Gastropod looks at food through the lens of science and history.
Co-hosts Cynthia Graber and Nicola Twilley serve up a brand new episode every two weeks.
Co-hosts Cynthia Graber and Nicola Twilley serve up a brand new episode every two weeks.
Now & Then is a binge-worthy podcast in the Vox Media Podcast Network that looks at how the past can inform today’s most pressing questions. Heather Cox Richardson is a political historian and professor at Boston College, where she teaches courses on 19th century American history. Joanne Freeman is a professor of history at Yale, and specializes in early American political culture.
Beth Kimmerle is an innovation and sensory consultant to the food business, particularly candy companies, and has written several books, including Candy: The Sweet History. You may remember Beth from our licorice episode!
Margaret Magat is an independent scholar and folklorist who writes about Filipino foodways. She works in historic preservation and cultural resource management, and is the author of Balut: Fertilized Eggs and the Making of Culinary Capital in the Filipino Diaspora, a book about the traditional and popular contexts for eating balut, fertilized duck eggs. Margaret is the co-host of a new podcast from the University of Pennsylvania called Yellow and Brown: Asian American Folklife Today.
Sugar skulls and other sweets in Mexico, © Tomas Castelazo / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0
Sarah Chavez is one of the founders of the death positive movement, executive director of the Order of the Good Death, and a founding member of the Collective for Radical Death Studies. Her work centers around dismantling oppression and decolonizing death in studies, practice, and experience. Sarah co-hosted the podcast Death in the Afternoon, should you wish to treat your ears to more deathy delights.
A 1936 poster for a "sanitized" Halloween event, one of the many civic efforts to redirect Halloween mischief. Source: Library of Congress
Our friends at Eater have shared some excellent Halloween-y stories, including this delightful video about pan de muerto, and this spirited defense of Halloween's most polarizing treat.