Dinner in Camelot
Dinner in Camelot

Almost sixty years ago to the day, President John F Kennedy and his wife Jacqueline hosted the largest state dinner of the Kennedy Administration. Invited to the White House for a special "brains dinner" in April 1962 were 49 Nobel laureates, along with Pulitzer Prize winners, noted actors, and Poet Laureates.

Listen Now

Show Notes

Brewing with Fire
Brewing with Fire

This week, the Feast is heading to Ohio to visit a brewery entirely dedicated to making beer like they did in the mid-19th century. Located in Dayton, Carillon Brewing Company is not your average craft brewery. Instead of wrestling with stainless steel tanks, you’re more likely to find these brewers chopping wood and discussing 19th century recipe books.

Listen Now

Show Notes

Serving Up Wisconsin's State Secret: The Supper Club
Serving Up Wisconsin's State Secret: The Supper Club

In an era of celebrity chefs, fast casual chains, and meal delivery services available at the touch of a button, it may be hard to imagine a state where people drive out of town to go to a pyramid-shaped restaurant to enjoy a nice brandy-based cocktail, a relish tray, fried fish, and prime rib. Where the host lets you linger at a bar for hours before even thinking of being seated for dinner. Where you might know everyone in the restaurant, including the owners. And you may be back in a few days to dine at the same place all over again.

But this magical state does exist, my friends. It exists at the Wisconsin supper club.

Listen Now

Show Notes

The Lost Women of America's Hop Industry: A Conversation with Dr. Jennifer Jordan
The Lost Women of America's Hop Industry: A Conversation with Dr. Jennifer Jordan

This week, we’re learning about the forgotten women that helped shape America’s beer industry in the 19th century. Dr. Jennifer Jordan, a professor at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee, has spent the last few years researching and writing about the forgotten hop industry and specifically the women who were often at the forefront of hop harvesting in states like Wisconsin and California.

Listen Now

Show Notes

Beer is Culture: A Conversation with the Brewseum's Liz Garibay
Beer is Culture: A Conversation with the Brewseum's Liz Garibay

This week, we're taking you to the heart of the Windy City itself, Chicago, to chat with the founder and executive director of the one of the only museum's dedicated entirely to the history and culture of beer: the Chicago Brewseum. At its helm is Liz Garibay, who has spearheaded the organization's programming and events for the last several years.

Listen Now

Show Notes

Feast & Fast: How Clean Eating Came to Early Modern Europe
Feast & Fast: How Clean Eating Came to Early Modern Europe

The Feast is back! Our season premiere features a rich discussion on the history of feasting and fasting in Europe. We talk to Dr. Victoria Avery and Dr. Melissa Calaresu, co-curators of the exhibition “Feast & Fast: The Art of Food in Europe 1500–1800” at the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge, England, to learn some of the questions early modern Europeans were asking about what to eat and where their food came from.

Listen Now

Show Notes

"Feast of the Seven Fishes": Italian-American Christmas Cuisine with Director Robert Tinnell
"Feast of the Seven Fishes": Italian-American Christmas Cuisine with Director Robert Tinnell

"Feast of the Seven Fishes": Italian-American Christmas Cuisine with Director Robert Tinnell

On a special holiday bonus episode of the Feast, we talk to Robert Tinnell, the writer and director of the new film, “Feast of the Seven Fishes”, out now. Centered on the Italian-American culinary tradition of seven seafood dishes eaten on Christmas Eve, the romantic-comedy is based loosely on Robert’s childhood growing up in West Virginia.

Show Notes

Listen Now

The Hardworking History of the Hardy Orange
The Hardworking History of the Hardy Orange

The Hardworking History of the Hardy Orange

Professor Ian Glomski of Vitae Spirits in Charlottesville, Virginia has discovered what may be the perfect solution for the South’s citrus pest, the hardy orange. Sourcing hardy oranges throughout Virginia, including even a few fruit from Thomas Jefferson’s grave, Glomski has produced a unique hardy orange liqueur, used in bars and restaurants throughout the upper South.

Show Notes
Listen Now

The Waldorf’s First Final Feast
The Waldorf’s First Final Feast

The Waldorf’s First Final Feast

On the Feast’s season finale, we revisit a meal that ended a chapter in one of the most famous hotel’s in history: the Waldorf Astoria. Famous for its invention of the Waldorf Salad and (arguably) Eggs Benedict, the legacy of this world-renown hotel has always been associated with food.

