Podcasts about homa dashtaki

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Best podcasts about homa dashtaki

Latest podcast episodes about homa dashtaki

Modern Persian Food
Navigating Identity through the Art of Persian Cooking, A Conversation with Author Homa Dashtaki

Modern Persian Food

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2023 24:27


Join us for a compelling conversation with author Homa Dashtaki, who takes us on a journey through her nine-year process of writing her book, Yogurt & Whey: Recipes of an Iranian Immigrant Life. The dialogue is rich with insights about food as a language and a tool to make sense of our identities and our place in this world. We are mesmerized by her tale of using her culinary heritage to navigate her Iranian history and to find her sense of belonging in America.    In this episode, we also get a taste of Persian cuisine as Homa contrasts yogurt and whey, teaching us about kefir and the art of making homemade yogurt. We explore the special place of yogurt in Middle Eastern cuisine and the important role of liquid whey in these dishes. We also learn about the significance of paying homage to culture when discussing food, a theme that resonates throughout our conversation.   Lastly, we uncover the unique aspects of traditional Iranian cuisine as we learn about the process of making kashk, a form of fermented yogurt. We discuss how this practice is used in preserving milk and extending its shelf life. We also touch on the White Mustache, a yogurt company started by Homa and her father, and the original recipes inspired by traditional Persian flavors. This episode is a tasty ride through Persian cuisine, cooking methods, and the importance of food in shaping our identities. Listen in and be prepared to be inspired and, of course, hungry!   https://homadashtaki.com/yogurt-whey-book/ https://whitemoustache.com/   All Modern Persian Food podcast episodes can be found at: Episodes   Sign up for the email newsletter here!   Subscribe+ to the Modern Persian Food podcast on your favorite podcast player, and share this episode with a friend.   Podcast production by Alvarez Audio

Christopher Kimball’s Milk Street Radio
Salmon Wars: The Dark Underbelly of Our Favorite Fish

Christopher Kimball’s Milk Street Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2023 50:43


Investigative journalists Doug Frantz and Catherine Collins take us inside the farmed salmon industry to explore the open net pens, health effects and future of America's favorite fish. Plus, Homa Dashtaki shares the traditional Iranian method for making creamy old-world yogurt; Dan Pashman invites us to a picnic; and we make Thai hot and sour soup.Get the recipe for Thai Hot and Sour Soup with Chicken and Mushrooms here.Take the Milk Street Listener Survey here.We want to hear your culinary tips! Share your cooking hacks, secret ingredients or unexpected techniques with us for a chance to hear yourself on Milk Street Radio! Here's how: https://www.177milkstreet.com/radiotipsListen to Milk Street Radio on: Apple Podcasts | Stitcher | Spotify. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Cooking Issues with Dave Arnold
Homa Dashtaki of The White Moustache Yogurt

Cooking Issues with Dave Arnold

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2023 64:40


Homa Dashtaki of The White Moustache Yogurt Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Good Food
The Pie Contest returns, Parsi food and pantry cooking

Good Food

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2023 56:56


After a three-year, in-person hiatus, KCRW's Good Food PieFest & Contest returns — with a vengeance. Claire Saffitz answers the most burning after-dinner question with a new cookbook. Noah Galuten opens the cupboard and looks at pantry staples with fresh eyes. Reclaiming her identity, Homa Dashtaki abandons a legal career to make yogurt. Chef Farokh Talati explores his Parsi roots in his first cookbook. Finally, Alex Weiser brings fingerling potatoes to Santa Monica Farmers Market and chef Chuy Cervantes of Damian puts them to work.

cooking contest reclaiming pantry kcrw parsi claire saffitz homa dashtaki santa monica farmers market
Lunch Therapy
Whey Pancakes with Homa Dashtaki

Lunch Therapy

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2023 50:09


Today's guest, Homa Dashtaki, is the co-founder (along with her father) of The White Mustache yogurt, some of the most celebrated yogurt in the country. She's also the author of a brand new cookbook called Yogurt & Whey (coming out March 5th) that gives away her signature yogurt recipe as well as all of the things you can make with the yogurt itself and the whey, including these out-of-this-world whey pancakes which are seriously the best pancakes I've ever eaten (go to amateurgourmet.com for the recipe!). In today's talk, we cover the genesis of Homa's business, what it's like working with her father, how she went from selling yogurt at farmer's markets to having it in stores, and what the process actually is for making yogurt. We also learn about the legal battles she fought in order to make yogurt with her hands as opposed to machines, the food that she loves the most when she visits Iran, and her favorite thing to do with labneh. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

