Road Hungry

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Food guy, Adam Boles, travels America talking to chefs, farmers, writers, and all kinds of other folks about the world we're inventing together coming out of the pandemic, especially as it relates to food culture, sustainability, food scarcity, and the future of restaurants. All dispatches broadcast from a teardrop camper. New episodes every Thursday.

Adam Boles


    • Jun 23, 2022 LATEST EPISODE
    • monthly NEW EPISODES
    • 1h 19m AVG DURATION
    • 18 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from Road Hungry

    17. Chef Lando (Part 2)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2022 68:45


    Today, I return to my conversation with Chef Lando of Enclave Cafe in San Diego. This is part two, so if you haven't listened to last week's episode, I recommend you start there. This was recorded in the spring at Lando's brand new, 19-acre regenerative farm north of the city that she'd just bought to supply her restaurants and further her “food-as-medicine” mission. Enjoy part two of my conversation with Chef Lando as we finish kicking off the second season of Road Hungry. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

    16. Chef Lando (Part 1)

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2022 68:06


    Today, I talk with Lan Thai, known to most by her nom d'guerre “Chef Lando.” She was born the youngest of five in a Thai refugee camp at the end of the Vietnam War. When her family immigrated to the U.S. a year later, they bought a farm in Southern California where Lando was raised on the food they grew, and that her mother turned into daily feasts for her family. Lando believes that good food isn't just nourishing. When her mother was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer in 2016, Lando knew she could help. She took the skills and values her mother raised her with on the farm, and began to cook. Using a combination of research into medicinal foods and a dogged stubbornness to try and save her mother's life, she helped take a dim prognosis of two months for her mom to live and turned it into two years. Now, Lando has set her sights on the rest of us, believing that what we eat and how we grow it is at the core of healing a sick planet and those of us who live on it. Since 2019, she's opened three locations of Enclave, her farm-to-fork cafes in and around San Diego, and she's just purchased a 19-acre regenerative farm about an hour north of the city to supply them. For Lando, food is medicine, food is art, and food is what's going to save us all. With this episode, I'm doing something I've never done before. When Lando and I talked, we really got into it, and our conversation went way longer than these usually do. Instead of trying to chop it down into a more digestible length, I decided instead to just cut it in half. So this is part one of my conversation with Lando. Part two will drop next week. Seems like a good way to kick off the second season of Road Hungry. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

    15. Chris Bianco

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2022 72:06


    I imagine I might have some new listeners this week, and for that, I'm really grateful. Welcome to the road, and to today's conversation with Chris Bianco, a guy that a lot of people consider the father of the artisan pizza movement in the United States. He's got plenty of awards and accolades to back up that claim, including a current nomination for a James Beard Award as the Best Restauranteur in the country. I've worked in restaurants a long time, and I know what I think makes a great restauranteur. Beyond offering great food and service, a person who's really good at this game is someone who gives a genuine shit about the people they work with. You've heard me say it here before — restaurants at their best are hothouses where little misfit families form. Sometimes that's a trauma response, where everyone bands together to make it through in spite of the hellish conditions and treatment. But when there's real magic at a place, where everyone works together as a team, are there to support each other, that magic usually comes from the top. There's a moment early in the upcoming conversation with Chris where you can hear for yourself exactly what I mean. When I was in Phoenix a few months back, I went to Pizzeria Bianco on a random Tuesday just to say I'd gone. What I found, of course, was an outstanding pizza — like really great. But I also met staff who've worked there for a decade or more. If you know what you're looking for, you can feel the family vibe in a restaurant, especially on a quiet weeknight. You can see them with their guard down a little, how they interact. Pizzeria Bianco — and Chris's white table cloth restaurant Tratto, where I ate after we talked — pulse with that sense of family. I didn't think I'd get to talk to Chris. He's got four restaurants in Phoenix, and it turns out another one on the way this Spring in LA (that I hope I'm still out here for when it opens). He has three young kids, and he, like every other restaurant owner out there, is still battling the effects of a stubborn pandemic that just won't go away, no matter how much we all pretend it has. And he's famous as fuck — people use superlatives like “legend” and “icon” when they talk about him. But Chris doesn't go in for that sort of thing. He's pretty egoless, a bit of a philosopher-chef who embraces easy humility. The conversation you'll hear in a few minutes is a bit of a high watermark for this fledgling little podcast, but not because of Chris's notoriety. He offers himself up without guile or pretense, and we get into some of the territory I'm always hoping my guests will volunteer. He's forthright and thoughtful, and more than anything, he's exactly what he seems — a hardworking guy from the Bronx with a big heart and generous sensibility. Chris Bianco started out in the back of a grocery store in 1988, and spent 20 straight years making every single pizza he ever sold. Despite all the laurels, Chris remains a canny Bronx guy whose priorities begin and end with his family and the people he works with. I hope you enjoy our conversation, and if you like what you hear, please please leave a rating and a review wherever you're listening. If you're new here, please follow and subscribe so you can hear all the great guests I've got coming up. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

