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  • This month: Kin by Marie Mitchell. I met Marie in the days before the book was published in June and we reflected on grief, demanding more from attitudes to Caribbean food in the UK and the importance of flavours at the heart of her recipes.

    Welcome back to the Lecker Book Club. Every month I’ll pick a newly released food related book and talk to the author about the process of writing it. I’ll also be writing about it on Substack and Patreon. Join me there as well!

    You can listen to the previous episode i made with Marie here.

    You can find a transcript for this episode at leckerpodcast.com.

    Kin is out now. Find all of the Lecker Book Club reads on my Bookshop.org list.

    Support Lecker by becoming a paid subscriber on Patreon, Apple Podcasts and now on Substack.

    Music is by Blue Dot Sessions.

  • Welcome back to the Lecker Book Club. Every month I’ll pick a newly released food related book and talk to the author about the process of writing it. I’ll also be writing about it on Substack and Patreon. Join me there as well!

    This month: London Feeds Itself, edited by Jonathan Nunn. This episode features Kurdish chef and writer, Melek Erdal, one of the contributors to the book, reflecting on the essay she wrote, The Warehouse, and on London and Kurdish food in general.

    You can find a transcript for this episode at leckerpodcast.com.

    The second edition of London Feeds Itself is out now, published by Open City and Fitzcarraldo. Find all of the Lecker Book Club reads on my Bookshop.org list.

    Support Lecker by becoming a paid subscriber on Patreon, Apple Podcasts and now on Substack.

    Music is by Blue Dot Sessions.

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  • A meandering exploration of what surrounds our food: its packaging, history and meaning for our world.

    Featuring Hugo Lynch, Sustainability Lead at Abel and Cole, Alice Kain, curator at Museum of Brands, Renée and Anshu, founders of Dabba Drop and Sohini Banerjee, chef and founder of Smoke and Lime supper clubs.

    Dabba Drop are offering 50% off the first order for Lecker listeners in London zones 1-3! Enter LECKER50 to use this excellent offer.

    You can find a transcript for this episode at leckerpodcast.com.

    This episode features excerpts from longer conversations published for paid subscribers on Substack and Patreon. Support Lecker by becoming a paid subscriber on Patreon, Apple Podcasts and now on Substack.

    You can buy zines on BigCartel. You can also order print-on-demand merch at Teemill.

    Music is by Blue Dot Sessions.

  • Welcome back to the Lecker Book Club. Every month I’ll pick a newly released food related book and talk to the author about the process of writing it.

    This month: Namesake: Reflections on a Warrior Woman by N.S. Nuseibeh.

    Namesake is a collection of essays exploring what it means to be a young, secular Muslim woman today, told through the lens of stories of the author's ancestor, Nusaybah, the only woman warrior to have fought alongside the Prophet.

    N. S. Nuseibeh is a British Palestinian writer and researcher, born and raised in East Jerusalem. In Namesake, she weaves her own experiences of anxiety, of racism, of joy, of illness, of cooking in shared houses, of aubergines, with the myths and legends told of her ancestor. All of this makes this a book that I think should be required reading for everyone.

    You can find a transcript for this episode at leckerpodcast.com.

    Namesake is out now, published by Canongate. Find all of the Lecker Book Club reads on my Bookshop.org list.

    This month, all the revenue I would normally get from Patreon, Apple Podcasts and Substack will be donated to mutual aid requests from Gazan people on Operation Olive Branch. If you would like to make your own donation, send me a screenshot and I'll comp you a subscription.

    Music is by Blue Dot Sessions.

  • A reflection on learning – and teaching – the fermented arts at the School of Artisan Food.

    You can find a transcript for this episode at leckerpodcast.com.

    Support Lecker by becoming a paid subscriber on Patreon, Apple Podcasts and now on Substack.

    You can buy zines on BigCartel. You can also order print-on-demand merch at Teemill.

    Music is by Blue Dot Sessions.

    This ep isn't sponsored but I was invited to attend the school for free at the press day Thanks to the School of Artisan Food for hosting us. Special thanks to Martha Brown, Sally Ann Hunt and Kevan Roberts for the mini workshops (and the lunch) and to Alison Swan Parente for being part of this episode. Thanks to Emily Leary for all her work in getting us all there.

