Curated to Cater!
We have a bud for every possible taste bud!
Alfred levels
Here’s a full 5-level system, each named like a kitchen role, matched with classic CEFR equivalents — but with personality:
1. Street Speak
From “sup?” to “you good?”, learn how real people actually talk — in cafés, memes, and awkward elevator rides.
Learning Goal: Understand and use casual, everyday English expressions, contractions, filler words, and local slang to sound more natural in informal conversations.


2. Interview Mode: Activated
Practice how to say “I’m a team player” without sounding like a robot. We’ll help you prep, polish, and lowkey impress HR.
Learning Goal: Practice structured responses, formal vocabulary, and fluency in professional interview settings.
3. Sing It Like You Mean It
Turn Adele lyrics, Disney hits, or Queen choruses into pronunciation practice. You’ll hit the high notes and the vowels.
Learning Goal: Improve pronunciation, intonation, and rhythm through fun, repetitive singing-based language exposure.


4. Survive Paris in 10 Phrases
Well, London or New York actually. Learn how to order food, ask directions, or survive awkward small talk at a hostel.
Learning Goal: Memorize and practice essential travel phrases to handle common tourist situations confidently.
5. Talk Deep Over Wine
Go beyond “how are you” and dive into love, family, regrets, and dreams — in fluent, heartfelt English.
Learning Goal: Improve fluency, vocabulary range, and emotional expression in deep, open-ended conversations.


6. Roast Me Gently
You speak. Your Alfred fixes you — kindly, constructively, and maybe with a little sass.
Learning Goal: Receive real-time corrections in grammar, word choice, and pronunciation while building conversational flow.
7. Netflix & Pronounce
Pick a scene from Stranger Things or Emily in Paris, break it down line by line, and nail the delivery like a Hollywood pro.
Learning Goal: Strengthen pronunciation, stress, and spoken rhythm by mimicking real media dialogue.


8. Text Me Later
What does “brb” really mean? Is “lol” still cool? Decode texting culture so you don’t sound like an email.
Learning Goal: Learn common abbreviations, digital tone, and texting etiquette in casual English communication.
9. Flirt Like a Local
Learn how to say “you have a nice smile” without sounding like a serial killer. Casual flirting, compliments, and sweet talk included.
Learning Goal: Use expressive vocabulary, humor, and tone for playful, respectful romantic interactions.


10. Café Flirt
Small talk, cheeky compliments, and how to make friends (or more) in line for coffee — without sounding awkward.
Learning Goal: Gain confidence initiating and maintaining informal, lighthearted conversation in real-life scenarios.
Kitchen Helper (~A1–A2)
Just getting warmed up, but can carry basic, friendly conversations with charm. Think of them as sous-sous-sous-chef of French.
Can: Handle greetings, simple questions, very basic convo practice.


Line Cook (~B1)
They know their way around a convo. Good with everyday topics, polite corrections, and fun expressions — just don’t ask them to explain the subjunctive.
Can: Manage structured conversation, help with pronunciation, correct simple grammar, keep it flowing.
Sous-Chef (~B2)
Solid, confident, and ready to spice things up. A great Alfred for anyone aiming to level up without overthinking it.
Can: Discuss abstract topics, give feedback gently, model strong native-like speech.


Head Chef (~C1)
Fluent, smooth, and deeply intuitive. Great at adapting to your pace, fixing your grammar on the fly, or throwing in a proverb just for fun.
Can: Handle any topic, guide deep convos, give sharp, soft feedback.
Master Chef (C2 / Native)
A language artist. Accent? Perfect. Flow? Effortless. Cultural nuance? Impeccable. Probably makes great pasta too.
Can: Lead sessions at any level, challenge advanced learners, even switch registers (formal/informal) on demand.