    14. Maria Mazon

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2022 79:27


    Today, I talk to chef Maria Mazon, owner of Boca Tacos in Tucson, AZ, and one of the final five competitors on the last season of Bravo's Top Chef. About two weeks ago, she was named as a semifinalist for the 2022 James Beard Award for Best Chef Southwest, an honor that maybe she manifested in small part with a bit of the conversation you're about to hear. Maria is one of the greatest firsthand examples I've encountered of the power and efficacy of living life as your authentic self. She founded Boca Tacos in the wake of personal crisis. She was ending her marriage with the father of her son, not because she didn't love him, but because being married to a man ran fundamentally against her nature. Up to then, she'd been living as the person she thought she should be, unwilling to admit to the world that she's gay. As soon as she began living as the person she is, things changed drastically for her. You can feel that honesty and singular authenticity in her food. She's made a name for herself making tacos, but they are unlike any tacos you've ever had. She's playful when it comes to the flavors she uses. She borrows ingredients from all kinds of other cuisines. And she's always finding new ways to express herself with her food. As will become apparent in a few minutes, I adore Maria Mazon. Maria Mazon grew up straddling the border between Sonora and Arizona, and by extension straddling the values and expectations of her Mexican Catholic upbringing, and the more generationally and culturally liberal communities she found herself part of in the States. She is the embodiment of balance between those two, someone who's found happiness and success by being honest and unafraid in everything she does. Here we are talking in the little tiendita next to her restaurant where she'd just begun selling her homemade Sona Tortillas to the public. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

    13. Frida Silva-Carreira

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2022 73:39


    The third installment of the Odd Duck Almanac, a multivolume cookbook project I spent most of last two years working on, was just released to the world. It's the last in a trilogy featuring stories and recipes from the Odd Duck family of restaurants back in Austin, and I had the great privilege to write and oversee the last two books. While working on it, I had the pleasure of getting to know Frida Silva-Carreira, the leader of the bakery program at Sour Duck Market on Austin's East Side. At just 25 years old, she channeled her drive, ambition, and raw talent into this impressive leadership role. She's featured in one of the main centerpieces of the book, telling her story, and sharing her recipes, including the recipe for her signature conchas. The conversation you're about to hear was originally released back in November as exclusive content for my Patreon subscribers. Now that I've suspended that subscription service for the time being, and the book is available, I thought this would be the perfect time to let the whole world hear from Frida. We talk about her upbringing in Monterrey, Mexico, Kentucky, and Ohio; how she made it up the ladder so quickly in some of Austin's best restaurants; and her experience coming into awareness around her Mexican-American identity during the racial reckoning our country went through in the summer of 2020. If you want to order a copy for yourself, head over to oddduckaustin.com/merch. The two volumes I wrote are both available there — the new Resilience Issue, and last year's At Home Issue. I first met Frida during the initial lockdown of 2020 when I was working on that first Almanac. I was granted special access to the bakery where she tried to teach me and my big awkward hands how to boule sourdough. Go to the Road Hungry Instagram to see a video of her doing it the right way. Here's Frida SIlva-Carreira talking to me last summer at Sour Duck Market in Austin. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