Show Notes

Listen Now

Georgia O’Keeffe’s Art of Eating
Georgia O’Keeffe’s Art of Eating

Georgia O’Keeffe’s Art of Eating

Join us on an artistic feast like no other with American artist, Georgia O’Keeffe. A prolific painter, O’Keeffe was also a devoted foodie, with an enviable cookbook collection and gigantic kitchen at her home in New Mexico.

Show Notes

Listen Now

Ernest Shackleton’s Pantry
Ernest Shackleton’s Pantry

Ernest Shackleton’s Pantry

This week we look at Antarctic expedition rations in the early 20th century and what explorers ate before the advent of energy bars and protein powder. We’ll also dig up Shackleton’s secret storage of whiskey, buried for a hundred years under the snow. Just don’t ask us if we want our Scotch served over ice.

Show Notes

Listen Now!

Travels with Steinbeck: Dogs and Drive Ins on the Open Road
Travels with Steinbeck: Dogs and Drive Ins on the Open Road

Travels with Steinbeck: Dogs and Drive Ins on the Open Road

We’re exploring the great American road trip this week on The Feast. Learn how the call of the open road has inspired millions over the last century to see the country. We follow in the footsteps and exhaust fumes of American writer, John Steinbeck, along the road.

Show Notes

Listen Now

Call Us Julius Childus: A Roman Culinary Experiment
Call Us Julius Childus: A Roman Culinary Experiment

Call Us Julius Childus: A Roman Culinary Experiment

We’re rolling up our sleeves to make a first century dessert recipe courtesy of one of the most famous Roman cookbook writers of all time, Apicius. Although this sweet cheese and biscuit recipe, known as hypotrimma with spelt biscuits, may look like your standard cheese dip, this concoction has a few fishy” ingredients hidden up its sleeve.

Show Notes

Listen Now

Titanic Redux: The Final Feast of the Unsinkable Ship
Titanic Redux: The Final Feast of the Unsinkable Ship

Titanic Redux: The Final Feast of the Unsinkable Ship

This week, we're revisiting one of our favorite episodes in honor of the 107th anniversary of the sinking of the RMS Titanic.  We explore the culinary life onboard the unsinkable ship, looking at everything from those who worked in Titanic’s state of the art kitchens to the epic meals served only a few hours before the ship sank.

Show Notes

Listen Now on Apple Podcasts

Nailed It: Ancient Roman Edition with Farrell Monaco
Nailed It: Ancient Roman Edition with Farrell Monaco

Nailed It: Ancient Roman Edition with Farrell Monaco

The Feast is headed to ancient Rome this week with experimental archaeologist, Farrell Monaco. Join us as we discover the bakeries and fast food joints of Pompeii, make an ancient Roman cheese ball with an early-rising farmer, and learn the joys of fish sauce with Apicius.

Show Notes

Listen Now!

Historical Meals on Wheels: The Manitoba Food History Project
Historical Meals on Wheels: The Manitoba Food History Project

Historical Meals on Wheels: The Manitoba Food History Project

Join us as The Feast hits the road with the Manitoba Food History Project Food Truck. We speak to Dr. Janis Thiessen and Kent Davies (University of Winnipeg), two leaders on this research project to discover meaningful dishes and historical recipes in Manitoba, Canada.

Show Notes

Listen Now!

Tea. Earl Grey. Hot. Tales from a Star Trek Speakeasy
Tea. Earl Grey. Hot. Tales from a Star Trek Speakeasy

Tea. Earl Grey. Hot. Tales from a Star Trek Speakeasy

The Feast is back! On our debut episode for Season 3, we dig deep into one of the most beloved sci fi universes of all time: Star Trek. Forget the transporters, phasers, and warp speed, on this episode, we look at the food and drink that kept the Enterprise crew flying through the stars. We talk to Glenn McDorman and Valerie Hoagland, hosts of the Lower Decks podcast, about how the future of food has changed since Star Trek debuted in the 1960s.

Show Notes

Listen Now!

