
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Imagine, for a moment, a world without garlic: garlic-free garlic bread, tzatziki sans Allium sativum, a chili crisp defanged. If this sounds like the makings of a horror story to you, you’re not alone. Garlic consumption in the U.S. has quadrupled since 1980, and people around the world have been enjoying the stuff for thousands of years. But alliums smell like sulfur, and sulfur is something humans are born *not* liking—so why did we start adding garlic, onions, and their kin to our food? This episode, we join microbiologist Rob Dunn and food safety specialist Ben Chapman to follow along as they conduct the world's first experiment designed to figure out whether alliums started out as a food safety additive designed to keep our lamb stew safe for longer, and only later turned into a flavor we crave. Plus, why did the British government send garlic to the trenches in WWI? What do fetal sniffing, Egyptian fertility tests, Korean mythology, and the world’s first-recorded labor strike have to do with the stinking rose? Listen in now for all this and more!
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
By Cynthia Graber and Nicola Twilley4.7
35353,535 ratings
Imagine, for a moment, a world without garlic: garlic-free garlic bread, tzatziki sans Allium sativum, a chili crisp defanged. If this sounds like the makings of a horror story to you, you’re not alone. Garlic consumption in the U.S. has quadrupled since 1980, and people around the world have been enjoying the stuff for thousands of years. But alliums smell like sulfur, and sulfur is something humans are born *not* liking—so why did we start adding garlic, onions, and their kin to our food? This episode, we join microbiologist Rob Dunn and food safety specialist Ben Chapman to follow along as they conduct the world's first experiment designed to figure out whether alliums started out as a food safety additive designed to keep our lamb stew safe for longer, and only later turned into a flavor we crave. Plus, why did the British government send garlic to the trenches in WWI? What do fetal sniffing, Egyptian fertility tests, Korean mythology, and the world’s first-recorded labor strike have to do with the stinking rose? Listen in now for all this and more!
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

91,306 Listeners

43,857 Listeners

26,233 Listeners

2,536 Listeners

7,888 Listeners

10,752 Listeners

2,677 Listeners

9,732 Listeners

3,094 Listeners

3,930 Listeners

1,109 Listeners

375 Listeners

3,142 Listeners

12,133 Listeners

3,026 Listeners

2,239 Listeners

1,485 Listeners

24,593 Listeners

3,563 Listeners

2,164 Listeners

42 Listeners

23,563 Listeners

4,831 Listeners

737 Listeners

6,489 Listeners

2,306 Listeners

1,217 Listeners

150 Listeners

1,789 Listeners

1,475 Listeners

430 Listeners

36 Listeners