    12. Don Guerra

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2022 73:05


    **While I was putting this episode together, the James Beard Awards semifinalists dropped, and Don, unsurprisingly, is a contender as one of the country's Best Bakers. Congrats, Don, and best of luck! You deserve it, friend!** Today, I talk to baker Don Guerra, founder of the celebrated Barrio Bread in Tucson, AZ. Don's bread is a truly post-colonial fusion of French sourdough technique using heritage grain lines that date back to their introduction in the Sonoran region by Catholic missionary, Father Kino in the 17th century. And it's freakin' delicious. He gave me a few samples after our conversation, and I sat in a parking lot and ate an entire loaf on its own, by myself, without shame. For Don, his heritage is alive in the bread he bakes. He's an Arizona native with Mexican indigenous roots on his father's side, and European lineage on his mother's. He's made it his life's work, not just to bake what Food & Wine magazine recently called the best bread in Arizona, but also to imbue his bread with the history and terroir of the region and his own life. Representation matters to him, and he's proud to stand up as a baker of color and say, this life is for anyone who wants to work hard enough to have it. Don, along with his longstanding farming partnerships, is responsible for bringing several wheat varietals back from the brink of extinction. He has an intimate relationship with his product at every stage. He's involved in the growing, harvesting, and milling of the wheat with which he makes his signature flour blends. He also spends the better part of most days driving the Barrio Bread delivery truck, supplying restaurants and markets all over Tucson with the day's spoils. Don Guerra has the hands of an artist, the drive of a hustler, and the heart of a good teacher — which he was before he started his bakery. In fact, during my time in Tucson, I met, randomly, more than one person who was once a proud student of his. One night, Don and I had dinner together, and two of his now-grown students stopped at our seats to say hi. Connection to his community is more than a talking point for Don. It's his deepest ethic, his way of life. I really enjoyed getting to know him, and I hope you will, too. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

    11. Charleen Badman

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2022 98:41


    Today, I talk to Charleen Badman, chef and owner of the celebrated Scottsdale restaurant, FnB, and winner of the 2019 James Beard Award for Best Chef Southwest. Since COVID, the James Beard Foundation has suspended its awards, making Charleen the most recent recipient of the honor. When we spoke, it just so happened to be the 12th anniversary of the opening of FnB, an occasion she'd marked thus far by spending the morning in her prep kitchen on her day off making food for the next night's service. This is to say, Charleen is always working. She's never left her kitchen, and certainly hasn't let the accolades for her food go to her head. Her soul is on the line, at the expo pass, and these days, on the dining room floor. She's happiest at work, it seems, and it shows in the ever-changing menu at FnB. The night before our conversation, I invited my new friend Silvana, the subject of my last episode, to join me for dinner at FnB. I think we ate almost everything on the menu that night. Charleen's passion is for vegetables. She has a way of making them sing, bringing out what is naturally great about what's fresh and local to the region. The most skilled cooks, in my opinion, know how to stay out of the way of their ingredients, especially if they're as good as what Charleen is able to source. On top of being one the country's best chefs, Charleen is a dedicated gardener. Around the same time she opened FnB, she began working with local schools to build community gardens and promote nutrition with the students. Out of that effort was born the Blue Watermelon Project, a grassroots group of chefs, farmers, educators, and activists who fight for healthy, nutritious food in schools. The Blue Watermelon Project's 4th annual Feed the Future fundraiser will be held February 26th in Phoenix. Students from across Arizona will be there to taste their guests on their school lunch solutions that are delicious, healthy, and cost- and regulation-compliant. All ages are welcome, and there are fun activities for kids, too. Buy tickets or donate at the link on their Instagram profile, @bluewatermelonproject. Seriously, give them some cash if you can. They're trying to save America one kid at a time. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