Of Fish & Fermentation: Maine’s Odd Alewives Farm Brewery
Of Fish & Fermentation: Maine’s Odd Alewives Farm Brewery

Of Fish & Fermentation: Maine’s Odd Alewives Farm Brewery

Join us on Maine’s craft brewery trail as we head north to Waldoboro to talk to John and Sarah McNeil, co-owners of Odd Alewives Farm Brewery. From their adorable brewery cat, Rocket, to the latest changes in the American craft beer scene, we’ll discover what makes their fantastic farm brewery tick!

Show Notes

Listen Now!

Wine, Olives, and Sheep: The Etruscan Guide to 21st Century Foodways
Wine, Olives, and Sheep: The Etruscan Guide to 21st Century Foodways

Wine, Olives, and Sheep: The Etruscan Guide to 21st Century Foodways

Join The Feast under the Tuscan sun as we chat with award-winning winemaker Charlotte Horton about the enduring culinary traditions of one of Italy’s oldest communities: the Etruscans. From millennia-old grape presses to enduring wine-soaked folk songs, learn how traditional Tuscan cuisine and culture can trace its lineage back 3000 years.

Show Notes

Listen Now on Apple Podcasts

Changing Tides in Maine's Craft Beer: A Conversation with Heather Sanborn
Changing Tides in Maine's Craft Beer: A Conversation with Heather Sanborn

Changing Tides in Maine's Craft Beer: A Conversation with Heather Sanborn

The Feast's summer road trip continues as we head to a state once known as the birthplace of Prohibition: Maine! Join us in conversation with state politician and owner of Portland's Rising Tide Brewery, Heather Sanborn, as we chat about the past and present of Maine's beer scene.

Listen Now On Apple Podcasts

Show Notes

Jell-O Girls: A Conversation with Allie Rowbottom
Jell-O Girls: A Conversation with Allie Rowbottom

Jell-O Girls: A Conversation with Allie Rowbottom

Join us for an exclusive chat with author, Allie Rowbottom, as she talks about the food and feminist themes that infuse her new book, Jell-O Girls: A Family History, available on July 24th, 2018.

Listen Now

Show Notes

Summer Special: Joshua James & Arizona’s First Cocktail
Summer Special: Joshua James & Arizona’s First Cocktail

Summer Special: Joshua James & Arizona’s First Cocktail

On this special summer episode, we talk to award-winning bartender Joshua James of the Clever Koi restaurant in Phoenix, Arizona about the long-lost original Arizona state cocktail, aptly named the Statehood...

Listen Now!

Show Notes

Cod Sounds, Goose Tongue, and Lion’s Teeth: A Culinary Journey Through Newfoundland with Lori McCarthy
Cod Sounds, Goose Tongue, and Lion’s Teeth: A Culinary Journey Through Newfoundland with Lori McCarthy

Cod Sounds, Goose Tongue, and Lion’s Teeth: A Culinary Journey Through Newfoundland with Lori McCarthy

Join us in the season finale of the Feast for a discussion with Lori McCarthy of Cod Sounds in Newfoundland. From salt cod to goose tongue, she takes us through a culinary cornucopia of the island's history and culture.

Listen Now on Apple Podcasts

Show Notes

Exhibition Sneak Peak! Mixed Messages: Making and Shaping Culinary Culture in Canada
Exhibition Sneak Peak! Mixed Messages: Making and Shaping Culinary Culture in Canada

Exhibition Sneak Peak! Mixed Messages: Making and Shaping Culinary Culture in Canada

The Feast is headed to the library this week with a special sneak peek of the Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library's upcoming exhibition, Mixed Messages: Making and Shaping Culinary Culture in Canada. We'll speak with one of the co-curators of the exhibit, Liz Ridolfo, as she takes us through a chronological culinary tour of Canada.

Listen Now!

Show Notes

Saffron Rice and Shiraz Wine: The Past & Present of Persian New Year
Saffron Rice and Shiraz Wine: The Past & Present of Persian New Year

Saffron Rice and Shiraz Wine: The Past & Present of Persian New Year

Listen Now! 

From fire jumping to colored eggs, Persian New Year (Nowruz) is an epic annual tradition for millions of people worldwide. A celebration of the return of spring, Nowruz is a food-laden affair, where thousand-year-old dishes are served each year on Persian tables. Join us as we chat with Iranian-born Merhnoosh Zamani and Kimia Ziafat as they prepare to ring in the new year of 1397 in Vancouver, British Columbia. 

