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40 votes
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No, climate activists are not coming for New York City pizza
16 votes -
'No kill' meat, grown from animal cells, is now approved for sale in the US
104 votes -
Why Britain's curry houses are in decline
21 votes -
N=1: Dr. Garcia’s queasy irradiated rats
9 votes -
The medieval food that killed an English king, and could be used to pay your rent
5 votes -
Taco Bell's iconic Crunchwrap goes vegan
40 votes -
Work trip to Palo Alto, CA - Seeking recommendations
In a few weeks, I'll be making a short trip (3 days) to Palo Alto, working in the Stanford Medical Center area. I'm hoping for some local or experienced insight into "don't miss" destinations for...
In a few weeks, I'll be making a short trip (3 days) to Palo Alto, working in the Stanford Medical Center area.
I'm hoping for some local or experienced insight into "don't miss" destinations for food, culture, history, and sight-seeing. It's likely I'll only have Sunday afternoon and weekday evenings free, so the personal tour may have to be more focused than local guides might otherwise suggest.
My home area has great food, but I'm really starving for Eastern cuisines. I'm willing to go beyond what a corporate travel budget permits if there's truly extraordinary, "can't get anywhere else" dining available.
Your insights are greatly appreciated!
14 votes -
Confessions of a slaughterhouse worker
24 votes -
Padma Lakshmi opens up about leaving Top Chef
6 votes -
Why these old Japanese vending machines are genius
14 votes -
How Big Beef is fueling the Amazon's destruction
10 votes -
Could ultra-processed foods be harmful for us?
10 votes -
I (basically) stopped weeding thanks to this game-changing gardening method; Tilling is out. ‘No dig’ is in.
27 votes -
Why it took thirteen years to engineer the Taco Bell Crunchwrap
8 votes -
Nearly half of every pineapple you eat ends up in the trash. But now, companies across the globe are turning the inedible parts of the fruit into textiles, plates, soap, and more. | World Wide Waste
8 votes -
I opened a ramen pop-up restaurant for just one night, and all 300 tickets sold out in 40s. It's one thing to cook for youtube videos, but it is another to cook for real customers.
5 votes -
How they saved the holes in Swiss cheese
6 votes -
Japanese Jidori chicken is perhaps the world's best, but how good is it? We'll visit a Jidori "free range" chicken farm and then visit my favorite restaurant in Miyazaki
4 votes -
Trying the 10,000 calories eat and burn challenge
2 votes -
How Somali food in the diaspora holds the history of forced migration
4 votes -
A flock of chickens, held for ransom — Growing cyberattacks on Canada's food system threaten disaster
9 votes -
Jamie Oliver's war on nuggets
14 votes -
How Grey Poupon became hip-hop’s favorite condiment
3 votes -
Fruity Pebbles and Lucky Charms threaten to block “healthy” food labelling guidelines in court
9 votes -
The vertical farming bubble is finally popping
20 votes -
Does anyone actually like canned beans?
Yes, I’m totally serious. If you find a recipe online that includes beans in the ingredients list, chances are that it calls for canned beans. And I honestly don’t know why. Canned beans are...
Yes, I’m totally serious.
If you find a recipe online that includes beans in the ingredients list, chances are that it calls for canned beans. And I honestly don’t know why. Canned beans are terrible.
To be specific I am not talking about flavored beans. Beans in tomato sauce or a sugary sauce for baked or barbecue beans tend to be OK. It’s the unflavored ones that bother me.
I could only wish that a lack of flavor was the only problem with canned beans, but in addition to that they also tend to have a sharp metallic taste. I don’t even know how that can happen. Canned tomatoes don’t taste that bad. Are they just not cleaning the cans before they put the beans in them?
We are living in an age where it’s surprisingly common for people to have access to pressure cookers which can cook dry beans en masse within an hour’s time. And the result will be properly nutty, buttery, and creamy like they are supposed to taste.
I get that canned beans are always going to be more convenient, but they taste so much worse that I honestly don’t think the resulting dish should be called the same thing.
Am I the only one who feels this way?
15 votes -
Forks Over Knives - A documentary about whole food plant based diets
11 votes -
Why the ground under Colorado solar panels is ripe for growing food
7 votes -
Excessive outbreaks of seaweed are clogging up our waters – now the algae is being harvested alongside farmed crops to create ingredients for cosmetics and food products
5 votes -
Cake in the office should be viewed like passive smoking, says UK food regulator
13 votes -
Chinese takeout Lo Mein secrets revealed
4 votes -
Is Alchemist the world's most creative restaurant? Rasmus Munk offers Michelin-starred meals from food waste, drinks from rabbit's ears and a new way to look at food.
5 votes -
High tech meets agriculture in Denmark – strategic investments mean country may one day become a major exporter of farming technology
3 votes -
I did caffeine analysis: The unexpected truth about freshly brewed vs instant coffee, and dark vs light roast
14 votes -
Fast-rising electricity bills and surging food price inflation are taking their toll in Sweden – Matmissionen and the social stores offering food at rock-bottom prices
7 votes -
Food giant Unilever is planning a dairy ice cream that uses milk that doesn’t come from a cow
11 votes -
Exclusive: We tasted the world's first cultivated steak, no cows required
4 votes -
Welsh council bids to print McDonald’s customer car number plates on wrappers
12 votes -
Chinese takeout fried rice secrets revealed
9 votes -
The world depends on this government warehouse's collection of strange Standard Reference Materials. They're not cheap.
1 vote -
A guide to Norway's Trøndelag – this year's European Region of Gastronomy
4 votes -
Why food commercials cost hundreds of thousands of dollars | Big Business
2 votes -
The mysterious, stubborn appeal of mass-produced fried chicken (2019)
11 votes -
How mushrooms are turned into bacon and styrofoam | World Wide Waste
10 votes -
The inside scoop on ice cream innovation – a Tetra Pak product development centre where future recipes and technology are tested out
6 votes -
How Japanese grow and eat $46,500 melons
4 votes -
Extreme China heatwave could lead to global chaos and food shortages
19 votes -
Instead of a field, hundreds of Danish growers now share patches of the ocean, growing mussels, sea kelp and more
6 votes -
A history of tacos
3 votes