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

129: Third Culture Cooking, TikTok Foods, and Kung Food Cookbook with Jon Kung 28.05.2024

For our last episode this season, we're exploring what it means to cook from a third culture kitchen. There's been growing discussions online of what it means to be a third culture kid or a third culture individual. My guest today, Jon Kung , is one of the best people to speak to how third culture experiences can play out through food, cooking, and kitchen spaces. Jon is a popular Chinese American...

128: Heydays at the June Motel - Translating a Lakeside Summer Cuisine into a Cookbook with Katie Laliberté 14.05.2024

Here in Ontario, we're just hitting the warmer spring weather after a grey and cloudy winter, and anyone living up north can attest to the amount of daydreaming we do about our future and past summer plans. During that daydreaming, memory and nostalgia can play a significant role in establishing an ideal summer, with tastes, scents and flavour playing powerful roles in thinking about what foods we...

127: How Local Journalism Explores the Foods of the American South with Hanna Raskin of The Food Section 09.04.2024

News media at large is in a challenging position this year: we've seen mass layoffs across digital media, local news, TV, print, even podcasts and documentaries. There's shifts in audiences, loss of journalist jobs, and shaky foundations of social media platforms like Twitter and Substack that make even the strongest bylines at risk of being swallowed up. As a public, that means how we consume and...

126: The Ikaria Way: How Mostly Plant-Based Foods Maintain a Greek Island's Longevity with Diane Kochilas 03.04.2024

You may be familiar with the Greek island of Ikaria through the popularity of "Blue Zones" and the idea that these regions of the world can provide insights into living longer, healthier lives. Yet as with most trends around diet and health, there is so much unspoken about the nuances of what an Ikarian lifestyle and diet entails, and the cultural relationships that Ikarians have with their food a...

125: Sesame, Soy, Spice: Using Plant-Based Recipes to Honour Heritage and Healing with Remy Morimoto Park 26.03.2024

Thinking about "typical" types of veganism can reveal a lot of fascinating Western stereotypes or biases around what it does and doesn't entail. And yet so many cultural cuisines from around the world are rooted in plant-based meals that have been passed down through generations to shape contemporary ethnic cuisines. So what happens when someone adopts a vegan diet and lifestyle, in terms of navig...

124: How Microgreens Weave Indigenous Knowledge and Western Science for Food Futures with Natalie Paterson 19.03.2024

One of the pitfalls in sustainability movements is this assumption that we're all working from an equal playing field, when the reality is that oftentimes we don't have the home space or the time to grow our own food. What we don't always ask is whether we can make the comproimses that allow us to meet those desires to grow our own food without the high demands often required of it conventionally....

123: The Power of Showcasing Immigrant Restaurant Stories with Maggie Leandre of CharisMaggieTV 12.03.2024

If you've been a regular listener to this podcast, you know that food is central to all of our discussions around identity, culture, belonging, and sense of place. My guest today is someone who excels at bringing these relationships to life through her YouTube channel, and speaks to the layers of personal experience she has had growing up and living across multiple countries and cultures. Maggie L...

122: Celebrating the Diversity of Torontonian Food through The Depanneur Cookbook with Len Senater 05.03.2024

When I think of a quintessentially Torontonian food experience, I tend to think of The Depanneur. Founded in 2011, The Depanneur was a tiny old corner store that transformed into a place where interesting food things happen, featuring hundreds of talented cooks and home chefs serving thousands of eclectic meals through unique Drop-In Dinners, cooking classes, table talks, and supper clubs. It was...

121: Exploring the Relationship between Fish Hacks, Porgy, and Black Maritime Culture with Dr. Jayson M. Porter 27.02.2024

Anytime I get to talk about water and seafood on this show feels like a really special week for me, as I have spent most of my life thinking about how we connect with or form relationships around water. My guest, Dr. Jayson M. Porter , this week takes a really nuanced approach to this through a recent article he wrote called Fish Hacks for Distillations , which is a magazine and podcast that cover...

120: Making Sense of Misunderstood Vegetables through Humour and Celebration with Becky Selengut 20.02.2024

Often when we make our grocery runs, time and money are on our mind – which can quickly lead to following a stringent list of household classics and crowd pleasers. But sometimes, in the corner of your eye, you might catch a new to you vegetable and wonder what the heck it is, or how it works. My guest today, Becky Selengut , is here to provide knowledge and humour in getting to know these misunde...

119: Destigmatizing Harm Reduction, Mental Health, and Drug Use in Alberta with Danielle English 13.02.2024

We've spoken a bit this season about the drug poisoning crisis and how breweries can work to support their neighbours using substances, but with this affecting so many across Canada, but I wanted to come back to this topic with some more dimensions as well. My guest this week is Danielle English , who's on to share more about harm reduction strategies and unpack the misconceptions and stigma that...

118: Pink Gold - Women, Shrimp, and Work in Mexico with Dr. María L. Cruz Torres 06.02.2024

The idea of fish industry tends to feel big, vague, and hyper-masculine – it's easy to think of tales of fisherman and ideals of masculinity. But as my guest this week shares, there are so many complexities to how gender, fishing, and identities intersect.  My guest this week is Dr. María L. Cruz Torres. She is an Associate Professor in the School of Transborder Studies at Arizona State University...