Cantonese Canada: Supermarkets, Street Food, & Special Ingredients
Cantonese Canada: Supermarkets, Street Food, & Special Ingredients

Cantonese Canada: Supermarkets, Street Food, & Special Ingredients

As the Year of the Dog approaches, join us for noodle rolls and year cake in the city of Markham, Ontario- home to some of the best Cantonese restaurants and Asian supermarkets outside China!

Listen Now

Show Notes

The Gods Must Be Hungry: Divine Food Stories from Eaten Magazine
The Gods Must Be Hungry: Divine Food Stories from Eaten Magazine

The Gods Must Be Hungry: Divine Food Stories from Eaten Magazine

Listen Here

From medieval butter towers to prehistoric bee-keepers, this week we're examining the divine associations with global foods with Emelyn Rude, editor of the new food history magazine Eaten.

Dining in Toronto: Café de l'Auberge
Dinner in Camelot
Brewing with Fire
Serving Up Wisconsin's State Secret: The Supper Club
The Lost Women of America's Hop Industry: A Conversation with Dr. Jennifer Jordan
Beer is Culture: A Conversation with the Brewseum's Liz Garibay
Feast & Fast: How Clean Eating Came to Early Modern Europe
"Feast of the Seven Fishes": Italian-American Christmas Cuisine with Director Robert Tinnell
The Hardworking History of the Hardy Orange
The Waldorf’s First Final Feast
Georgia O’Keeffe’s Art of Eating
Ernest Shackleton’s Pantry
Travels with Steinbeck: Dogs and Drive Ins on the Open Road
Call Us Julius Childus: A Roman Culinary Experiment
Titanic Redux: The Final Feast of the Unsinkable Ship
Nailed It: Ancient Roman Edition with Farrell Monaco
Historical Meals on Wheels: The Manitoba Food History Project
Tea. Earl Grey. Hot. Tales from a Star Trek Speakeasy
Of Fish & Fermentation: Maine’s Odd Alewives Farm Brewery
Wine, Olives, and Sheep: The Etruscan Guide to 21st Century Foodways
Changing Tides in Maine's Craft Beer: A Conversation with Heather Sanborn
Jell-O Girls: A Conversation with Allie Rowbottom
Summer Special: Joshua James & Arizona’s First Cocktail
Cod Sounds, Goose Tongue, and Lion’s Teeth: A Culinary Journey Through Newfoundland with Lori McCarthy
Exhibition Sneak Peak! Mixed Messages: Making and Shaping Culinary Culture in Canada
Riding the Rails with the Harvey Girls
Titanic's Final Feast: Edwardian Eating on the Unsinkable Ship
Saffron Rice and Shiraz Wine: The Past & Present of Persian New Year
King Arthur's Cookbook: A Handy Guide to Medieval Feasting
The Feast Live! The New Woman's Guide to Cocktails: Punch & Prohibition in Progressive America
Cantonese Canada: Supermarkets, Street Food, & Special Ingredients
Musketeers & Mousselines: Alexander Dumas' Massive Dictionary of Food
A Case for Kale: Vegetarianism in Victorian England
Hard Nog & Hardy Oranges: A History of Virginian Cocktails with Micah LeMon
The Gods Must Be Hungry: Divine Food Stories from Eaten Magazine
Unsimply Soba: Comics & Competition in Japanese History
Passionate Pavlovas: National Desserts from A to Z
Supernatural Suppers: An Icelandic Ghost Story
Complicating Kosher:How the Trefa Banquet Changed American Judaism
From Washington Street to Atlantic Avenue: Food Stories from New York's Little Syria
Fuelling the Presidency: African American Cooks in the White House
A Thousand & One Recipes: Caliphate Cooking in 10th Century Baghdad
Cooking with Lightning: Helen Louise Johnson's Electric Oven Revolution
A Brief History of Space Gastronomy
Season Two Debuts August 4th, 2017
A Mythic Meal: A Very Special Season Finale with The Curated Feast
The Scandalous, Dangerous, Unbelievably True History of the Cocktail Party
Behind the Deep Fat Fryer: America's Original Fair Food
Edible Monuments: Naples' Salami Castle of 1768
Excuse me, Sir, but are you going to eat that woolly mammoth? 
A Man Named Peppercorn: Saving & Savoring the Foodways of the Sonoran Desert
The Battle for Chicken Pot Pies: A History of Department Store Dining
Maple Roosters & Tofu Tumults: A Han Dynasty Banquet
A Punchy Inauguration Special: Andrew Jackson & the Mob of 1829
Boars & Butchers: A Porky History of Winter Festivals
Bulldozer Butter & C-Rations: The Food that Built the Alaskan Highway
Subterranean Snacks: Cornish Pasties in 19th Century Mexico
Thomas Jefferson & the Mammoth Cheese of Cheshire
Dining with the Dead in Imperial Rome
 How King Midas Lost His Dinner
War Cake & Emergency Steak
The Thousand Dollar Dinner
A Sour & Salty Trip to Byzantium
Down with Pasta! Italian Futurist Cuisine in the 1930s
A Victorian Dinosaur Dinner
How Do You Solve a Problem like Christina? Papal Banquets in 1655
The Medieval Michelin Guide: Finding Food on the Camino de Santiago, 1490
The St. Charles Hotel, 1846 New Orleans
Oktoberfest, 1896
Dinner in Camelot

