Bite’s special 100th episode is all about young farmers. You’ll hear from all kinds of folks—from a fourth generation Japanese American fruit grower in California to a “party farmer” in Brooklyn—about what’s keeping them up at night, and what’s giving them hope. Plus, Leah Penniman, farmer and author of the book Farming While Black, weighs in on how young farmers are fighting the legacy of racism in American agriculture, and Bite listeners chime in with stories of the farmers in their lives.
Sami Tamimi on the Delicious Complexity of Palestinian Food
Elderberries Don’t Boost Your Immune System, and Other Coronavirus Myths Debunked
Why We Need Black-Owned Food Media
Chef Dominique Crenn on Eating as Activism—and the Secret to Phenomenal Sandwiches
Swollen Hands, Rampant Contagion, No Sick Days: Processing Chicken During a Pandemic
White People Own 98 Percent of Rural Land. Young Farmers Are Asking for It Back.
A Science-Loving Chef's Guide to Eating Safely Right Now
How Does Your Pandemic Garden Grow?
Should Restaurants Be Saved?
Recipe for Escape
The Food Workers Who Brave Coronavirus to Feed Us
Your Best Dinner Option Is Hiding in Your Pantry
Many Restaurants May Never Re-Open After Coronavirus
103 – The Golden Arches’ Long Shadow on Black America
102 – You've Never Met Anyone Like This Bee Hunter
101 – Michael Pollan on the Iowa Farmers Who Will Sway the Election
Chicken, Waffles, and Smashing the Patriarchy
The Bizarre Fad Diet Taking the Far Right by Storm
99 – This Lab Makes Real Meat—But Not From Animals. Will You Eat It?
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