4.4 • 943 Ratings
🗓️ 16 July 2023
⏱️ 29 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
The practice of smoking is one of the world’s oldest food preservation methods, but which techniques are catching fire today, while other processes risk being extinguished?
We hear from producers bringing diverse barbecue and smoking techniques to new audiences, as well as those keeping traditional processes alive.
Leyla Kazim visits Cue Point to hear from Mursal Saiq and Joshua Moroney about their unique ‘British Afghan Fusion BBQ’ that brings an inclusive style of smoking to a wider audience while drawing on diverse culinary heritages. Melissa Thompson, writer, cook and author of Motherland, discusses the central role smoke plays in Jamaican cuisine, and why food and history in the Caribbean are so intertwined.
Author of the Barbecue Bible and Project Smoke, Steven Raichlen, traces the history of smoking from its Palaeolithic origins to present day, and argues that cooking with fire was one of the greatest technological advances in the history of humankind.
Helen Graves, editor of Pit Magazine and author of Live Fire, explains why she has made it her mission to champion the broad range of diversity in open fire cooking, and the reasons she tends not to follow the trend of US-style barbecue.
Producer Robbie Armstrong heads to Fèis Ìle, Islay’s annual whisky and music festival, to hear about the renaissance of peated whiskies with Ardbeg’s visitor centre manager Jackie Thompson. He speaks to Arbroath smokie producer Iain R. Spink about reviving ancient methods on the verge of being snuffed out. Christian Stevenson, better known as DJ BBQ, tracks the popularity of US grilling and smoking in the UK.
Leyla and Robbie sit down to taste some smoky drinks, while pondering the future of traditional methods, and how to balance the world’s love for peated whiskies with peatland restoration.
Leyla discovers that while some processes born out of necessity may be less popular today, it’s clear the practice of smoking is showing no signs of dissipating.
Presented by Leyla Kazim. Produced by Robbie Armstrong.
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0:45.0 | It's a habit, a bit of salt, a bit of smoke, cooked over hardwood log fire in front of it in a barrel. |
0:53.7 | What could be more simple than that? |
0:55.7 | Smoking and cooking over fire is a way for us to connect with our ancestors. |
0:59.6 | It would be a tragedy for that to stop because it's very special. It just tastes so good. |
1:03.6 | Oh gosh, wow! |
1:07.6 | You know we have like bitter foods and mammy foods and salty and sweet and everything but I think |
1:12.4 | smoke is something that you only get when you cook outside. |
1:15.3 | It's a really nice thing really when you think about it. |
1:17.7 | Yeah there's few culinary practices that are universal and also speak to a sense of place at the same time. |
1:25.0 | Exactly. Yes. I agree. |
1:28.0 | It's one of our earliest cooking and food preservation methods. So how has smoking become such a hot and current trend? |
1:38.0 | Welcome to the food program with me, Leila Kuzim, where today I'll be looking at our growing obsession with this process and how it |
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