Order a hot pastrami on rye at any delicatessen and you’ll taste the briny terroir of the Jewish Diaspora. Pastrami is an iconic cured meat that migrated with Eastern European Jews to America and became synonymous with the deli, a beloved third place for Jewish communities across the country. In Jackson, Mississippi, that place was the Olde Tyme Deli, which Judy and Irv Feldman owned and operated from 1961 until 2000. In this episode, we’ll trace the migration of pastrami to the Deep South, where Southern Jewish identity coalesced during another moment of reckoning—the civil rights movement.
Pulp Fact: How Orange Juice Created the Sunshine State
"Easy," by Ed Madden
Take the Woods Ballistic! Black Belt Nightlife
Migration: Making Meals and Homes in Alabama
Alabama Hunters: Pretty Don't Tree No Coon
Cooking Up a Living in Alabama
New Stewards on Old Homesteads in Alabama
"Pesach in Blacksburg," by Erika Meitner
"Grace," by Jake Adam York
The Mithai Life of North Carolina
The Southern Genius of the Cuban Sandwich
Syrian-ish: Damascus Meets Little Rock at Layla's Restaurant
Ethiopian Atlanta: A Tale of Three Restaurants
Tempeh Brings Indonesia to Houston
"Drill," by Atsuro Riley
"Because Men Do What They Want to Do," by TJ Jarrett
The Holy Trinity: From the Bayou to the Bay
Puerto Rican Pasteles: Unwrapping the Diaspora
Horchata: An Ancient Drink that Crossed the Globe
A Pea for the Past, A Pea for the Future
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Gastropod
Dinner SOS by Bon Appétit
The Clever Cookstr’s Quick and Dirty Tips from the World’s Best Cooks
Frankenstein
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
The Splendid Table: Conversations & Recipes For Curious Cooks & Eaters
The Menu