Gastropod

Food with a side of science and history. Every other week, co-hosts Cynthia Graber and Nicola Twilley serve up a brand new episode exploring the hidden history and surprising science behind a different food- or farming-related topic, from aquaculture to ancient feasts, from cutlery to chile peppers, and from microbes to Malbec. We interview experts, visit labs, fields, and archaeological digs, and generally have lots of fun while discovering new ways to think about and understand the world through food. Find us online at gastropod.com, follow us on Twitter @gastropodcast, and like us on Facebook at facebook.com/gastropodcast.

Arts
Food
Science
101
Reinventing the Eel
43 min
102
Monsanto or MonSatan? How—and Why—a St. Louis S...
47 min
103
The Way the Cookie Crumbles
47 min
104
Black Gold: The Future of Food...We Throw Away
46 min
105
Gum's the Word: A Sticky Story
46 min
106
Déjà-Brew: How Coffee Got Bad, Then Worse, and,...
54 min
107
Grounds for Revolution: the Stimulating Story o...
47 min
108
The Fortune Cookie Quest
36 min
109
Guest Episode: Graveyard Cookies and Dollhouse ...
30 min
110
Mango Mania: How the American Mango Lost its Fl...
35 min
111
Guest Episode: Scents and Sensibility
39 min
112
Your Mystery Date
45 min
113
The Most Interesting Oil in the World
48 min
114
Are Plant- and Fungus-Based Meats Really Better...
50 min
115
Guest Episode: The Doorbell by Nice Try!
43 min
116
Balls *and* Brains: The Science and History of ...
45 min
117
Trick or Treat: Soul Cakes, Candy Corn, and Sug...
46 min
118
Buried Treasure: Weeds, Seeds, and Zombies
44 min
119
The Barrel That Could Save A Forest
45 min
120
Tofu for You: Meet the Cult Leader, the Spy, an...
45 min
121
The Great Gastropod Pudding Off (encore)
51 min
122
It's All Going to Pot: the Science and Economic...
56 min
123
Baked: How Pot Brownies and Pate de Fruits Fuel...
51 min
124
The Bottle vs. Tap Battle Finale: Alkaline H2O,...
As promised, it's time for the final splashdown in the battle of bottled vs. tap water. When we left off last episode, bottled water had staged a miraculous comeback thanks to Nike, yuppies, and Orson Welles. Today, it's America's favorite liquid refreshment: we buy more bottled water by volume than any other packaged beverage, even though you can get its less glamorous cousin, tap, delivered directly to your home for mere pennies. So, is bottled water somehow better than tap? Is it safer, or even just nicer tasting? This episode, we dive into the science behind the taste of water (spoiler: it has to do with spit) and explore the fine art of bottled water appreciation, before sharing the secret to making your own DIY Pellegrino. Meanwhile, we've all heard the water horror story unfolding in Flint, Michigan: should we be worried about lead or other chemicals in our tap water—or in the bottles on grocery store shelves? All that, plus our very own water taste test, as we declare the ultimate victor in this war of the waters.
43 min
125
Bottled Vs. Tap: The Battle to Quench Our Thirst
Today, bottled water is ubiquitous and cheap: every single second of every single day, more than a thousand people buy and drink a plastic bottle of water in the U.S.. But it wasn’t always so. In this episode, we trace a centuries-old power struggle as bottled water went from hip to lame to hot again. Why did doctors prescribe the waters from specific springs for everything from hemorrhoids to hypochondria, and how did whaling ships and a golf course help kick off the first bottled water frenzy in America? How did a swimming pool chemical help tap water fight back, and what did Nike, yuppies, and Orson Welles have to do with bottled water's reincarnation from the dead? And what's up with all these oxygen- or electrolyte-enhanced, alkaline, and even magical waters on supermarket shelves today? Listen in now for the first in our two-part deep dive into this battle of the ages: bottled vs. tap. We'll be back in a week with part two, including the science behind the taste of water, the specialist sommeliers who pair water and food, and the secret to making DIY Pellegrino at home.
42 min