It really is. The best part of it, though, is that it allows you to use
anything that relates to the topic, not just a specific scene.
While in the short example I gave you - Bob meets Jill - you can include more characters, more people, more reasons, and more details that don't stretch. Anything that revolves around him meeting Jill is useful - maybe his mother got pissed that he never does any work, and so he sets off for the market. Then you can also include how blown away she is when he's always going there and getting her groceries. And then maybe he has some older siblings who tease him for being a mama's boy. And then maybe their father doesn't want him doing woman's work.
But in the longer example I gave you, you focus more on stretching the paragraph into about ten pages for a decent chapter, which includes... more talking about fruits, more sighing, and more stammering.
But before you plunge into the chapter, even with your 3-word-summary, close your eyes and think about all the crazy things that can happen to lead to the "Bob meets Jill." Like fourty mini-novels, a chapter has to have a diologue, setting, theme, point of view, characters, tone, climax, everything. You're not going to get that by a scene at a market between two shy people talking about fruit and sighing.
