Food on the Edge (A Food Story Mix-Tape)
The Food Programme
BBC
4.4 • 977 Ratings
🗓️ 27 November 2017
⏱️ 29 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Dan Saladino is at Food On The Edge, a gathering of people with food stories to tell; from a Black Panther breakfast to a chef convinced her emotions could be detected in her food.
Held in Galway, the west of Ireland each year chef JP McMahon invites fellow cooks, chefs and restaurateurs to take to a stage and for 15 minutes share a food story of experience. Over two days more than 40 different stories from countries as diverse as Japan, Italy, Bolivia and Australia are told.
Dan selects a handful of the stories that made an impact on him during his time at Food On The Edge.
The first story is of how a Syrian kitchen came to be set up in Amsterdam. Tens of thousand of Syrians arrived in the city during the peak of the recent refugee crisis. Among them was a photographer, fashion designer, fitness machine repair man and a lawyer. Together they ran a kitchen in the Salvation Army centre where they were being housed, aiming to feed their fellow refugees with food from home. After spotting an appeal for help on Facebook, Dutch chef Jurriaan Momberg visited the kitchen to see if he could help teach them to cook. What he discovered were some of the greatest culinary talents he'd encountered in his career. It led to the creation of a pop-up restaurant which caused a sensation in Amsterdam. But all good things comes to an end and in the programme Jurriaan explains why one day he walked into an empty kitchen.
Another story comes from Oakland California. It was there in 1966 that the radical political movement The Black Panthers were created in response to police violence against black communities. By 1969 what had first looked like a militia, promoting armed resistance, the organisation had also created a series of social programmes. The most successful of which was a breakfast programme set up to feed black children who were often going to school undernourished and hungry. Chef Saqib Keval of the People's Kitchen Collective, a group of cooks, historians and researchers who tell stories through food, explains why he's brought the free breakfasts back to California.
Meanwhile Chef Matt Orlando of the Copenhagen restaurant Amass reveals some of the kitchen experiments he's been undertaking to convert so called "waste food" and by-products into delicious meals. He explains the ingenious way flavours and nutrients inside used coffee grounds can be released to make a meal.
Irish chef Domini Kemp took to the stage to express her frustration of how, based on her own experience of cancer treatment, the medical profession neglect the power of food in conversations about prevention, recovery and long term health.
Finally, New York chef Elise Kornack tells the story of how a mental breakdown led her to become convinced that her own powerful emotions were being transferred through her cooking and onto her customers. Like a scene from the book and film, Like Water For Chocolate, she believed every mouthful of food she was serving would result in diners sensing what was unfolding in her troubled mind.
Produced and presented by Dan Saladino.
Additional recording in Oakland, California by Meradith Hoddinott.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | You're about to listen to a BBC podcast and I'd like to tell you a bit about the |
| 0:03.8 | podcast I work on. I'm Dan Clark and I commissioned factual podcasts at the BBC. |
| 0:08.6 | It's a massive area but I'd sum it up as stories to help us make sense of the forces shaping the world. |
| 0:15.3 | What podcasting does is give us the space and the time to take brilliant BBC journalism |
| 0:19.8 | and tell amazing compelling stories that really get behind the headlines. |
| 0:23.7 | And what I get really excited about is when we find a way of drawing you into a subject |
| 0:28.4 | you might not even have thought you were interested in. |
| 0:30.2 | Whether it's investigations, science, tech, politics, culture, true crime, the environment, |
| 0:36.1 | you can always discover more with a podcast on BBC Sounds. |
| 0:40.0 | Hello, you've downloaded a podcast of BBC Radio Falls The Food Programme. |
| 0:44.6 | I'm Dan Saladino. Welcome to our world. |
| 0:48.0 | From cooking to culture, politics to pleasure. |
| 0:51.2 | We hope you enjoy this edition. |
| 0:57.0 | Oh good you made it. I hope you've brought some snacks and would you mind switching off your phone? |
| 1:07.0 | Yeah now just sit back and relax. |
| 1:10.0 | Welcome to the Black Box Theater. We ask that you do not smoke in the building and |
| 1:15.3 | please note that standing in the aisles is not permitted. Thank you and enjoyed the |
| 1:20.9 | show. The show, and this edition, is coming from the west of Ireland, Galway, where on the stage of the Black Box Theatre, |
| 1:29.7 | a collection of unusual food stories is about to be told. Think of it as a |
| 1:35.7 | mixtape of culinary tales and experiences from around the world or even a TED Talk for greedy people. The event is called Food on the Edge, and it's |
| 1:47.4 | put together by J.P. McMahon, the kind of chef who went out of the kitchen enjoys a good story and even a song. |
| 1:57.0 | Unraggling Rose on an autumn day I saw her first in you that her dark hair, when you're not singing or cooking in your restaurant in Galway, you organize |
... |
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