Episodes
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, Ozempic has become a powerful representation of our relationships with food, and the stories of how...
Published 01/23/24
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 20th century.   My guest today is here to unbox the TV dinner, Jeff Swystun. Jeff is a globally respected branding expert and author. He is the former Chief Marketing...
Published 01/16/24
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 inspiration by the Galician food traditions he grew up with. This led to him eventually opening...
Published 01/09/24
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 9th 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 policy. Discussions about international food regimes are critical for understanding how broad choices...
Published 12/05/23
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, two food scientists that started a series of conversations to pass the time during lockdowns,...
Published 11/28/23
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 talking with Nat and Bec Davey, two writer sisters who like to use art and conversations to reframe...
Published 11/21/23
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 changes in drug supply and challenges with cost of living. It is a lot to navigate, so I brought...
Published 11/14/23
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 some questionable (and now expensive) meatloaf.  Yet post-secondary campuses are spaces of...
Published 11/07/23
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. Julia is a former librarian and Library Science PhD turned food historian and fermentation expert....
Published 10/31/23
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 gender and ethnic identities, as well as for those who have disabilities.   My guest this...
Published 10/24/23
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 with this how they played into the concept of her new cookbook, The Unofficial Yellowstone...
Published 10/17/23
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 weave food stories from the past into present life. My guest this week is someone who is...
Published 10/10/23
We're going to try launching season 8... again. In this solo episode, I go into more detail about a burnout I experienced last year, how I got in my head about "failing" as a podcaster, and honouring my late brother through my creative work. I only almost cried once in it.  Links:  Website: https://www.anthrodish.com/ Newsletter: https://sarahduignan.substack.com/ Instagram: @anthrodishpodcast TikTok: @anthrodish  
Published 10/03/23
Whenever I watch a baking show, or a movie that has a really delicious looking food scene, I’m always blown away by the type of story that you can tell just through video and images of food. What exactly does it take to create these visions of food looking so delectable, despite there being no sense of smell associated with them? And what happens when the cameras stop rolling and the food is no longer needed? My guest this week, Alyssa Noui, is an LA based food stylist and culinary producer...
Published 11/23/22
Welcome to Season 8! It has been far too long and I am really excited to be back behind the old mic bringing you all new interviews this season. I am so grateful for the conversations that I’ve had so far for this season, and have some more planned that I am really looking forward to sharing with you. True to any season launch for AnthroDish, I’m going to give you a breakdown of all the reasons why the season ended so abruptly at the end of March 2022 (and how it almost always happens that...
Published 11/15/22
We started off this season looking at just how much Canadians wasted food, and how food systems management can be used to tackle this from a research based perspective. But the realities of how to navigate food waste, and the chain from supplier to consumer get a bit more murky. So how can it be done? This week, I’m chatting with Monique Chan, who is working on a solution through her company, Bruized. Monique is a 26-year old creative from Toronto, Ontario. She founded Bruized in 2019 as a...
Published 03/15/22
I'm someone who normally doesn't stop to take a breath and appreciate everything I've done, but I wanted to take a moment this week to celebrate AnthroDish hitting 100 EPISODES!  I'm so excited that we've made it this far together, I can't thank you all enough for tuning in over the years, bringing in your expertise and your questions to make this journey even more dynamic than I could have possibly imagined when I first started it.  To properly celebrate this, my friend Sydney Gautreau is...
Published 03/08/22
This week’s episode feels particularly special and close to home for me – because it kinda is! This marks my first episode getting to connect with someone from my hometown of Peterborough, Ontario. During the first year of the pandemic, I moved back to Peterborough to be closer to family while managing my daughter’s online schooling. It was a really difficult choice for me, because I had a lot of pride about living in Toronto and coming back to your smalltown can be challenging. But there was...
Published 03/01/22
The idea of food security has been around for quite some time, but never manages to grasp the full complexity and nuances of what it means to secure foods, or what foods are the most culturally appropriate and nourishing. And in turn, efforts to assist those facing food insecurity quite often miss the mark in making cultural food easier to reach. And with increased regional lockdowns and the significantly reduced accessibility and time that many people are facing, finding culturally...
Published 02/22/22
With every new year, we get absolutely bombarded by diet ads, fitness discounts, gym memberships (even if gyms are closed during lockdowns), and constant messaging about what our bodies are worth. Even when expected, it’s incredibly overwhelming. So how can we practice more conscious language and information sharing about our bodies, foods, and diet cultures online? This week, I am chatting with Ary Maharaj, who’s speaking as the Outreach and Education Coordinator for the National Eating...
Published 02/15/22
By now, we’ve all heard the jokes about how millennials can’t afford to buy homes because we spend all our money on avocado toast, and have felt the generational divides around class, race, and gender through these prolonged boomer analogies with food. But when you put the jokes aside, a complicated picture of why younger generations care so much about food starts to arise. My guest this week, Eve Turow-Paul, is here to explore this in more detail with me. Her recent book, Hungry: Avocado...
Published 02/08/22
When we think about COVID, we usually think about the short term health effects and terrifying stories from the ICU. However, there’s a lot to learn about the ways that long haul COVID symptoms affect people. Those that experience long term symptoms are sometimes referred to as “long haulers” on Twitter threads, and you don’t see much covered about their health challenges across the media. But with the high rates of infection across the US and Canada, understanding how people will be...
Published 12/14/21
Today’s episode marks a big first for me! This is the first time I’ve been able to have a guest return for a second episode, which I’m so thrilled about. This week, Trina Moyles is back! If you’re a longtime listener, you may remember her from AnthroDish’s first season, where she spoke about the global experiences of women farmers from her beautiful Women Who Dig debut book. This week, we’re having a conversation around her all new book, Lookout: Love Solitude, and Searching for Wildfire in...
Published 12/07/21
Here at AnthroDish, a lot of the focus in my conversations with people is around the eating behaviours of communities, or what food preparations say about individuals… but we don’t often get to think about what their food waste behaviours say about them. So what influences how people waste foods? Why do we have so many memes about that half empty and wilted bin of wilted spinach at the back of our fridges? My guest this week, Dr. Tammara Soma, looks at food waste patterns and behaviours in...
Published 11/16/21
It took a while, but I'm back for the 7th season of AnthroDish! Starting off as usual with a solo episode, giving some quick updates about what's been going on since season 6 wrapped in March 2021, some huge personal changes (I'm finally a Doctor!), and some reflections on what sorts of energy and themes I'm bringing in this season.  Regular interview episodes will be back as of next Tuesday, and I can’t wait for you to hear them!
Published 11/01/21