
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
What can one single dish can tell you about America's history? One particular bowl of soup gives us an insight about the future of cultures that convene around it. Gumbo is eaten by nearly everyone in New Orleans, but its past speaks of the deep inequalities in American history that still resonate to this day. The BBC's Dan Saladino looks into the origins of this dish and discovers influences from Native Americans, slaves from West Africa, settlers from Nova Scotia, and European immigrants from Spain, France and Italy. Dan tries to track down the perfect recipe for one of Louisiana's most famous dishes, and discover how the politics of which food belongs to whom, is still at play, hundreds of years later.
4.6
240240 ratings
What can one single dish can tell you about America's history? One particular bowl of soup gives us an insight about the future of cultures that convene around it. Gumbo is eaten by nearly everyone in New Orleans, but its past speaks of the deep inequalities in American history that still resonate to this day. The BBC's Dan Saladino looks into the origins of this dish and discovers influences from Native Americans, slaves from West Africa, settlers from Nova Scotia, and European immigrants from Spain, France and Italy. Dan tries to track down the perfect recipe for one of Louisiana's most famous dishes, and discover how the politics of which food belongs to whom, is still at play, hundreds of years later.
5,437 Listeners
7,621 Listeners
525 Listeners
97 Listeners
892 Listeners
155 Listeners
288 Listeners
278 Listeners
1,975 Listeners
1,035 Listeners
235 Listeners
63 Listeners
341 Listeners
608 Listeners
369 Listeners
139 Listeners
321 Listeners
38 Listeners
2,974 Listeners
226 Listeners
83 Listeners
91 Listeners
596 Listeners
1,002 Listeners
2,052 Listeners
531 Listeners
609 Listeners
50 Listeners
120 Listeners
272 Listeners
26 Listeners
78 Listeners
94 Listeners
4 Listeners