  • Welcome back to the Lecker Book Club. Every month I’ll pick a newly released food related book and talk to the author about the process of writing it. I’ll also be writing about it on Substack and Patreon. Join me there as well!

    This month: Piglet by Lottie Hazell.

    I first came across Lottie’s writing when she contributed to the first Lecker zine I curated and published in 2019: Plum Jam, a piece of short fiction about a funeral, an underset blancmange and a broken tooth. I still remember how the piece unsettled me, placing complicated family relationships alongside difficult or reluctant pleasure derived from feeding others; or being fed by others. Her debut novel, Piglet, came out earlier this year and its writing is deeply rooted in what food can mean to us: physically, emotionally and socially.

    I loved talking to Lottie about Piglet so much! As you’ll hear me tell her in the episode, it was such an interesting experience to encounter such luscious, detailed writing about food in a fictional setting, particularly set alongside scenes of such discomfort. The book made me squirm, in a really intriguing way and I loved how the dishes and tablescapes Piglet makes and consumes dressed the set of her home and work lives.

    Heads up that if you haven’t read the book, we do talk about specific plot points in it so if you’d prefer to be spoiler free, go and read it first! And the book does touch on themes of body image, weight and some implied references to disordered eating, so if those topics are sensitive to you please take care.

    You can find a transcript for this episode at leckerpodcast.com.

    Piglet is out now, published by Doubleday. Find all of the Lecker Book Club reads on my Bookshop.org list.

    Buy a copy of either/both of the Lecker zines on BigCartel. You can also order print-on-demand merch at Teemill.

    Support Lecker by becoming a paid subscriber on Patreon, Apple Podcasts and now on Substack.

    Music is by Blue Dot Sessions.

    I'm speaking at Interesting24 on 15th May at Conway Hall in London! Buy a ticket to come and watch me talk about kitchens.

  • Welcome back to the Lecker Book Club. Every month I’ll pick a newly released food related book and talk to the author about the process of writing it. I’ll also be writing about it on Substack and Patreon. Join me there as well!

    This month: Ramen Forever by Tim Anderson.

    Ramen has ended up as a cornerstone of Tim Anderson’s life. As he writes in the book, it was originally his love of ramen - as well as Japanese food more broadly - that took him to live in Japan, which steered the course of his future in many ways, including meeting his wife. Avid food TV watchers in the UK may also remember that ramen was at the heart of his Masterchef story; when he won the series in 20211, ramen was his winning main course in the final. He previously ran a ramen restaurant in Brixton, Nanban, which opened in 2015 and closed in 2021. But although he’s got five cookbooks already to his name, he’s never written a book entirely about ramen….until now.

    Ramen Forever is out now, published by Hardie Grant. Find all of the Lecker Book Club reads on my Bookshop.org list.

    Support Lecker by becoming a paid subscriber on Patreon, Apple Podcasts and now on Substack.

    Music is by Blue Dot Sessions.


  • Welcome back to the Lecker Book Club. Every month I’ll pick a newly released food related book and talk to the author about the process of writing it. I’ll also be writing about it on Substack and Patreon. Join me there as well!

    In Made in Taiwan, Taipei based journalist Clarissa Wei beautifully captures the food and spirit of this proud island nation, and brings it to life on the page. The book is stunning - you’ll hear more about the thought and consideration that Clarissa and her team put into how it looks as well as what it says later in this interview -and it examines the current state of Taiwanese food in incredible breadth and depth. For me, someone completely new to the food of the country, it’s a beautiful and rich education.

    It was such a pleasure to meet Clarissa via video chat and talk about this book, which involved an astonishing amount of research and recipe development on the ground. I’m a big fan of her work as a journalist - the podcast series she made with Whetstone Radio Collective, Climate Cuisine, is one of my all time favourite listens - and it was so interesting to hear how she approached this book, the subject of which is something hugely personal to her but one which she wanted to approach journalistically, and write as an act of documentation. We talked about how missing home through food sometimes takes unexpected, shifting forms, her culinary collaborator on the book Ivy Chen, and why it was crucial that Made In Taiwan moved away from its original proposal as a “cosy” cookbook and became something deeply political.


