
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Certain foods are named for the places they come from, but many foods acquire place-based names for quite different reasons. This episode peels back the layers of that oh-so-Canadian treat, the Nanaimo Bar. Lenore Newman fills us in on his history and heritage, while also commenting on the quasi-luxury that the dessert represented in past, and maybe still does. Sandwiching this exploration, Alexia Moyer tells us about the iconic French pastry, the Paris-Brest, and Julia Mitchell responds to Lenore’s article, “Notes from the Nanaimo Bar Trail.”
Guests:
Alexia Moyer is co-Managing Editor of Canadian Food Studies and a founding member of the editorial collective, red line-ligne rouge, based in Montreal.
Lenore Newman is a professor in the department of Planning, Geography, and Environmental Studies at the University of the Fraser Valley, as well as Director of its Food and Agriculture Institute.
Julia Mitchell is a master student in arts and communication at Carleton University, exploring the use of French terminology on English-language menus.
Mentioned in this episode:
- Speaking in Cod Tongues by Lenore Newman
- La Poutine by Geneviève Sicotte
- Paris-Brest (pastry)
- “But is it Authentic?” by Lisa Heldke
Credits:
Host/Producer: David Szanto
Executive Producers: Rachel Engler-Stringer, Laurence Godin, Charles Levkoe, Phil Loring, Kristen Lowitt
Audio consultant: Zélie Scherrer
Music: Alex Guz and Evgeny Bardyuzha on Pixabay
Sound Effects: Aviana_Phoenix and BenKirb and freesound_community on Pixabay
Photo: Joy (CC-BY 2.0, no changes made)
#DigestingFoodStudies
Digesting Food Studies is funded in part by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, Lakehead University, and the Canadian Association for Food Studies.
By Canadian Food Studies/La Revue canadienne des études sur l'alimentationCertain foods are named for the places they come from, but many foods acquire place-based names for quite different reasons. This episode peels back the layers of that oh-so-Canadian treat, the Nanaimo Bar. Lenore Newman fills us in on his history and heritage, while also commenting on the quasi-luxury that the dessert represented in past, and maybe still does. Sandwiching this exploration, Alexia Moyer tells us about the iconic French pastry, the Paris-Brest, and Julia Mitchell responds to Lenore’s article, “Notes from the Nanaimo Bar Trail.”
Guests:
Alexia Moyer is co-Managing Editor of Canadian Food Studies and a founding member of the editorial collective, red line-ligne rouge, based in Montreal.
Lenore Newman is a professor in the department of Planning, Geography, and Environmental Studies at the University of the Fraser Valley, as well as Director of its Food and Agriculture Institute.
Julia Mitchell is a master student in arts and communication at Carleton University, exploring the use of French terminology on English-language menus.
Mentioned in this episode:
- Speaking in Cod Tongues by Lenore Newman
- La Poutine by Geneviève Sicotte
- Paris-Brest (pastry)
- “But is it Authentic?” by Lisa Heldke
Credits:
Host/Producer: David Szanto
Executive Producers: Rachel Engler-Stringer, Laurence Godin, Charles Levkoe, Phil Loring, Kristen Lowitt
Audio consultant: Zélie Scherrer
Music: Alex Guz and Evgeny Bardyuzha on Pixabay
Sound Effects: Aviana_Phoenix and BenKirb and freesound_community on Pixabay
Photo: Joy (CC-BY 2.0, no changes made)
#DigestingFoodStudies
Digesting Food Studies is funded in part by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, Lakehead University, and the Canadian Association for Food Studies.