Sarah Duignan

AnthroDish

Arts EN ↓ 186 episodes

AnthroDish is a podcast that explores the powerful relationships between between food, culture, and identity through the lens of anthropology. Hosted by anthropologist Dr. Sarah Duignan, each episode explores the stories behind what we eat and drink, reflecting larger social, political, and historical systems. Featuring conversations with chefs, scholars, writers, and food experts, each episode blends current issues with anthropological ideas to highlight how food shapes (and is shaped by) the world around us. AnthroDish invites you to look at food not only as nourishment, but as a window into...

Author

Sarah Duignan

Category

Arts

Podcast website

anthrodish.com

Latest episode

Apr 28, 2026

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Episodes

154: Episode 10 Launch! [SOLO Episode] 07.10.2025

A solo episode to kickstart season 10 of AnthroDish - exploring diverse themes of community this year relating to food, culture, and identity.  Website: https://www.anthrodish.com Newsletter: https://sarahduignan.substack.com/   Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/anthrodishpodcast/   YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@anthrodishpodcast  

153: Setting a Place for Recipes of Displacement & Community with Hawa Hassan 20.05.2025

As season 9 of the podcast draws to a close, it's feeling like a full circle moment thematically. The conversations began this season around what it means to value labour, specifically whose labour is and isn't valued to power a global food supply, and an exposé of the cruel treatment of migrant workers coming to the U.S. But the process of migrating, and the experiences that come with it, are inc...

152: Documenting the Undocumented through Food with Jill Damatac 06.05.2025

The idea of a pristine kitchen with clean countertops feels distinctively American, or an all-American idealist. However, the concept of the American ideal, or the American dream, desperately needs to be challenged. How better to do that than through food? My guest this week, author and filmmaker Jill Damatac, does just that in her new memoir, Dirty Kitchen: A Memoir of Food and Family.  Jill was...

151: What Can Local and Seasonal Food Networks Look Like? with Colin Fontaine 29.04.2025

Perhaps now more than ever, there's renewed appreciation for the intricacies of our food systems' deep dependence on a global supply chain. However, that also raises challenges around our relationships with producers and understanding of food value. My guest today, Colin Fontaine, is here to discuss how to reorient American concepts of food and culture to be grounded in seasonal and local approach...

150: Italian Pasta Nights with an American Accent with Renato Poliafito 22.04.2025

Throughout this season, we've been exploring immigrant narratives around food: roles in food systems, labour, and diasporic food stories. Part of this is making sense of the "ish" elements to identities through food, which my guest this week, Renato Poliafito, does beautifully.  Renato is a James Beard-nominated restaurateur, pastry chef, cookbook author, designer, and entrepreneur based in Brookl...

149: Unbottling the Problems of Bottled Water with Daniel Jaffee 15.04.2025

A plastic bottle of water powerfully represents the state of our current environmental and health priorities. That water can become commodified while being an essential public service means that who gets access to water can be deeply challenged. How is water justice reached when plastic water privatization has become so embedded in our systems? My guest today, Dr. Daniel Jaffee, is here to explore...

148: Masala, Maíz, and Movement - Ingredients for Decolonizing Plates with Norma Listman and Saqib Keval 01.04.2025

On the show today are Norma Listman and Saqib Keval, looking at the solutions and communities that can be built when activism and ethical values are at the forefront of food creation. Norma and Saqib are the chefs and restauranteurs behind Masala y Maíz, which TIME Magazine named as one of the top destinations to visit worldwide, and its slightly more casual Indian-Mexican sister restaurant, Mari...

147: What Canada Ate - The Role of Cookbooks in Culinary History with Dr. Rebecca Beausaert 18.03.2025

As most historians will tell you, the past can help make sense of a lot of the present, but maybe in unexpected or novel ways—like through cookbooks! We're living in an intense period (I probably always say this, but it feels particularly challenging right now). With the new Trump presidency, shifts to Canada's economic stability and food security are top of mind for many—how are we going to affor...

146: Flavour's Role in Food System Fixes with Franco Fubini 12.03.2025

The idea of industrial food systems is flat, heavy, and feels complex to access. It brings up connotations of very bland, hyper-processed foods made to reach a large number of people at a low cost. There are important consequences to these food systems choices, though some are louder ones than others. My guest today, Franco Fubini, tackles an often under-appreciated one: flavours of ingredients. ...

145: Exploring the Biodiversity of Climate-Smart Crops with Shreema Mehta 04.03.2025

Industrial food systems tend to use mono-crop and unilinear approaches to supplying the Global North with food. But what happens when we consider more diverse crops? My guest today, Shreema Mehta, will discuss the traditional, climate-smart crops that are overlooked by the industrial food system. She started Climate Cookery selling tamarind hot sauce and has since expanded it to a newsletter that...

144: The Rich History of Georgian Wines with Sarah May Grunwald 25.02.2025

When it comes to wine, I have a tendency to retreat and panic: I don't know anything, and I certainly don't feel like I have the means to access the knowledge. I often wonder if that's a common experience for people, based on the connotations that come with its consumption. My guest this week, Sarah May Grunwald, is someone I find quite admirable for the barriers she breaks down in communication a...

143: Unpacking the Absent Food Citizen in Policy with Isabela Bonnevera 18.02.2025

This week, we're exploring the idea of the food citizen, or perhaps more accurately, the absent food citizen, with Isabela Bonnevera. Isabela is a doctoral researcher at ICTA-UAB, and engages with participatory methods to explore how immigrants are shaping sustainable food transitions in cities. She also examines how sustainable food policies impact food justice outcomes for immigrant communities....

