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.
Amy Bentley is a professor in the department of Nutrition, Food Studies and Public Health at New York University, and author of Inventing Baby Food: Taste, Health, and the Industrialization of the American Diet. She was a guest on our previous episode about formula, The Milk of Life, as well as our earlier episode on baby food, First Foods: Learning to Eat. Her article on the 1981 shenanigans, "Ketchup as a Vegetable: Condiments and the Politics of School Lunch in Reagan’s America," was published in Gastronomica magazine last year.
Food entrepreneur John J. Heinz seized on the budding pure food movement to sell his tomato ketchup, emphasizing that it was free of the preservative sodium benzoate.
Ken Albala is a food historian and professor at the University of the Pacific. He has authored more than 25 books on food; watch out for his next one , The Great Gelatin Revival, which you can pre-order now for delivery when it's published early next year.
Sally Grainger is a historian of Roman food and the author of The Story of Garum: Fermented Fish Sauce and Salted Fish in the Ancient World.
The results of Sally's experiment in backyard fish-sauce making: from left to right, the fish sauce progressing from bony bits, to paste, to thick, creamy sauce pre-filtration. (Images by Sally Grainger)
Cuong Pham is the founder of Red Boat, which makes delicious fermented fish sauce following a traditional Vietnamese method. He is the co-author of the new Red Boat Fish Sauce Cook Book.
Click here for a transcript of the show. Please note that the transcript is provided as a courtesy and may contain errors.