Burnt Toast

Informações:

Synopsis

Food intersects with our lives in more ways than we think. Food52's Burnt Toast podcast chases those stories to give listeners the perfect pieces of snackable dinner-party fodderall inside of a commute's time. In each episode, host Michael Harlan Turkell explores a different aspect of food culture and community, highlighting the often-surprising past informing what we eat every day, and meeting some of the people shaping food's present and future.

Episodes

  • I Propose a (Wedding) Toast (Rebroadcast)

    23/02/2017 Duration: 26min

    This episode digs into the art of the wedding toast—let it serve as an example of what to do, what not to do, and what to never even think of doing if you're asked to speak. We asked for your best and worst toast stories—here they are. This episode is a rebroadcast from June 30, 2016. 

  • Jonathan Gold on L.A. Food, Anonymity, and Thousand-Year Eggs (Rebroadcast)

    09/02/2017 Duration: 29min

    Getting 30 minutes in a room with L.A. restaurant critic and Pulitzer-winning food writer Jonathan Gold is a little like feeding the man himself a single taco. We do it anyway. Listen as we discuss City of Gold—the new documentary featuring him—plus the role of a critic, the insignificance of anonymity, and the great mosaic that is L.A. food. This episode was originally released on March 24, 2016. 

  • Simply Nigella Lawson (Rebroadcast)

    26/01/2017 Duration: 32min

    Nigella Lawson, the domestic goddess herself, on cooking as necessity over therapy, how she doesn't entertain, and about making up her own words. This episode is a rebroadcast from November 5, 2015. 

  • Michael Pollan, Ten Years After the Omnivore’s Dilemma (Rebroadcast)

    12/01/2017 Duration: 20min

    Does Michael Pollan always follow his own food rules? Does he truly believe sustainability is economically feasible? We talk to journalist and one of today's important voices in food about these things—and you tell us how his work has impacted your life. This episode was originally released on August 11, 2016. 

  • Fat Isn’t Bad, Stupid Is Bad (Rebroadcast)

    29/12/2016 Duration: 25min

    Or so says food writer Michael Ruhlman, who wants to know if you know what’s in your food. He wants to restart the conversation around this—and change the way we talk about what we eat. Today, we hear why he thinks kale isn’t healthy, and what we can do to be better cooks, eaters, and shoppers. This episode was originally released on February 11, 2016. 

  • Someone Put A Diaper On The Turkey (Rebroadcast)

    15/12/2016 Duration: 18min

    We asked you to share your holiday disasters—the biggest flubs, the most comically tragic things that inevitably happen when everyone comes together for the holidays. You delivered. Here are the best of the worst—and here’s to reminding ourselves that whatever happens this year, it could probably be worse. This episode was originally released on December 17, 2015. 

  • Man vs. Meatloaf (Rebroadcast)

    01/12/2016 Duration: 28min

    Kenji López-Alt of Serious Eats’ Food Lab fame just published a book, and it’s 900 pages of hard cooking science and strong opinions. We learn what makes him and his recipes tick, then decide to tackle his 8-page meatloaf recipe on our own. Is it all worth it? This episode was originally released on October 22, 2015. 

  • Calvin Trillin's Thanksgiving Campaign: Spaghetti Carbonara Day (Rebroadcast)

    17/11/2016 Duration: 10min

    In honor of Trillin's campaign to change the national Thanksgiving dish from turkey to spaghetti carbonara, we ask him to read his 1981 essay. Listen to him tell the tale of the very first Thanksgiving dinner, and then maybe start a campaign of your own. Happy Thanksgiving, turkeys. This episode was originally released on November 24, 2015. 

  • On Co-Authoring and Chef Whispering (Rebroadcast)

    03/11/2016 Duration: 24min

    We talk to New York Times writer and prolific cookbook author Melissa Clark about co-authoring. We find out what it’s like to get inside someone else’s voice, why the process is a little like dating, and all about the infamous Tuna Casserole Bread from the first cookbook she ever wrote. This episode was originally released on July 18, 2015. 