    10. Silvana Salcido Esparza

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2022 111:13


    I want to bring in a new year of this ongoing journey with a conversation unlike any I've had yet on this podcast. For many, the name Silvana Salicido Esparza is synonymous with the city of Phoenix. She's been a force of nature there for two decades at the helm of her restaurant, Barrio Cafe. Her accolades, including a few fistfuls of James Beard nominations, are too numerous to list here. She's the OG badass behind her comida chingona. She's a pivotal champion of muralists and painters the city over. She's a passionate lowrider enthusiast and restorationist. And she's a forever curious traveler, ethnographer, writer, genealogist, and collector of misfit toys like me. I love this recording so much because, if you listen closely, you can actually hear the moment when we decide to be friends. I think the word “icon” should be specifically reserved for people like Silvana. After I stopped tape on our interview, we spent the rest of the day talking. She showed me her amazing vintage cars, her handwritten family tree, and availed me with more astounding tales of her family and life. I hope I know her forever. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

    9. Jieun Beth Kim

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2021 80:02


    Today's conversation is a really special one to me because I feel like it encapsulates so much of what I hoped this project could do — that is, to dive deep into what makes someone tick, to explore why they do what they do on a level that goes beyond practical concerns. Jieun Beth Kim isn't someone I'd met before. But when we sat down to talk after she fed me the most delicious homemade Korean food, I feel like we found a connection that I hadn't had before during one of these interviews. Beth is the proprietor of Kimchi Rok, an artisan label of various homemade kimchis based on her mother's recipe and technique. Honest to god, it's some of the best kimchi I've ever had. That evening, she incorporated it into a beautiful fried rice dish, and served it as banchan alongside the rest of the feast. She's been selling locally at Austin farmers' markets since late 2020, but she's about to scale into retail and probably take over the planet with it. The other thing Beth is, though, is a brilliant visual artist. We spent a lot of time talking about her art, her process, and about the ideas and conceptions that inspire what she does. It's in that exploration that I think I really found something I've been after since starting this project — a real window into the inner life of a wildly smart and talented person. Jieun Beth Kim, along with her husband David, is the founder and proprietor of Kimchi Rok out of Austin, TX. You can see her artwork, including the works we reference in our talk, at her website, www.jieunbeth.com. She is the exhibit coordinator for Austin Central Library. And, she's a hella good cook. I hope you enjoy our conversation. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

    8. Kate Watters & Mike Knapp

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2021 101:01


    Today, we're trying something a little different. Instead of talking to one interesting person, we're going to speak with two — Kate Watters and her husband, Dr. Mike Knapp, proprietors of Wild Heart Farm in Rimrock, AZ. Kate is a trained botanist and master gardener, and Mike is a naturopath and holistic physician. I met them quite by accident — they listed their farm as a place where a transient camper like myself could post up for a few nights, and something about camping at an organic neighborhood farm felt like exactly the right choice for this project. Beyond being wonderful hosts, they're both great cooks and amazing musicians. We had dinner a few times while I was there, and on more than one occasion, they broke out their guitars and sang in beautiful two-part harmony while I plated our meals. Their farm is an amazing little oasis in the middle of the high desert. They have gardens full of food for themselves, and Kate makes her living growing and selling stunning flower arrangements for all kinds of events. I came to stay with them because I needed a place to stage myself while I found a more permanent spot closer to Sedona. We recorded this conversation almost two months ago, and had dinner together that night. We went shopping in their garden for our ingredients. They made beautiful battered squash blossoms stuffed with queso fresco and herbs. I made a bright and spicy posole verde using their chilis and an herb called pepicha — strong like cilantro, but without the soapiness that apparently only I can taste. After dinner, we sat in the cool autumn evening and recorded this conversation. Forgive the audio here and there — like I said, this was an experiment, and I only have two mics, so they were sharing. If you're a Patreon subscriber, be on the lookout for some bonus content from this episode where they take us on an audio tour of their gardens. I hope you enjoy our conversation as much as I did. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

