Recent media attention surrounding native indigenous foodways has brought to light what a decolonized diet means. This is in part thanks to individuals like Sean Sherman, the Sioux Chef, places like the Ohlone Cafe in Berkeley, Ca, Andi Murphy the host of Toasted Sister podcast and Brit Reed who works at Tulalip clinic. Through their work, and the work of many other indigenous people, they are revitalizing and bringing attention to the precolonial foods of their local indigenous tribes.
On this episode of Point of Origin from Whetstone Magazine we explore how can we truly honor indigenous foodways, without it becoming the new, then forgotten trend? And why land and gathering are essential to indigenous foodways. Learn more about this episode.
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Introducing the Whetstone Radio Collective
Food Apartheid: (And Why We Don't Call it a Food Desert)
The Morality of Meat
Black Coffee
Beyond the Wheat
What Do We Mean When We Say Food Anthropology?
Spoiled Milk
Green Gold: Avocado Farming in Mexico
Wine of Volcano and Sea
Fulani Foodways with Chef Binta
Reviving Arak in Palestine
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A New, New Nordic?
Culinary Commodities
Third Culture
One-on-One with Reem Assil
Natural Wine: Part 2
Natural Wine: It’s Alive!
Korean Food and Modernity
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The War of the Worlds
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