    Made In Taiwan is out now, published by Simon and Schuster. Find all of the Lecker Book Club reads on my Bookshop.org list.

    Support Lecker by becoming a paid subscriber on Patreon, Apple Podcasts and now on Substack.

    Music is by Blue Dot Sessions.

  • Is it possible or productive to organise around a common language in order to reimagine how we produce grain and bread? In the third and final part of Good Bread, Kim and Ruth reflect on some of their experiences working on the project and consider what the future of good bread might look like.

    Good Bread is a three part series made with Farmerama exploring The Body Lab, a participatory arts and research project by baker Kimberley Bell and artist Ruth Levene considering standardised grain testing and the possibility of reimagining measurement within the system that surrounds bread production.

    The Body Lab is funded by Farming The Future.

    Good Bread is hosted and produced by Lucy Dearlove.

    Thanks to everyone at Farmerama who has helped on this series in various ways: Jo Barratt, who was a fantastic exec, Abby Rose, Dora Taylor, Olivia Oldham, Annie Landless, Eliza Jenkins and Lucy Fisher. The music is by Owen Barratt. The artwork was by Hannah Grace.

    Thanks also to everyone else who has been part of the series: Fred Price at Gothelney Farm, Rosy Benson at Field Bakery + Mill and Chris Holister at Shipton Mill. Thanks to everyone who contributed to the Breadline!

    Make sure you listen to Cereal, Katie Revell's Farmerama series about bread.

  • Consistency is at the heart of industrial bread production, from the field to the mill to the oven. But what is it costing us?

    Good Bread is a three part series made with Farmerama exploring The Body Lab, a participatory arts and research project by baker Kimberley Bell and artist Ruth Levene considering standardised grain testing and the possibility of reimagining measurement within the system that surrounds bread production.

    The Body Lab is funded by Farming The Future.

    Thanks to Shipton Mill for their openness and generosity in allowing the Body Lab to explore these ideas

    Good Bread is hosted and produced by Lucy Dearlove.

    Thanks to everyone at Farmerama who has helped on this series in various ways: Jo Barratt, Abby Rose, Dora Taylor, Olivia Oldham, Annie Landless, Eliza Jenkins and Lucy Fisher. The music is by Owen Barratt. The artwork was by Hannah Grace.

    If you haven't already listened to Cereal the previous Farmerama series about bread made by Katie Revel, I can't recommend it highly enough!

  • How is the quality of bread measured by the system that produces and consumes it?

    Good Bread is a three part series made with Farmerama exploring The Body Lab, a participatory arts and research project by baker Kimberley Bell and artist Ruth Levene considering standardised grain testing and the possibility of reimagining measurement within the system that surrounds bread production.

    The Body Lab is funded by Farming The Future.

    Thanks to Shipton Mill for their openness and generosity in allowing the Body Lab to explore these ideas.

    Good Bread is hosted and produced by Lucy Dearlove.

    Thanks to everyone at Farmerama who has helped on this series in various ways: Jo Barratt, Abby Rose, Dora Taylor, Olivia Oldham, Annie Landless, Eliza Jenkins and Lucy Fisher. The music is by Owen Barratt. The artwork was by Hannah Grace.

    If you haven't already listened to Cereal, the previous Farmerama series about bread made by Katie Revell, I really urge you to.


  • Welcome back to the Lecker Book Club. Every month I’ll pick a newly released food related book and talk to the author about the process of writing it. I’ll also be writing about it on Substack and Patreon. Join me there as well!

    Conversations around food often - rightly - touch on attribution, ownership and identity, especially when it comes to certain dishes. But the subject is so, so complicated and many dishes we consider to be deeply entrenched within a country’s culinary history and culture are no more than PR exercises dreamed up a few decades ago.

    In National Dish :Around the World in Search of Food, History and the Meaning of Home, Anya von Bremzen explores whether we can find nationhood on a plate - and what it says about us that we’re so obsessed with looking for it there.