    7. Douglas Merriam

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2021 85:59


    Happy Thanksgiving! Today, I talk with food and travel photographer Douglas Merriam, author of Farm Fresh Journey: Santa Fe Farmer's Market Cookbook. He's spent his 30-year career traveling the world, shooting for cookbooks, magazines, restaurants, and chefs. He's a happy home gardener and a really accomplished amateur cook. Most of all, Doug is a champion for local foodways. His cookbook is the definition of a labor of love. It took him years to put together, gathering recipes from the farmers and artisans who make much of their livings selling their products at the Santa Fe Farmer's Market. He chose to self-publish the book so that he could control the profit distribution. He gives a percentage of every book sale back to the farmers that appear in its pages. If you want your own copy, you can pick one up at farmfreshjourney.com. I believe the best cookbooks tell a story, that food itself is a narrative of the place and people who make it. Doug's is a beautiful book visually — his photos are stunning — but more than that, he captures the spirit of the people who have been working the land in and around Santa Fe for generations. Douglas Merriam and I met at that farmer's market where he introduced me to Mia, the 12-year-old daughter of Jose, one of the farmers in the book. Jose dresses up as an elf for Christmas every year and spreads a little cheer at the market. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

    6. Ahmed Obo

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2021 69:34


    Today, I talk to beloved Santa Fe chef Ahmed Obo, owner of Jambo Cafe. His restaurant is a love song to his island home of Lamu off the coast of Kenya, and to the journey he's been on since leaving Africa. He went from cooking wild-caught fish for tourists in the channels and inlets around the island to apprenticing under some great chefs in New York and New Mexico before finally opening Jambo in 2009. But there's more to the story he tells with his food than his own experience. He has an instinctual sense of history and how the flavors in a single bite can represent generations or even millennia of cultural evolution. His menu demonstrates an awareness of where the food he grew up with in Kenya comes from, but also how it has migrated away on the currents of time. Lamu is an ancient Swahili trading hub that welcomed merchants from the Middle East, India, and Asia, and later, became a favorite spot for European colonialists from Portugal and then England. Those same colonialists drove a brutal exodus from the continent, and that diaspora brought those flavors with them to other parts of the world like the Caribbean. Curries, spice blends, animal proteins, and cooking techniques share common ancestry, and chef Ahmed brings them all back together in a harmonious confluence of dishes on his menu at Jambo. The hard work Ahmed has put in to realize his success has always been about helping others. Beyond working with a number of local nonprofits in Santa Fe, he founded the Jambo Kids Clinic back in Kenya, and uses the proceeds from Jambo Imports, a retail venture he started to partially fund it. If you'd like to help, you can go to jambokids.org/donate to make your show of support and help some families who need it. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

    5. Jennifer Hwa Dobbertin

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2021 81:44


    Today, I talk to restaurateur Jennifer Hwa Dobbertin, co-owner of Tenko Ramen located in the Pearl food hall, and the new eatery, Best Quality Daughter, which Time Out magazine just named the best restaurant in San Antonio. I had dinner there after we spoke, and it remains one of the best meals I've had since emerging from lockdown. Jen and I talk about throwing grenades at the bygone chapters of our lives, being in the right place for the wrong reasons and vice versa, and the origins of her signature cuisine — a very personal melding of her mom's Chinese cooking, the summers she spent in Taipei around her extended family's hawker stall, and her very Texas-American upbringing. Her food challenges the orthodoxy of the “authentic” that everyone seems to be after these days, telling Sam Sifton in a recent writeup in the New York Times Magazine that the menu at Best Quality Daughter is “authentic to me.” Her restaurant is filled, not only with great food, but also with the original art of friends and collaborators, a lot of which tells the story of the modern Asian-American experience. And if you have any appreciation for the history of San Antonio, the wallpaper in the bar will have you standing staring at the wall, picking out bygone landmarks for longer than might be comfortable for anyone. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

