エピソード

  • Food as a clue - Alias Agnes - The Guilded Age Spy with Elizabeth DeWolfe
    2026/05/28

    When Elizabeth A. DeWolfe delved into her sources about the notorious case of Madeleine Pollard verses her former lover, Congressman William C.P. Breckinridge, she discovered that food was used as a clue and a method of connection for Jane Tucker (using the alias Agnes Parker), the woman Breckinridge employed to spy on Madeleine. In this week’s episode of The Hungry Historians, Matt Phillpott and Kelly Spring talk with Elizabeth DeWolfe about her research and how food became an essential ingredient in the tale of an eighteenth century American scandal.

    Elizabeth DeWolfe published this research in 2025 as Alias Agnes: The Notorious Tale of A Gilded Age Spy, through the University Press of Kentuck. You can learn more about Elizabeth at her website https://www.elizabethdewolfe.com.

    This episode is sponsored by ⁠⁠Bloomsbury Food Library⁠⁠, an essential resource for students, researchers, and scholars studying food, offering the widest-ranging existing collection of food studies content.

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    54 分
  • Tomatoes in Egypt with Anny Gaul
    2026/05/14

    Tomatoes arrived in Egypt in the 16th century but quickly became ubiquitous with Egyptian foodways. In this episode we talk with Anny Gaul, an assistant professor of Arabic Studies at the University of Maryland. Anny published in 2025, Nile Nightshade: An Egyptian culinary history of the tomato, through the University of California Press. She also runs the popular food blog Cooking with Gaul.

    You can learn more about Anny Gaul on her website and buy her book on the University of California Press website and other bookstores.

    This episode is sponsored by ⁠⁠Bloomsbury Food Library⁠⁠, an essential resource for students, researchers, and scholars studying food, offering the widest-ranging existing collection of food studies content.

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    50 分
  • Post-colonial realism and cuisine with Hanna Kassab
    2026/05/01

    How do people think about their own cuisines and those of their neighbouring countries? How does this ‘feeling’ reflect on our political attitudes and our defence of what we see as ours? In this week’s episode of The Hungry Historians Matt and Kelly talk with Hanna Kassab, Associate Professor at East Carolina University. Hanna describes his discoveries from travelling to various countries and exploring their attitudes to their cuisines. This was for his 2025 book, Post-Colonial Realism: Cultural Conflicts, Cuisine, and the Changing International System from Routledge.

    You can learn more about Dr Hanna Kassab on his ECU profile page and follow him on X and YouTube.

    This episode is sponsored by ⁠⁠Bloomsbury Food Library⁠⁠, an essential resource for students, researchers, and scholars studying food, offering the widest-ranging existing collection of food studies content.

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    50 分
  • Ruin their Crops on the Ground with Andrea Freeman
    2026/04/16

    Food is politics, and politics is food. In this week’s episode Matt and Kelly talk with Andrea Freeman about her 2024 book Ruin their Crops on the Ground: The Politics of Food, in the United States, from the trail of tears to school lunch, which was published by Macmillan.

    Andrea’s study makes the argument that food policy and laws in the US have created and maintained racial and social inequality. Using history to understand this ‘food oppression’.

    Andrea Freeman works at the Southwestern Law School Lost Angeles and you can learn more about her on her profile page.

    This episode is sponsored by ⁠⁠Bloomsbury Food Library⁠⁠, an essential resource for students, researchers, and scholars studying food, offering the widest-ranging existing collection of food studies content.

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    38 分
  • Berries with Heather Arndt Anderson
    2026/04/02

    Widely available in nature, berries are of such significance to Northern and Eastern Europeans and have become essential foods across the world. Berries are more than what you think they are; bananas are berries for example! In today's discussion with Heather Arndt Anderson we learn about the historical use of berries, our attempts to make artificial versions, and what might happen to berries in the future.

    Heather Arndt Anderson published Berries: A Global History with Reaktion Books in 2018. You can find out more about her at her Instagram page and at Superabundant.

    This episode is sponsored by ⁠⁠Bloomsbury Food Library⁠⁠, an essential resource for students, researchers, and scholars studying food, offering the widest-ranging existing collection of food studies content.

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    47 分
  • Vanilla with Rosa Abreu-Runkel
    2026/03/19

    Vanilla has become a slightly more expensive condiment in our lives, but for a long time it was simply impossible to grow outside of its native Mexico. In this episode we explore the history of Vanilla, how it was propagated, and its use in various foods. We look at the connection to slavery and its artificial version vanillin.

    We are joined by Rosa Abreu-Runkel who, in 2020, published Vanilla: A Global History with Reaktion Books.

    To find out more about Rosa's work check out her profile on the New York City College of Technology (City Tech) website.

    This episode is sponsored by ⁠⁠Bloomsbury Food Library⁠⁠, an essential resource for students, researchers, and scholars studying food, offering the widest-ranging existing collection of food studies content.

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    44 分
  • Picky Eaters with Helen Veit
    2026/02/27

    Are children naturally picky eaters? Are there really some foods that we shouldn't feed them and are we damaging their mental health by pushing too hard? These questions and more form the topic of today's discussion as we explore the truth of picky eaters (particularly children) in America in the 20th and 21st centuries, based on research stretching back to the 19th century.

    We are joined by Helen Veit, who has just published Picky: How American Children Became the Fussiest Eaters in History. You can find the book on Macmillan publishers and other booksellers. To find out more about Helen's work check out her website helenveit.com.

    This episode is sponsored by ⁠⁠Bloomsbury Food Library⁠⁠, an essential resource for students, researchers, and scholars studying food, offering the widest-ranging existing collection of food studies content.

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    50 分
  • Diet Books with Adrienne Bitar
    2026/02/13

    What happens when we examine diet books as a form of literature that addresses some of the deeper existential questions of our identity and our understanding of our own bodies and those of others? In this episode Kelly and Matt interview Adrienne Bitar about her book Diet and the Disease of Civilization, published by Rutgers University Press in 2018.

    Adrienne focuses her interest on American diet books and specific diet types - the Paleo and Garden of Eden diets and the detoxification (detox) diet. In this conversation we cover how diets are often couched in myth and legend, and lean back to simpler times and even human organs and hunter-gatherer lifestyles. We also touch on how diet books cross a sometimes inconsistent boundary between science and rejecting science, and what diets tell us about our modern society and understanding of ourselves.

    You can find out more about Adrienne at the Cornell University website and her website.

    This episode is sponsored by ⁠⁠Bloomsbury Food Library⁠⁠, an essential resource for students, researchers, and scholars studying food, offering the widest-ranging existing collection of food studies content.

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    44 分