fryer oil so you can use it again

Practice Tip: Closing properly protects food safety. Always follow the checklist. If something is low or broken, write it down for the next shift.

Dialogue 10: Dealing with a Substitution Request

Scene: A server comes to the window with an unusual customer request.

Server (Tom): Hi — can the cook do a substitution? Table 12 wants the grilled salmon but wants to swap the rice pilaf for mashed potatoes.

Cook (Nadia): That’s fine. Mashed instead of rice. No problem. Does she want gravy on the mashed?

Server (Tom): Good question — let me ask.

Server (Tom): (returns) She says yes to gravy, but on the side please.

Cook (Nadia): Got it. Grilled salmon, mashed potatoes, gravy on the side. And the vegetable of the day is still green beans, right?

Server (Tom): Yes, green beans are fine. She didn’t mention those.

Cook (Nadia): Perfect. I’ll have it up in about ten minutes. The salmon takes a little longer on the grill.

Key Vocabulary

TermMeaning
Substitutionreplacing one item with another
Swapto exchange one thing for another
Rice pilafa type of cooked rice with herbs or broth
Gravy on the sidethe sauce is in a small cup, not poured over the food
Vegetable of the daythe vegetable the restaurant is serving that day

Practice Tip: Substitutions are common. Always confirm the full order after a change. If you are not sure a substitution is possible, ask your supervisor first.