Almost sixty years ago to the day, President John F Kennedy and his wife Jacqueline hosted the largest state dinner of the Kennedy Administration. Invited to the White House for a special "brains dinner" in April 1962 were 49 Nobel laureates, along with Pulitzer Prize winners, noted actors, and Poet Laureates.

Listen Now

Show Notes

Brewing with Fire

This week, the Feast is heading to Ohio to visit a brewery entirely dedicated to making beer like they did in the mid-19th century. Located in Dayton, Carillon Brewing Company is not your average craft brewery. Instead of wrestling with stainless steel tanks, you’re more likely to find these brewers chopping wood and discussing 19th century recipe books.

Listen Now

Show Notes

Serving Up Wisconsin's State Secret: The Supper Club

In an era of celebrity chefs, fast casual chains, and meal delivery services available at the touch of a button, it may be hard to imagine a state where people drive out of town to go to a pyramid-shaped restaurant to enjoy a nice brandy-based cocktail, a relish tray, fried fish, and prime rib. Where the host lets you linger at a bar for hours before even thinking of being seated for dinner. Where you might know everyone in the restaurant, including the owners. And you may be back in a few days to dine at the same place all over again.

But this magical state does exist, my friends. It exists at the Wisconsin supper club.

Listen Now

Show Notes

The Lost Women of America's Hop Industry: A Conversation with Dr. Jennifer Jordan

This week, we’re learning about the forgotten women that helped shape America’s beer industry in the 19th century. Dr. Jennifer Jordan, a professor at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee, has spent the last few years researching and writing about the forgotten hop industry and specifically the women who were often at the forefront of hop harvesting in states like Wisconsin and California.

Listen Now

Show Notes

Beer is Culture: A Conversation with the Brewseum's Liz Garibay

This week, we're taking you to the heart of the Windy City itself, Chicago, to chat with the founder and executive director of the one of the only museum's dedicated entirely to the history and culture of beer: the Chicago Brewseum. At its helm is Liz Garibay, who has spearheaded the organization's programming and events for the last several years.

Listen Now

Show Notes

Feast & Fast: How Clean Eating Came to Early Modern Europe

The Feast is back! Our season premiere features a rich discussion on the history of feasting and fasting in Europe. We talk to Dr. Victoria Avery and Dr. Melissa Calaresu, co-curators of the exhibition “Feast & Fast: The Art of Food in Europe 1500–1800” at the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge, England, to learn some of the questions early modern Europeans were asking about what to eat and where their food came from.

Listen Now

Show Notes

"Feast of the Seven Fishes": Italian-American Christmas Cuisine with Director Robert Tinnell

"Feast of the Seven Fishes": Italian-American Christmas Cuisine with Director Robert Tinnell

On a special holiday bonus episode of the Feast, we talk to Robert Tinnell, the writer and director of the new film, “Feast of the Seven Fishes”, out now. Centered on the Italian-American culinary tradition of seven seafood dishes eaten on Christmas Eve, the romantic-comedy is based loosely on Robert’s childhood growing up in West Virginia.

