
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The history of smoking foods stretches back many years, but when did what began purely for preservation become a highly sought-after flavour? In this episode of The Food Chain, Ruth Alexander explores the origins of smoked foods and finds out why their flavours are so appealing to so many people around the world. She visits a smokehouse run by Michael Price in the port city of Lancaster in north-west England, where he explains the techniques used to flavour a variety of fish, as well as some of the more unusual demands he’s received from chefs. We learn about the science behind smoked flavours from Professor Heather Smyth, a flavour chemist and sensory scientist at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia. And food historian, Professor Ken Albala, walks us through thousands of years of history via a meal prepared using his own home smoker in Stockton, California. We also investigate the impact of EU legislation with the European Food Safety Authority, following a European ban on several smoke flavour additives, and ask what this might mean for the future of smoked foods.
If you would like to get in touch with the show, please email [email protected]
Producers: Sam Clack and Izzy Greenfield
(Image description: racks of fish fillets inside a smoker)
By BBC World Service4.7
325325 ratings
The history of smoking foods stretches back many years, but when did what began purely for preservation become a highly sought-after flavour? In this episode of The Food Chain, Ruth Alexander explores the origins of smoked foods and finds out why their flavours are so appealing to so many people around the world. She visits a smokehouse run by Michael Price in the port city of Lancaster in north-west England, where he explains the techniques used to flavour a variety of fish, as well as some of the more unusual demands he’s received from chefs. We learn about the science behind smoked flavours from Professor Heather Smyth, a flavour chemist and sensory scientist at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia. And food historian, Professor Ken Albala, walks us through thousands of years of history via a meal prepared using his own home smoker in Stockton, California. We also investigate the impact of EU legislation with the European Food Safety Authority, following a European ban on several smoke flavour additives, and ask what this might mean for the future of smoked foods.
If you would like to get in touch with the show, please email [email protected]
Producers: Sam Clack and Izzy Greenfield
(Image description: racks of fish fillets inside a smoker)

7,669 Listeners

883 Listeners

1,049 Listeners

5,528 Listeners

1,795 Listeners

963 Listeners

1,753 Listeners

1,045 Listeners

2,007 Listeners

580 Listeners

91 Listeners

260 Listeners

413 Listeners

80 Listeners

216 Listeners

364 Listeners

78 Listeners

476 Listeners

241 Listeners

136 Listeners

42 Listeners

3,166 Listeners

729 Listeners

1,003 Listeners