142: What Role Does Food Play in Fiction Writing? with Margaux Vialleron 26.11.2024

One of the most frustrating parts of watching Gossip Girl growing up was witnessing the elaborate breakfast spreads that the families had each morning, only for the main characters to grab a piece of toast and run away with anguish. When we think about fiction, food isn't always central to how a story is told. But what happens when it is?  My guest this week is Margaux Vialleron , a French-born an...

141: Uncovering Medieval Pictish Foodways through Paleobotany with Dr. Shalen Prado 19.11.2024

Oftentimes, when we think about plant-human relationships, we're thinking about our contemporary lives and how plants factor into it – be it North American plant-based diets or what we're growing in our apartments. But our relationship with plants goes back for millennia, and accessing this historical and prehistoric knowledge is a glimpse into what life looked like for ancient humans. My guest th...

140: Recovering from Restrictive Online Diet Myths with Dr. Sarah Ballantyne 12.11.2024

Diet culture on the internet is excellent at sensationalizing our food to the point of panic. I'm sure many of you have seen the videos across TikTok and Instagram where someone positions themselves as an expert and demonizes strawberries, bread, or my beloved potatoes. But what happens when we take a more proactive and less restrictive approach to looking at food? My guest today is the delightful...

139: What Makes for Good Food Policy? with Chef Joshna Maharaj 05.11.2024

One downside I find when I spend too much time on the internet is that there's an overwhelming viewpoint that the system is broken and there's not much we can do to change that – or that food, in general, is disconnected from all other components of our lives. But I think these attitudes forget that a lot of empowerment comes through advocating for better policies across the board.  My guest today...

138: Fish, Wine, and Letting Go of Ego in Southern France with Steve Hoffman 29.10.2024

In the daily grind of work under capitalism, I'm sure I'm not alone for dreaming of something more to life. Usually, this takes the shape of going somewhere new in the world on vacation or picking up a new language and imagining what life would look like if you lived in that country and spoke that language with ease. For my guest today, this dream became a concrete and humbling reality. Tax prepar...

137: Transformations through Fermentation and Oracle Decks with Julia Skinner 22.10.2024

As far as public conversations around fermenting, we've come a long way as a society in our understanding of what that is in 2024. So with that, deeper explorations into the practice of fermentation and its role in building communities get a lot more interesting. Dr. Julia Skinner is returning to AnthroDish today to discuss the magic and art of fermentation, a central theme in her latest work, The...

136: Beer (and Everyone) Still Has a Diversity Problem with Ren Navarro 15.10.2024

If you've listened to AnthroDish regularly over the last few years, you'll know that Ren Navarro is a champion of diversity and inclusion within the beer industry and beyond. When I first interviewed Ren back in 2020, we looked at her Canadian consulting services through B.Diversity, and the diversity problem within craft beer in Ontario. We've lived truly a lifetime of unprecedented times since t...

135: Growing Olive Trees in Texan Heat with Dr. Vikram Baliga 08.10.2024

Climate change is a daunting reality for many of us – there's a lot of anxiety around understanding what's happening and how it affects our communities and the foods we grow. While there's no magic bullet, there is a lot of great scientific researchers working hard to share what they know about this. For example – you may not immediately think of Texas when you think of olive oil production, but t...

134: The Art of the Plant-Based Table with Chloé Crane-Leroux and Trudy Crane 01.10.2024

Eating is so central to our ways of connecting as people and communities, but how we show up and make space around food is a practice of care and art. My guests today, Trudy Crane and Chloé Crane-Leroux are a mother-daughter duo best known for their individual foods, fashion, and lifestyle content. Montreal natives, these two are bursting with creativity and a deep appreciation for romanticizing t...

133: How to Break Down Diet Culture and Live Nourished with Shana Minei Spence 24.09.2024

Spend too much time on the internet these days and you can walk away with a lingering sense of body shame, dietary uncertainty, and overall not-great-vibes. To me, this means it's all the more important to reflect on our relationships with food and re-assess how we think about them.   My guest today, Shana Spence , is one of the central people that I take a lot of inspiration from when it comes to...

132: What Makes Food Hearty? with andrea bennett 17.09.2024

Our relationship with food in North America is such a deeply fascinating, contrasting, nuanced and complicated one. There's so much to consider – both in the sheer population size and geographic scale of our food systems, but also in how we make sense of the foods we do and do not have access to. My guest this week, andrea bennett , tackles these big questions in latest new book, and is here to di...

131: Season 9 Launch [Solo Episode] 10.09.2024

As we start up season 9 of the podcast, I wanted to share some life and technological updates, as well as what you can expect of this season. Food feels very different from when I started this show in 2018, the "foodie" culture isn't proliferating, which isn't a shock given the challenges of food and living costs in North America. This season we're going in with a clear eye for analysis on some of...

130: Invisible Labour Behind Chicken Nuggets: The Immigrants Taking on America's Largest Meatpacking Industry with Alice Driver 03.09.2024

We've heard stories about how chicken nuggets are riddled with questionable ingredients, but what gets missed when looking at industrial meat production is those who process a nation's worth of meat and poultry, the immigrants working at Tyson meatpacking companies throughout Arkansas. My guest today is Alice Driver, who has written a haunting exposé on the toxic labour practices experienced at Ty...

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