    4. Sheena Moore

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2021 98:46


    Today on the podcast, I talk to my old pal Sheena Moore, founder of Sheena's Pickles, an artisan brand of fermented goodies making waves all over Austin right now. Sheena and I have known each other for years since working together back in the old world as tour guides for Austin Eats Food Tours. Sheena is one of those smart, humble, incredibly funny people who makes you feel comfortable in your own skin when you're around her. The idea of Sheena's Pickles has been around for years — a fact I didn't realize when we talked — but only since the pandemic has the brand reached its current heights. Hers is a study in how to make a side-hustle really thrive. When she first conceived of the business, she decided to get her MBA from the prestigious Macomb School of Business at the University of Texas to see if she could learn enough to make the idea feasible. Not only is she a lovely human, one of my very favorites, but she's a great example of how uncanny and powerful acting in your life toward the manifestation of your dreams can be. When she's not pickling to keep up with her sold-out product-line at Antonelli's Cheese Shop, she works with rockstar academic Dr. Daina Ramey Berry, chair of UT's History Department, and professor of African American Diaspora Studies. Sheena and I talk about what it's like to grow up as an identical twin, how the corporate world nearly crushed her soul, and then we taste a bunch of pickles and cheese. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

    3. Trisha Bates

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2021 71:46


    On today's podcast, I talk to Trisha Bates who goes by the Instagram handle @urbanamericanfarmer. I first got to know Trisha at the beginning of the pandemic when she was a source for a series of articles I wrote about how Austin's small farms were providing for the community when the supermarkets were tanking. Since then, we've stayed on each other's collaborative radar, and I'm grateful to call her a friend. Trisha Bates grew up in rural Illinois, and came to Austin with her two sons a few years back. She's a pollinator, as you'll hear, someone taking wisdom and disseminating it, creating new spaces and uses for it, propagating it and letting it flourish where it can. I hope you enjoy our conversation. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

    2. Rashad Jones

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2021 96:55


    Rashad Jones is the host of the Food Network show, “Eat, Sleep, BBQ,” and is the winner of the Guy Fieri competition, “Guy's Big Project.” He's the owner of Big Lee's, a Texas-style barbecue empire in Ocala, FL. I'm not exaggerating when I say that Rashad makes the best barbecue outside of Texas I've ever had, and his is a damn sight better than a lot of the barbecue I've had in Texas. You'll hear for yourself, but that distinction didn't come easily to him. Just like everything else in his life, he had to work for it, tirelessly, well past the point when most everyone else would've given up. He's the father of four, the lucky husband to Dr. Patrice Dion Jones, and a helluva nice guy. I hope you enjoy our conversation. 
 --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

    1. Callie Speer

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2021 91:14


    Chef Callie Speer is the inaugural interview for the Road Hungry podcast. She and I cover a lot of ground — the meaning of success, how to keep going after a loss, the potholed road out of substance abuse. Callie is whip smart, totally fucking fearless, and funny as hell. That she was my first interview for this project is such a gift. Also in this episode: some updates on my time in New Mexico's Sangre de Cristo Mountains. Callie is a native of Austin, which makes her a unicorn by my reckoning. She's a self-taught pastry chef and successful restauranteur. I hope you enjoy our conversation. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

    0. Welcome to Road Hungry

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2021 12:49


    Welcome to Road Hungry. I'm Adam Boles, a writer, a cook, and now, a resident of nowhere in particular. I'm traveling the country to talk to chefs, farmers, writers, and anyone with an interesting point of view about how the country is changing, about the world we're all living in now, and how those things pertain to the one thing all of have in common -- food. This is a little bit of my story as I depart from Austin, TX. Subscribe for all the interviews to come. I'll see you out there. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

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