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5 votes
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Rice has a methane problem that a startup is promising to fix
15 votes -
French post office releases scratch-and-sniff baguette stamp
27 votes -
I gave up meat and gained so much more | A tale of one person's life, culture, and growing up
38 votes -
Seattle’s law mandating higher pay for food delivery workers is a case study in backfire economics
18 votes -
The economics of $15 salads
11 votes -
Bread, how did they make it? Part IV: Markets, merchants and the tax man
7 votes -
Behold, the $400 red pineapple
20 votes -
Cold brew coffee in three minutes using acoustic cavitation
20 votes -
Florida is the first state to ban lab grown meat - Ron DeSantis
37 votes -
Big farms are under pressure to address the problem of dying salmon in Norway's vast fish-farm industry
9 votes -
Why don't we do more food-based activism?
In the past few months I have been reading a lot about historical food culture. It's kind of amazing how much things have changed here in the US. Over the last century or so we have basically...
In the past few months I have been reading a lot about historical food culture. It's kind of amazing how much things have changed here in the US. Over the last century or so we have basically eliminated communal eating and massively changed the economics of prepared meals. At one point we had automats and cafeterias which skipped out on most of the "front of house" service and focused on serving large volumes of people to keep prices low. There were also diners, which are much different from what we consider to be a diner today; they were very small places that only prepared simple things that needed very little labor to prepare; things like hash browns, sandwiches, or pancakes, so the food was still very cheap. But because they were small, they were able to serve smaller markets that other restaurants were not able to capitalize on. Compare that to today, where diners are just restaurants that have 50s style decor.
But the thing I think is much more unusual is how rare we see food used in service of a message. It's something that has a long history across the globe. Most notably, religions operate food kitchens that help to bring poor people into their folds. Some religions actually have a built-in food culture that includes feeding your neighbors. It's really effective too; there's a small chain of restaurants where I live that has inexpensive food which has some bhuddist texts at the dining tables, and honestly it had me considering joining a religion for the first time. If I spoke Chinese they might have got me! Eating food requires a baseline of trust, so if you can get someone to eat at your restaurant you will bypass a lot of the caution that people approach the world with.
With that being said, why isn't food-based activism a lot more popular? I'm sure that it would work for much more than religion. A restaurant that acts as a messaging platform doesn't necessarily need to be funded by food sales, so they can undercut the competition on price and reach an even greater audience. Given the ways I have seen religions use food to further their means, I think that it could even go farther than changing people's minds about topics and actually motivate people to take action and join communities who are actually making real change. Food is both relatively inexpensive and it's something that everyone needs to survive, so it seems to me that food-based activism is the single largest missed opportunity for community organization.
20 votes -
On-demand nutrient production system for long-duration space missions
12 votes -
Ten times as much of this toxic pesticide could end up on your tomatoes and celery under a new US EPA proposal
29 votes -
Farmers reduce methane emissions by changing how they grow rice in Vietnam
14 votes -
Cocoa price swings are the craziest since the 1970s
14 votes -
What the first astronauts (and cosmonauts) ate - Food in space
3 votes -
Artisan roastery based in the Finnish capital has introduced a coffee blend that has been developed by artificial intelligence
5 votes -
What cooking techniques need more evidence?
There are many tips or techniques that are strongly recommended for cooking, but it's hard to know which are evidence based and which are just passed along because that's what people always do....
There are many tips or techniques that are strongly recommended for cooking, but it's hard to know which are evidence based and which are just passed along because that's what people always do.
Which are the tips that need more evidence?
Here are two that I struggle with, about stainless steel pans:
- Water drop test / leidenfrost
People say that if you get your pan hot enough to get the leidenfrost effect and then add the oil you'll have less problems with sticking. My problem with this is that it means the pan gets very very hot - much hotter than it needs to be for most uses. My other problem is they all say "Look, I'll cook eggs and they won't stick" and those videos either have a ton of cuts, or the eggs stick and you can see the person pushing with a spatula to get rid of the stick, or their "scrambled eggs" is really a chopped omelette.
