Latest Episode: Amrikan with Khushbu Shah and Koreaworld with Matt Rodbard and Deuki Hong
  • Donate
The Splendid Table
  • Recipes
  • Episodes
  • Radio
    • About Us
    • Newsletter
    • Subscribe to Podcast
    • Support The Splendid Table!
    • Merchandise
    • On the Radio
    • Become a Sponsor
    • Podcast Sponsors
    • Contact Us

Episodes

By Year

    20252024202320222021202020192018201720162015201420132012201120102009200820072006200520042003200220012000199919981997
FirstPrevious676869NextLast
  • 335: Robbing the Bees

    July 14, 2007

    This week it's the wonder and biology of honey and the bees that make it. Journalist and beekeeper Holley Bishop, a woman who fell for bees the way one might fall for a puppy, tells the story. Holley is the author of Robbing the Bees: A Biography of Honey, the Sweet Liquid Gold that Seduced the World. Her Berry Striped Pops are the perfect icy snack for these dog days of summer.

  • 334: Dr. Ernst Loosen

    July 7, 2007

    This week it's contemporary food's most friendly wine: Riesling. We're in Germany on the fruity, classy little gem's home turf with our guest, award-winning Riesling master Dr. Ernst Loosen.

  • 333: Monterey Bay Aquarium

    June 23, 2007

    This week we journey to Monterey, California for an in-depth look at one of the culinary world's biggest issues: healthy and sustainable seafood. It's politics at the grass roots level as we examine how the fishing industry is influenced by what chefs choose to serve in their restaurants. The show was recorded live at the Monterey Bay Aquarium's Cooking for Solutions weekend.

  • 358: How to Eat a Peach

    May 19, 2007

    Can you remember the last time you ate a peach so perfectly sweet, juicy and delicious it knocked your socks off? Probably not. In fact, why does most of our produce have so little flavor? For answers we turn to Russ Parsons, award-winning food and wine journalist for theLos Angeles Times. Russ has been tracking American agriculture for 20 years and explains what it means to farm for flavor. He leaves us a recipe forSugar Snap Peas and Shrimp with Chive Mayonnaisefrom his latest book,How to Pick a Peach: The Search for Flavor from Farm to Table.

  • 357: Encyclopedia of Junk Food

    May 12, 2007

    This week it's a scholarly look at junk food and fast food through the eyes of American food historian Andrew Smith. He tells how it all started and claims that between the Erie Canal and Ben Franklin our destiny had nowhere else to go. Mr. Smith is the author ofThe Junk Food Encyclopedia.

  • 331: Hunger

    May 5, 2007

    "Hunger is a country we enter every day, like a commuter across a friendly border," says nature writer Sharman Apt Russell. She joins us this week with a look at the subject through a new prism—hunger as art, hunger as power, and hunger as revelation. Ms. Russell's book is Hunger: An Unnatural History. The Sterns dine on succulent Italian roast pork sandwiches at Tony Luke's in Philadelphia.

  • 355: The Way We Garden Now

    April 21, 2007

    This week it's vegetable gardening for the horticulturally challenged. Gardening expert Katherine Whiteside, author of The Way We Garden Now, stops by with short cuts to instant gratification (hard labor is not for her) and a recipe for Rhubarbaritas.

  • 330: The Insatiable Critic

    April 14, 2007

    She's sensual, iconoclastic, and hungry. In the late 1960's she blew the lid off stuffy food writing with her restaurant reviews for New York, the smartest magazine in town. She's Gael Green, a critic like no other and the woman who led the pack in a dining revolution. Gael joins us this week to share memories from her new autobiography, Insatiable: Tales from a Life of Delicious Excess. The recipe for Danish Meat Loaf is from the book.

  • 354: Fred Kirschenmann

    April 7, 2007

    Fred Kirschenmann of The Leopold Center for Sustainable Agriculture joins us this week to talk why America lost touch with her food source—the farm—and looks at the resurrection taking place, right now, on farms across the land. The Sterns are at the final stretch of the famed Route 66 in Stroud, Oklahoma.

  • 327: Judith Jones

    March 31, 2007

    This week we're going inside the process of how exceptional cookbooks are brought to life. Our guide is Judith Jones, often called the cookbook editor's editor. Forty-some years ago she discovered Julia Child. In the ensuing decades Judith's influence changed the American cookbook forever and her authors became a "who's who of food."

FirstPrevious676869NextLast
The Splendid Table
American Public Media
© 2025 Minnesota Public Radio. All rights reserved.Terms and ConditionsPrivacy Policy