
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Many dishes have become famous national symbols both at home and abroad, for example Italian pizza, or British fish and chips.
Whilst such dishes can create a sense of unity and identity, they can also be used to fuel nationalism, or to push a political agenda.
In this edition of The Food Chain, Izzy Greenfield hears the stories behind some of the most famous national foods, some based more on myth or marketing than historical fact.
She speaks to Anya Von Bremzen, author of 'National Dish', in which Anya investigates the origins of foods such as Italian pizza, Japanese noodles, Spanish tapas and Mexican tortillas. The Secretary of the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage at UNESCO, Tim Curtis, explains why some dishes are recognised for the community practices that surround them. Andrew Crook, President of the National Federation of Fish Fryers in the UK, and food historian Professor Panikos Panayi from DeMontfort University in Leicester, England, explain the complex history behind fish and chips.
If you would like to get in touch with the programme, email [email protected]
Presented by Izzy Greenfield.
(Image:takeaway fish and chips with a union jack flag on a cocktail stick. Credit: BBC)
4.7
319319 ratings
Many dishes have become famous national symbols both at home and abroad, for example Italian pizza, or British fish and chips.
Whilst such dishes can create a sense of unity and identity, they can also be used to fuel nationalism, or to push a political agenda.
In this edition of The Food Chain, Izzy Greenfield hears the stories behind some of the most famous national foods, some based more on myth or marketing than historical fact.
She speaks to Anya Von Bremzen, author of 'National Dish', in which Anya investigates the origins of foods such as Italian pizza, Japanese noodles, Spanish tapas and Mexican tortillas. The Secretary of the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage at UNESCO, Tim Curtis, explains why some dishes are recognised for the community practices that surround them. Andrew Crook, President of the National Federation of Fish Fryers in the UK, and food historian Professor Panikos Panayi from DeMontfort University in Leicester, England, explain the complex history behind fish and chips.
If you would like to get in touch with the programme, email [email protected]
Presented by Izzy Greenfield.
(Image:takeaway fish and chips with a union jack flag on a cocktail stick. Credit: BBC)
5,421 Listeners
1,812 Listeners
7,665 Listeners
85 Listeners
1,739 Listeners
1,075 Listeners
94 Listeners
893 Listeners
585 Listeners
272 Listeners
2,065 Listeners
1,045 Listeners
838 Listeners
355 Listeners
66 Listeners
399 Listeners
758 Listeners
477 Listeners
243 Listeners
136 Listeners
4,169 Listeners
41 Listeners
2,972 Listeners
35 Listeners