- Heat the pan before adding oil. I don't understand this. Again, people say it helps prevent sticking, but they use some argument about "pores" which just feels hokey. I add cold oil to a cold pan and bring it up to temperature before adding food so the pan and oil are both at the right temperature, and food sticks and then releases, because that's how stainless pans work.
I'm aware I could be completely wrong here and that there may be a good evidence base for these, but they don't seem to work based on how I cook.
37 votes -
Did grave robbers plunder battlefields? Bones went to fertilizer and sugar processing, book argues.
14 votes -
Consumer reports on high levels of sodium and heavy metals in Lunchables
26 votes -
Front-of-package protein labels on cereal create health halos
7 votes -
Elephant Apple - Elephants love this fruit and I do too
6 votes -
Airline food during the golden age of air travel
13 votes -
The influencer who “reverses” Lupus with smoothies. Psychiatrist Brooke Goldner makes extraordinary claims about incurable diseases. It’s brought her a mansion, a Ferrari, and a huge social following.
18 votes -
What happened when you visited a medieval inn?
11 votes -
They grow your berries and peaches, but often lack one item: insurance
9 votes -
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances in food packaging: Migration, toxicity, and management strategies
5 votes -
Cutting-edge tech made the Netherlands a major exporter of food (2022)
15 votes -
From ‘crookies’ to flavored versions: The French croissant reinvents itself to battle American snacks and attract Gen Z
21 votes -
Tastes like chicken? Think again—edible ants have distinctive flavor profiles.
16 votes -
Deadly morel mushroom outbreak highlights big gaps in fungi knowledge
20 votes -
The health impacts of red meat - reviewing a recent study and current recommendations
10 votes -
Turning styrofoam into cinnamon candy
24 votes -
As gangs attack a critical port, ‘Haiti will go hungry soon’
18 votes -
The plastic chemicals hiding in your food. Test results for bisphenols/phthalates.
14 votes -
How the UN is holding back the Sahara desert
8 votes -
Kenji's Vietnamese garlic noodles... with twenty cloves of garlic
41 votes -
Analysis of a common preservative used to kill pathogens in food shows that it also affects beneficial bacteria
19 votes -
A shift towards a more sustainable global food system could create up to $10 trillion of benefits a year, improve human health, and ease the climate crisis
17 votes -
When Rakel took over the last farm in her Norwegian village, she was not only taking responsibility for a flock of sheep, but also a way of life at a crossroads
2 votes -
Can a chef turn KFC into a completely different dish?
16 votes -
Seaweed could save a billion people from famine after a nuclear war
27 votes -
Food scientists at Finnish startup SuperGround have found a way to make chicken nuggets and fish cakes out of otherwise discarded bones and hard tissues
28 votes -
Tallow to margarine
11 votes -
What do you eat when you're sick?
From chicken noodle soup to congee, no matter what cuisine or culture, what do you eat when you're sick? Since everyone around me is getting ill, I'm looking to expand my "sick food" recipes for...
From chicken noodle soup to congee, no matter what cuisine or culture, what do you eat when you're sick? Since everyone around me is getting ill, I'm looking to expand my "sick food" recipes for drop off. Bonus points if it's easy on digestion and will keep in the fridge/freezer for awhile.
Chicken congee is my go to because it's simple and can easily be dressed up or down.
Thanks for all the replies! I love learning about different food (and beverages) so I hope you find something new to try yourselves.
26 votes -
The economic secret hidden in a tiny, discontinued pasta
46 votes -
Plant-based spread maker tries move into paper-based tubs
13 votes -
I do not like this timeline, now I cannot even indulge in Smuckers blueberry syrup anymore!
27 votes -
Coffee connoisseurs have long believed that adding a little water to beans before grinding them makes a difference. A new study by researchers at the University of Oregon seems to confirm exactly why.
35 votes