117: Unpacking Anti-Fatness in Health and Nutrition for Body Liberation with Patrilie Hernandez of Embody Lib 30.01.2024

Health, nutrition, and food are spaces that can be fraught with harmful and perpetual misconceptions of the body, to the point where many people of the global majority may not always feel safe or heard. My guest this week, Patrilie Hernandez , is someone who works to create more weight-inclusive and nutritionally holistic practices at the forefront of these spaces. Patrilie (they/she) has over 14...

116: How Ozempic and Stomach Paralysis Impact Relationships with Food with Emily Wright 23.01.2024

Across social media and TV advertisements, drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy have risen in recent years and are quickly associated with weight loss and celebrity lifestyles. Yet semaglutide drugs (which includes Ozempic and Wegovy) are intended originally as a drug for use by adults with type 2 diabetes, to manage blood sugar levels along with diet and exercise. With the shifts towards weight loss, Oz...

115: Unboxing the History of TV Dinners with Jeff Swystun 16.01.2024

When you think about the concept of a TV dinner, there is a wash of nostalgia that can takeover how you remember the tastes and functions of the dinner itself. But the story of how these TV dinners came to our North American freezers is a fascinating and fun exploration into a lot of the social and technological progress of the 20 th century.    My guest today is here to unbox the TV dinner, Jeff...

114: Honouring Maternal Ancestries through Cooking and Restaurant Development with Ruben Rodriguez of Nai Restaurant Groups 09.01.2024

Alright everyone, this is the first episode back after the holiday break, so I hope that this finds you rested, stuffed, and balancing all the new year expectations as well as you can be!   For today's show, I am chatting with chef Ruben Rodriguez, who is a Galcian-born chef and restauranteur of Nai Restaurant Group. Ruben immigrated to New Jersey with his family when he was 11 years old and found...

113: How UN Organizations Shape the Rules of World Trade for Food Security with Dr. Matias Margulis 05.12.2023

Before we jump into today's show, I wanted to give listeners a heads up that today is the last AnthroDish episode for 2023, but we will be returning with more episodes this season on Tuesday, January 9 th so be sure to tune back in this new year!  Today we're exploring a topic that I personally find sometimes quite challenging to access and fully understand the nuances of: international food polic...

112: Dinner on Mars - How Technologies that Could Feed the Red Planet Can Transform Agriculture on Earth 28.11.2023

What happens when two food scientists get bored in a pandemic? It turns out, they start to brainstorm how they would feed a colony of humans on Mars. What might seem like a trivial question is actually a more nuanced exploration of how we can sustain ourselves on Mars, and what we can learn from this thought experiment back on Earth, too. My guests this week are Drs. Evan Fraser and Lenore Newman,...

111: Reframing Cookbooks, and Salad as Comfort Food with Nat and Bec Davey of Reframeables 21.11.2023

When you think about comfort food, what types of meals or dishes come to mind – is it mashed potatoes and gravy, the best of your grandmother's kitchens, or a chickpea curry? Often we have this idea around "comforting" foods that is rooted so deeply in our family ties and meaty or hearty cultural dishes. Yet sometimes, comfort food can be a bit more imaginative, if you reframe it.  Today I'm talki...

110: Creating Safer Community for Breweries and Vulnerable Neighbours with Ren Navarro of B.Diversity 14.11.2023

Alcohol has been navigating a new social landscape in America and Canada since COVID hit. While there were signs that alcohol consumption was rising with lockdowns, there's also been more spaces for conversation around the use of alcohol as a drug, or trickier relationships with drinking and binge drinking, amidst a backdrop of the drug use crisis that is sweeping across families of all types with...

109: Campus Food System Alternatives as Organizing Tools with Dr. Michael Classens 07.11.2023

When we think about food security and food systems, it can easily be imagined as a large national or state or provincial level experience. Yet many young adults increasingly are experiencing the unique dynamics of food systems on campus landscapes, which offers a concentrated and specific food environment that can feel limited as food prices increase and food vendors on campus continue to produce...

108: Understanding Community through Fermentation with Dr. Julia Skinner 31.10.2023

In 2023, we're facing increased food prices, tech-heavy innovations around lab grown foods for climate change, and heavily industrialized and packaged foods. Amidst that, though, there's still interest in the world of fermented foods and returning to working with microbes to create a multitude of communities. My guest today is Dr. Julia Skinner, who shares her work and research on fermentation. Ju...

107: Unpacking Wellness through Personalized Nutrition & Genetic Diets with Dr. Tina Sikka 24.10.2023

With increasingly wearable and seamless tech experiences, there is a growing ability for us to monitor almost every phase of our day: what we eat, how much we eat, how we exercise, and how it all aligns with our bodies in a personalized level. These all can come together to create a perspective of what health "should" be, rather than what it could be or what it is for a lot of people with diverse...

106: Rethinking Cowboy Food through the Unofficial Yellowstone Cookbook with Jackie Alpers 17.10.2023

Food on popular television shows can be a storytelling mechanism, particularly in terms of building a sense of place and history. While the television show can tell a specific story, there can be a whole world to explore extending beyond this, which is rife for creative exploration for cookbook writers and recipe developers.  My guest this week, Jackie Alpers, is here to share her own experiences...

105: Weaving Ancient Korean Cookbooks with Seasonal Local Food with Ji Hye Kim 10.10.2023

When we think about "authentic" food experiences – what are we really explicitly looking for? Oftentimes the idea of authenticity can be exoticized to represent a particular type of ethnic cuisine at a specific time – or someone's version of it. But in a diasporic world, there are ways to create a menu and recipes that reflect both local and seasonal food availability in a way that continues to we...

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