  • Who Wins the 2016 Piglet Tournament of Cookbooks? (Rebroadcast)

    20/10/2016 Duration: 12min

    Today's the first day of our annual NCAA-style cookbook tournament, so we asked for your predictions. Hear who our judges and readers think is going to win—and hear from a bookstore owner who's running her own competition—in today's episode. This episode was originally released on February 25, 2016. 

  • The Genius Recipes that Change the Way We Cook (Rebroadcast)

    06/10/2016 Duration: 28min

    Kristen Miglore— our mighty Creative Director and colleague—has been surfacing recipes from food luminaries that promise to change the way we cook for the past 5 years. She collects them in her James Beard Award-nominated column, Genius Recipes, and also in a New York Times best-selling book by the same name. This episode goes behind the scenes on how she chooses them, those that have taken on a life of their own, and what it is, really, that makes a recipe genius. This episode was originally released on April 21, 2016. 

  • What’s Different About Getting a Food Job Now?

    09/09/2016 Duration: 22min

    We revisit a topic from one of our earliest episodes of Burnt Toast—and the one you’ve listened to most: first food jobs, and advice for future food writers. Listen to how co-founder of Food52 Amanda Hesser and founder of Lucky Peach Peter Meehan got to where they are now, and hear if any of their advice has changed.

  • The World of Wacky, Wonderful Road Trips

    26/08/2016 Duration: 23min

    Go see the World's Largest Peanuts (yes, there are two) or the World's Oldest Ham—We'll tell you what to eat and what to listen to along the way. Welcome to the great American road trip season. Happy travels, listeners. 

  • Michael Pollan, Ten Years After the Omnivore’s Dilemma

    11/08/2016 Duration: 20min

    Does Michael Pollan always follow his own food rules? Does he *truly* believe sustainability is economically feasible? We talk to journalist and one of today's important voices in food about these things—and you tell us how his work has impacted your life. 

  • That Time We Tried to Ship Turkeys Across the Country

    29/07/2016 Duration: 23min

    We go behind the scenes of the Food52 Shop, which celebrates it's third anniversary this summer, and talk with founders Amanda Hesser and Merrill Stubbs about what it's like to run a food business, what we've learned, and the mistakes we've made--including, yes, shipping fresh turkeys on Thanksgiving. 

  • Simply Nigella Lawson (Rebroadcast)

    14/07/2016 Duration: 32min

    Nigella Lawson, the domestic goddess herself, on cooking as necessity over therapy, how she doesn't entertain, and about making up her own words. This episode is a rebroadcast from November 5, 2015. 

  • I Propose a (Wedding) Toast

    30/06/2016 Duration: 26min

    This episode digs into the art of the wedding toast—let it serve as an example of what to do, what not to do, and what to never even think of doing if you're asked to speak. We asked for your best and worst toast stories—here they are. 

  • Judith Jones and Her Life in Food

    16/06/2016 Duration: 14min

    This is part two of a conversation with the legendary editor. Last time, we talked Julia Child and Judith’s work as a cookbook editor—but Judith is a cook herself, too. This time we go inside Judith’s kitchen and talk about her own personal intersection with food. 

  • Lunch with Judith Jones at the Best Restaurant in Manhattan

    02/06/2016 Duration: 20min

    In part one of a two-part series, we talk to Judith Jones, legendary editor of Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking. Hear about her work with cookbooks and their authors (think: Marcella Hazan, Marion Cunningham), and learn why, even still, she wouldn’t call herself a cookbook editor. And: There’s a Julia Child impression or two in here, just for fun.

  • What We Cook When We Don't Feel Like Cooking

    19/05/2016 Duration: 09min

    This was the subject of our most popular post on Food52 last year, so we asked more of you for your back-pocket, too-tired-to-cook meals. We all have them—here's what you said, plus our tips for riffing and making them even faster. 

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