Episodes
Published 12/28/22
Published 09/16/22
Published 09/02/22
Published 08/11/22
While some EU countries are banning Glyphosate, the most used herbicide on the planet and the active ingredient in Monsanto's RoundUp, Ireland's Department of Agriculture and Teagasc say there's no alternative and that Irish farming isn't sustainable without it. Join John Spink, Teagasc's head of Crops and Environment, organic farmer Ross Jackson who farms organic oats and barley, and NUIG researcher Dr Alison Connolly, who is investigating glyphosate exposure in Irish farming and...
Published 10/30/20
Published 10/30/20
The closure of the Irish sugar industry in 2005 was a staggering blow to Irish food security. From self-sufficiency in sugar and molasses, we now import hundreds of thousands of tonnes of these commodities per year, from countries whose cheap production relies on terrible working conditions on sugar cane plantations. Ellie is joined by Alan Navratil, a farmer whose family history is steeped in the story of Irish sugar, for a 2020 look at Ireland’s lost sugar industry.
Published 10/26/20
This is a special family-friendly episode of Green Bites, all about the pumpkin.  Join Ellie and her nephew Fionn to carve pumpkins and make pumpkin pie from a very special pumpkin that Ellie got by going to visit vegetable farmers Joe and Sandra Burns. Covering food waste, seed-saving, how pumpkins grow and recipes to make the most of your Halloween pumpkin, this podcast episode is tasty food for thought. Recipes and video on the podcast website. www.greenbites.ie
Published 10/16/20
Green Bites visited with community gardens on Cork's Northside at the end of the Covid-19 lockdown to learn how gardening is not only used therapeutically to aid mental health, but to grow resilient communities.  Community Health officers Sarah Carr, John Paul O'Brien give Ellie a tour of NICHE Community Garden in Knocknaheeny. 
Published 10/09/20
Did you know that less that 5% of the apples eaten in Ireland are grown here? Most are flown from far-flung places like New Zealand, Chile and South Africa. Yet all over the country, each autumn, apples are left to rot in gardens. This ode to the humble apple is in the company of David Llewellyn of Llewellyn's Orchard in Lusk, Co Dublin. 
Published 10/02/20
"The restaurant is the showcase of a lot of other hard work that's gone on in the background, and it's important for the restaurant to showcase that work in a respectful way." Take a seat in Michelin-starred Galway restaurant Loam, where head chef Enda McEvoy serves an indigenous Irish cuisine based on local supply chains.  Loam is the first Irish restaurant to be awarded three stars by the Sustainable Restaurants Association and the first winner of Michelin's UK and Ireland sustainability...
Published 09/25/20
Neighbourfood is the growing online click-and-collect local shopping platform that allows time-poor customers to support their local food producers.   From five collection hubs in March to 40 all over Ireland in September: Cork man Jack Crotty, co-founder of Neighbourfood, talks about how the Covid-19 crisis has led to a boom in his fledgling business, and all the ways he hopes it will be able to support small local food producers in Ireland. 
Published 09/18/20
Ireland is almost entirely dependent on imported seed for all its commercial and garden food crop seeds.  During Covid-19 restrictions, this dependence was highlighted when both Ireland's organic seed suppliers, Irish Seedsavers and Brown Envelope Seeds, had to limit access to their website to ration seeds in response to the boom in interesting in growing vegetables.  Ellie visits both Irish Seedsavers and Brown Envelope Seeds to explore the implications of this for our food security and...
Published 09/11/20
From smoked salmon to sushi, salmon is widely eaten and widely loved.  But wild Atlantic salmon stocks are in a dangerous decline.  Ireland plans to double its farmed salmon exports in the coming years and yet our government licensing system hangs in a 13-year stasis.  With John Murphy of Salmonwatch Ireland and Catherine McManus of MOWI, the Norwegian aquaculture giant who produce the bulk of Ireland's organic farmed salmon, Green Bites goes fishing for the truth about the sustainability of...
Published 08/08/20
Ireland produces somewhere in the region of 13% of the world's infant formula, and recent research has revealed that for every kilo of formula produced, the true carbon cost is anywhere between four and 11 kilos of greenhouses gases.  Alongside Australian expert in the economics of infant feeding Dr Julie Smith, Green Bites takes a deep dive into the environmental and ethical impacts of Ireland's €1.3 billion White Gold Boom. 
Published 07/30/20
Do you think a vegan diet will save the world?  This episode might make you think again. We meet Sligo farmer and artist Clive Bright, whose 120 acre organic farm raises 100% grass-fed beef for Clive’s direct-to-customer company The Rare Ruminare. Clive has transformed his farm from standard non-organic dairy farming to the mob-grazing system he uses today, where trees play a vital role in improving his pastures.  Clive believes a truly sustainable food system necessarily includes livestock. 
Published 07/24/20
Could YOU live on foods only grown in Ireland for a month each year? Lisa Fingleton is the author of The Local Food Project, based on her 30-day Local Food Challenge: each September she invites people to try eating only food grown in Ireland. Her partner Rena Blake is the North Kerry co-ordinator for Kerry Social Farming. Together they live on a 20 acre organic smallholding called Barna, where they try to embody the saying “be the change you want to see in the world.”
Published 07/20/20
Where does our flour come from?  Can Ireland grow wheat and other milling grains? Green Bites follows the story of flour from farm to loaf with Emma Clutterbuck of Oak Forest Mills in Co Kilkenny and Cork-based baker Ben Lebon of The Natural Foods Bakery.
Published 07/18/20
When Ireland went into Covid-19 lockdown, allotments were not given an exemption under food production and allotment-holders all over the country were locked out during a vital growing window.  Ellie visits Cork allotments on the day they re-open and enlists the help of Junior Agriculture Minister Pippa Hackett and food historian Regina Sexton to ask....when it comes to growing our own, has Ireland lost the plot?
Published 07/18/20
Season one of Green Bites, the Irish Food Sustainability Podcast, launches on Friday the 17th of July.  Listen on podcast platforms or on www.greenbites.ie 
Published 07/18/20