Show Notes

Listen Now

The Hardworking History of the Hardy Orange

The Hardworking History of the Hardy Orange

Professor Ian Glomski of Vitae Spirits in Charlottesville, Virginia has discovered what may be the perfect solution for the South’s citrus pest, the hardy orange. Sourcing hardy oranges throughout Virginia, including even a few fruit from Thomas Jefferson’s grave, Glomski has produced a unique hardy orange liqueur, used in bars and restaurants throughout the upper South.

Show Notes
Listen Now

The Waldorf’s First Final Feast

The Waldorf’s First Final Feast

On the Feast’s season finale, we revisit a meal that ended a chapter in one of the most famous hotel’s in history: the Waldorf Astoria. Famous for its invention of the Waldorf Salad and (arguably) Eggs Benedict, the legacy of this world-renown hotel has always been associated with food.

Show Notes

Listen Now

Georgia O’Keeffe’s Art of Eating

Georgia O’Keeffe’s Art of Eating

Join us on an artistic feast like no other with American artist, Georgia O’Keeffe. A prolific painter, O’Keeffe was also a devoted foodie, with an enviable cookbook collection and gigantic kitchen at her home in New Mexico.

Show Notes

Listen Now

Ernest Shackleton’s Pantry

Ernest Shackleton’s Pantry

This week we look at Antarctic expedition rations in the early 20th century and what explorers ate before the advent of energy bars and protein powder. We’ll also dig up Shackleton’s secret storage of whiskey, buried for a hundred years under the snow. Just don’t ask us if we want our Scotch served over ice.

Show Notes

Listen Now!

Travels with Steinbeck: Dogs and Drive Ins on the Open Road

Travels with Steinbeck: Dogs and Drive Ins on the Open Road

We’re exploring the great American road trip this week on The Feast. Learn how the call of the open road has inspired millions over the last century to see the country. We follow in the footsteps and exhaust fumes of American writer, John Steinbeck, along the road.

Show Notes

Listen Now

Call Us Julius Childus: A Roman Culinary Experiment

Call Us Julius Childus: A Roman Culinary Experiment

We’re rolling up our sleeves to make a first century dessert recipe courtesy of one of the most famous Roman cookbook writers of all time, Apicius. Although this sweet cheese and biscuit recipe, known as hypotrimma with spelt biscuits, may look like your standard cheese dip, this concoction has a few fishy” ingredients hidden up its sleeve.

Show Notes

Listen Now

Titanic Redux: The Final Feast of the Unsinkable Ship

Titanic Redux: The Final Feast of the Unsinkable Ship

This week, we're revisiting one of our favorite episodes in honor of the 107th anniversary of the sinking of the RMS Titanic.  We explore the culinary life onboard the unsinkable ship, looking at everything from those who worked in Titanic’s state of the art kitchens to the epic meals served only a few hours before the ship sank.

Show Notes

Listen Now on Apple Podcasts

Nailed It: Ancient Roman Edition with Farrell Monaco

Nailed It: Ancient Roman Edition with Farrell Monaco

The Feast is headed to ancient Rome this week with experimental archaeologist, Farrell Monaco. Join us as we discover the bakeries and fast food joints of Pompeii, make an ancient Roman cheese ball with an early-rising farmer, and learn the joys of fish sauce with Apicius.

Show Notes

Listen Now!

Historical Meals on Wheels: The Manitoba Food History Project

Historical Meals on Wheels: The Manitoba Food History Project

Join us as The Feast hits the road with the Manitoba Food History Project Food Truck. We speak to Dr. Janis Thiessen and Kent Davies (University of Winnipeg), two leaders on this research project to discover meaningful dishes and historical recipes in Manitoba, Canada.

Show Notes

Listen Now!

Tea. Earl Grey. Hot. Tales from a Star Trek Speakeasy

Tea. Earl Grey. Hot. Tales from a Star Trek Speakeasy

The Feast is back! On our debut episode for Season 3, we dig deep into one of the most beloved sci fi universes of all time: Star Trek. Forget the transporters, phasers, and warp speed, on this episode, we look at the food and drink that kept the Enterprise crew flying through the stars. We talk to Glenn McDorman and Valerie Hoagland, hosts of the Lower Decks podcast, about how the future of food has changed since Star Trek debuted in the 1960s.

Show Notes

Listen Now!