    I loved this book. It’s fascinating and surprising but also Anya is such a great, dynamic writer that you feel like you’re on the road with her: party hopping at the Semana Santa in Seville, in the boardroom of an instant ramen company in Tokyo, learning to roll out the perfect pizza dough in Naples, drinking midday mezcal in Oaxaca.

    Anya and I spoke via video call a couple of weeks back, coincidentally on the day the book came out in the UK.

    National Dish is out now, published by ONE, an imprint of Pushkin Press. Find all of the Lecker Book Club reads on my Bookshop.org list.

    Support Lecker by becoming a paid subscriber on Patreon, Apple Podcasts and now on Substack.

    Music is by Blue Dot Sessions.

  • Stories of moving house, and moving kitchen.

    Episode contributors:

    Ruby Mason
    Ruby is an editor at SAND, a Berlin-based journal of contemporary writing and art (www.sandjournal.com)

    Margaux Vialleron
    Margaux writes the newsletter The Onion Papers: https://theonionpapers.substack.com/

    Maria Agiomyrgiannaki
    Maria is originally from Crete, now living in London. You can find her on instagram.

    Stephen Rötzsch Thomas
    Stephen writes the newsletter Ideas With Legs: https://ideaswithlegs.substack.com/

    Matthew Curtis
    Matthew is a co-founder and Editor-in-Chief at Pellicle.

    Eli Davies
    Like her doctorate, much of Eli's work is focused around women and home building; you can read some of it on Tribune here. She is currently writing a book about single women and cooking.

    You can listen to Kitchens if you haven't already! And buy the print zine too.

    Support Lecker by becoming a paid subscriber on Patreon, Apple Podcasts and now on Substack.

    Music is by Blue Dot Sessions.

  • Welcome back to the Lecker Book Club. Every month I’ll pick a newly released food related book and talk to the author about the process of writing it. I’ll also be cooking from the book and writing about that on Substack and Patreon. Join me there as well!

    On this edition of the Lecker Book Club: Fliss Freeborn's Do Yourself A Flavour. Did you go to university? If you did, there’s a chance someone bought you - or you bought yourself - one of the many student cookbooks available. But did you actually find it useful? I definitely owned a couple of these myself, and I can’t say that I distinctly remember cooking anything from them - certainly nothing memorable, and definitely nothing that I continued cooking once I left student life. Fliss Freeborn feels very strongly that these books are more often than not a waste of your time and money and with Do Yourself A Flavour she’s written a different kind of cookbook - for students, yes, but also for anyone who wants to get themselves out of a pesto pasta rut, as she puts it, and more importantly have a good time doing it.

    Fliss started university with a few years of cooking already under her belt, and so she wsas in the ideal position to start cooking for her friends, and eventually she wasn’t just providing delicious home cooked meals for them, but also recipes too. She started a food blog while studying, mostly so she’d have an easy way to send instructions to friends, and this - a few years in - led to an unusual lucky break for her.


    Do Yourself A Flavour is out now, published by Ebury Press. Find all of the Lecker Book Club reads on my Bookshop.org list.

    Support Lecker by becoming a paid subscriber on Patreon, Apple Podcasts and now on Substack.

    Music is by Blue Dot Sessions.

  • Welcome to the Lecker Book Club. Every month I’ll pick a newly released food related book and talk to the author about the process of writing it. I’ll also be cooking from the book and writing about that on Substack and Patreon. Join me there as well!

    On the first edition of the Lecker Book Club: Maria Bradford’s Sweet Salone. Maria grew up in Sierra Leone and moved to Kent, UK in her late teens. Sweet Salone is the first English-language book of Sierra Leonean recipes published internationally, and in it Maria wanted to share the unique nature of the food of her home country, but also celebrate the country’s people, including her own family. But it wasn’t necessarily a smooth process writing the book, as you’ll hear her talk about.

    We spoke about the culture shock she experienced on arriving in the UK; what it was like encountering strawberries and apples for the first time. But it was Maria’s deep-rooted curiosity about all kinds of food that eventually led her on a path to training at Leiths and setting up her fine-dining catering business, Shwen Shwen - a Krio phrase meaning ‘fancy’. It’s this outlook and experience that closely informs the recipes in the book: from traditional dishes learned from her mother and grandmother, to her very own brand of Afrofusion.

