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Food with Mark Bittman

Carla Hall Takes a Culinary Tour of the South

Food with Mark Bittman

Sweetness and Light

Nutrition, Arts, Society & Culture, Health & Fitness, Food, Culture, Cooking

4.8981 Ratings

🗓️ 7 June 2021

⏱️ 45 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Mark talks to Chef Carla Hall about how she found her way back to her roots, the difference between soul food and Southern food, and why dairy does not belong in shrimp and grits. Mark shares Carla's recipes for smashed carrots with curry oil, pickled cucumber calad, watermellon with mint and lime, and Team Bittman answers listener questions.

Order Carla's book Carla Hall's Soul Food: Everyday and Celebration wherever books are sold and follow her on Instagram @carlahall, on Twitter @carlahall, and on Facebook at @ChefCarlaHall. Find the recipes from today's episode at at www.bittmanproject.com. Subscribe to Food with Mark Bittman on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you like to listen, and please leave us a 5 star review on Apple Podcasts. Follow Mark on Twitter at @bittman, and on Facebook and Instagram at @markbittman, and subscribe to Mark's newsletter The Bittman Project at www.bittmanproject.com.


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Transcript

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0:00.0

We'll get back to that conversation in a minute, but first I want to talk about

0:03.9

something that lots of people ask me about when it comes to global cuisines.

0:07.7

There is something magical about eating a cuisine in the place where it

0:11.6

originated. One of the reasons for that is that the

0:14.3

dishes that define a cuisine are built around the produce that's native to a place.

0:18.7

It's why the feta and tomato and a Greek salad tastes so perfect in Athens, where the artichokes and olive oil in Rome are to die for.

0:27.0

They have a certain sweetness and tang that you can get close to, but not easily replicate.

0:32.0

And, not surprisingly, one of the best ways to get a sense for how something

0:36.9

should taste is to visit a region of the world and sample a dish in several

0:41.9

forms from lots of different neighboring areas.

0:45.0

Then you can appreciate the local variations as well.

0:48.0

And the most efficient way to do that, for me at least, is the first-class experience of a regent cruise.

0:54.1

I was able to do that on our recent all-inclusive tour of Asia.

0:58.0

I had a hankering for seafood.

0:59.8

Well, I always do.

1:01.1

Seafood that you don't get easily in the U.S. and I had just an incredible experience

1:06.2

in the fish markets of Busan, just overwhelming varieties of fresh seafood.

1:11.3

With more than 500 destinations worldwide, Regents options are endless.

1:16.0

Lisbon to Cape Town, Dubai to Athens, Vancouver to Tokyo, Bali to Sydney, just about any regional cuisine you could want is within your grasp.

1:26.0

You really can't go wrong.

1:28.0

Sounds pretty great, right?

1:29.6

Even better.

...

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