Of Fish & Fermentation: Maine’s Odd Alewives Farm Brewery

Of Fish & Fermentation: Maine’s Odd Alewives Farm Brewery

Join us on Maine’s craft brewery trail as we head north to Waldoboro to talk to John and Sarah McNeil, co-owners of Odd Alewives Farm Brewery. From their adorable brewery cat, Rocket, to the latest changes in the American craft beer scene, we’ll discover what makes their fantastic farm brewery tick!

Show Notes

Listen Now!

Wine, Olives, and Sheep: The Etruscan Guide to 21st Century Foodways

Wine, Olives, and Sheep: The Etruscan Guide to 21st Century Foodways

Join The Feast under the Tuscan sun as we chat with award-winning winemaker Charlotte Horton about the enduring culinary traditions of one of Italy’s oldest communities: the Etruscans. From millennia-old grape presses to enduring wine-soaked folk songs, learn how traditional Tuscan cuisine and culture can trace its lineage back 3000 years.

Show Notes

Listen Now on Apple Podcasts

Changing Tides in Maine's Craft Beer: A Conversation with Heather Sanborn

Changing Tides in Maine's Craft Beer: A Conversation with Heather Sanborn

The Feast's summer road trip continues as we head to a state once known as the birthplace of Prohibition: Maine! Join us in conversation with state politician and owner of Portland's Rising Tide Brewery, Heather Sanborn, as we chat about the past and present of Maine's beer scene.

Listen Now On Apple Podcasts

Show Notes

Jell-O Girls: A Conversation with Allie Rowbottom

Jell-O Girls: A Conversation with Allie Rowbottom

Join us for an exclusive chat with author, Allie Rowbottom, as she talks about the food and feminist themes that infuse her new book, Jell-O Girls: A Family History, available on July 24th, 2018.

Listen Now

Show Notes

Summer Special: Joshua James & Arizona’s First Cocktail

Summer Special: Joshua James & Arizona’s First Cocktail

On this special summer episode, we talk to award-winning bartender Joshua James of the Clever Koi restaurant in Phoenix, Arizona about the long-lost original Arizona state cocktail, aptly named the Statehood...

Listen Now!

Show Notes

Cod Sounds, Goose Tongue, and Lion’s Teeth: A Culinary Journey Through Newfoundland with Lori McCarthy

Cod Sounds, Goose Tongue, and Lion’s Teeth: A Culinary Journey Through Newfoundland with Lori McCarthy

Join us in the season finale of the Feast for a discussion with Lori McCarthy of Cod Sounds in Newfoundland. From salt cod to goose tongue, she takes us through a culinary cornucopia of the island's history and culture.

Listen Now on Apple Podcasts

Show Notes

Exhibition Sneak Peak! Mixed Messages: Making and Shaping Culinary Culture in Canada

Exhibition Sneak Peak! Mixed Messages: Making and Shaping Culinary Culture in Canada

The Feast is headed to the library this week with a special sneak peek of the Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library's upcoming exhibition, Mixed Messages: Making and Shaping Culinary Culture in Canada. We'll speak with one of the co-curators of the exhibit, Liz Ridolfo, as she takes us through a chronological culinary tour of Canada.

Listen Now!

Show Notes

Saffron Rice and Shiraz Wine: The Past & Present of Persian New Year

Saffron Rice and Shiraz Wine: The Past & Present of Persian New Year

Listen Now! 

From fire jumping to colored eggs, Persian New Year (Nowruz) is an epic annual tradition for millions of people worldwide. A celebration of the return of spring, Nowruz is a food-laden affair, where thousand-year-old dishes are served each year on Persian tables. Join us as we chat with Iranian-born Merhnoosh Zamani and Kimia Ziafat as they prepare to ring in the new year of 1397 in Vancouver, British Columbia. 

Cantonese Canada: Supermarkets, Street Food, & Special Ingredients

Cantonese Canada: Supermarkets, Street Food, & Special Ingredients

As the Year of the Dog approaches, join us for noodle rolls and year cake in the city of Markham, Ontario- home to some of the best Cantonese restaurants and Asian supermarkets outside China!

Listen Now

Show Notes

The Gods Must Be Hungry: Divine Food Stories from Eaten Magazine

The Gods Must Be Hungry: Divine Food Stories from Eaten Magazine

Listen Here

From medieval butter towers to prehistoric bee-keepers, this week we're examining the divine associations with global foods with Emelyn Rude, editor of the new food history magazine Eaten.

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