    Sweet Salone is out now, published by Quadrille. Find all of the Lecker Book Club reads on my Bookshop.org list.

    Support Lecker by becoming a paid subscriber on Patreon, Apple Podcasts and now on Substack.

    Music is by Blue Dot Sessions.




  • An audio exploration of the most enigmatic meal of the day.

    Thanks so much to the guests on this episode:
    Bre Graham
    Bettina Makalintal
    Gurdeep Loyal
    Dan Hancox and Dr Kasia Tee
    Thea Everett
    Lara Lee

    You can listen to the full versions of all the Breakfast Season conversations by becoming a paid subscriber on Patreon, Apple Podcasts and now on Substack.

    Music is by Kevin McLeod at Incompetech

  • This is a preview of an episode of the excellent Cursed Objects podcast, featuring me, Lucy, talking to Dan Hancox and Dr Kasia Tee about the great British institution of Meal Deals.

    Listen to the full version on Cursed Objects.

  • I’m delighted to bring you a very short sweet taste of a conversation I had recently with the food writer Gurdeep Loyal. I’ve followed Gurdeep’s work for a few years now, and have always been in great admiration of what he does; not only in his own writing, and not even just in his platforming of other people’s work on his site and instgram page Mother Tongue, but also just in his general enthusiasm, charm and fostering of connections and community within food.

    His debut cookbook, also called Mother Tongue, is published this week and celebrates his heritage as -as Gurdeep himself puts it: "a descendant of Punjabi farmers and Leicester market traders.”

    This is part of a much longer interview over breakfast of crab crumpets - recipe in Mother tongue - which you can hear over on the Lecker Patreon or via Apple Podcasts subscription.

    Reminder that merch is available via the Lecker Teemill site or BigCartel

    Music is by Kevin McCleod at Incompetech.



  • Ginger and apple bircher, toast toppings, Australian pancakes; writer Bre Graham talks about being a breakfast person. Her debut cookbook, Table for Two, is out now!

    This is the first episode in a new interview series all about BREAKFAST! Future episodes will be available exclusively on the Lecker Patreon. For £3 a month you can get access to all episodes. Subscribe here.

    Merch is available via the Lecker website. Or you can go directly to Teemill for T-shirts and tote bags, and to bigcartel for zines and patches.

    Follow Lecker on Twitter and Instagram.

    Music:
    "In Your Arms" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
    Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
    http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

    "Pleasant Porridge" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
    Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
    http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

  • A mythical-looking beast to be found on the hills of the Isle of Man; the loaghtan is a fascinating heritage breed sheep whose story is intertwined with Manx culture and history.

    Katie and Lucy meet farmer Jenny Shepherd from Ballacosnahan, who have one of the biggest loaghtan flocks on the island, make loaghtan croish cuirns with artist Rosie Wood and find out how to work with loaghtan’s unique flavour with chef and spice importer Kumar Menon of Leela’s Kitchen. Plus Annie Kissack is on hand with some folktales about the sheep.


    Blasstal is a podcast series by Lecker about food and folklore on the Isle of Man, supported by Culture Vannin.

    Hosted and produced by Lucy Dearlove and Katie Callin
    Podcast theme music by Mera Royle
    Podcast artwork by Vicky Webb
    With thanks to all contributors and others who made the series possible!

    Music credits:

    Manx Folk Dance Music - Car ny Ferrishyn
    Manx Folk Dance Music - Fathaby Jig
    Caarjyn Cooidjagh - Ballakilpheric - 07 Irree Shiu
    Caarjyn Cooidjagh - Ballakilpheric - 11 Berree Dhone
    Manx Folk Dance Music - 08 Thobm y Thallear (Tom the Tailor)
    Caarjyn Cooidjagh - Ballakilpheric - 02 Ny Kirree fo Niaghtey
    Manx Folk Dance Music - 15 Car Juan Nan

    With thanks to Annie Kissack

    Enjoying Blasstal? You might like Lecker’s brand new merch selection, including a very Manx bonnag T-shirt!

    Follow Lecker on Twitter and Instagram. Read more about Blasstal and see some behind the scenes photos at leckerpodcast.com