In the Sauce
Women Makers: Raising the Bar (LIVE at Whole Foods Market Tribeca)

In the Sauce

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2020 63:50


In this special live episode of In The Sauce - Ali  joins Whole Foods Market Tribeca to celebrate women makers across the country who raise the bar! Recorded on February 27th, 2020: We hear from a diverse group of women how they have overcome adversity to create products we love. Our panelists include: Maria Loi of Loi, Pooja Bavishi of Malai, Homa Dashtaki of White Moustache, Essie Bartels of Essiespice,  and  Janie Deegan of Janie’s Life-Changing Baked Goods.In The Sauce is powered by Simplecast.  

Liz and Alissa Make Stuff
Ep 53 - Liz and Alissa Answer Your Burning Questions! (It's our party, we can release a week late if we want to)

Liz and Alissa Make Stuff

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2019 72:59


Happy second birthday to us! That's right, this podcast is entering it's terrible two's and in classic toddler fashion it has become incredibly temperamental and impossible to reason with. We encountered some technical difficulties the first time we did this so you are listening to take two (itself not free from tech issues, unfortunately) and we are answering some of you, our listeners, most pressing questions! We are giving you all the mildly interesting details about how we pick a show topic, what we wish we could buy at Trader Joe's, what our favorite episode was and so much more! The Birthday Gurl 6 apricots, chopped and pitted 1 pint raspberries 1 pint strawberries, sliced 1 ripe mango, peeled and diced 1 lime, sliced 1/4 cup sugar 3/4 cup ruby red grapefruit juice 1/4 cup elderflower liquor 2 bottles of rosé In a large pitcher, combine all the fruit and the sugar and muddle well. Add the juice, wine and liquor. Stir and refrigerate for several hours before serving. Serve on ice and top with seltzer if desired. Links   Yogurt maker Homa Dashtaki shows dedication and respect for whey Serious Eats fried Chicken Moral Orel clip Drawn episode Linen pants from Old Navy Pork dumplings   Double Deuce episodes Ep 184 Ep 185 For more pictures, visit us on Instagram and Facebook. Join our Facebook group, Liz and Alissa Made Me Make It and show us what you're making! Hey! Give us a call and tell us something awesome! (818) 697-6249 or 818 NY Sob Gy :) Theme song: The Show Must Be Go Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

The Splendid Table
One Cook's Trash...

The Splendid Table

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2019 49:39


Listen on: Apple Podcasts | Stitcher | Google Podcasts | Spotify | Pandora We're looking at trash from all different angles. Chef Abra Berens, author of Ruffage, rifles through Francis's kitchen to show him the missed opportunities. Visit with Homa Dashtaki of The White Moustache, a yogurt company based in Brooklyn. Homa is determined to turn her yogurt-making waste, whey, into the next kombucha. We discover why the French can't quite grasp the doggie bag. And, America's Test Kitchen recommends their favorite reusable items including storage bags, kitchen wrap, and more. Broadcast dates for this episode: May 31, 2019

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In the Sauce
Episode 25: Building Consciously

In the Sauce

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2019 47:27


Homa Dashtaki is the Founder of White Moustache, a yogurt company with a cult-like following and a waitlist of over thirty retailers. On this episode of In the Sauce, Homa and Ali talk about authenticity and scale: Can they coexist? What gets sacrificed when you grow? What about when you don't grow? And again...how it always comes back to an amazing product. Photo Courtesy of Nicole Franzen In The Sauce is powered by Simplecast.

Special Sauce with Ed Levine
Special Sauce: The White Moustache’s Homa Dashtaki on Staying Small and Flourishing [2/2]

Special Sauce with Ed Levine

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2019 29:49


On this week’s Special Sauce I continue my delightful conversation with The White Moustache founder Homa Dashtaki. I asked her how she makes her sinfully rich yogurt. Homa said, "There's nothing I'm doing different than the way I would teach you how to do it at home. And you can make White Moustache yogurt at home, and it's a very magical process, but it's so, so simple. It's just a matter of boiling the milk, letting the milk cool to a certain temperature, and then very mildly letting it incubate. And we are now making yogurt in a vat, in a 79-gallon vat, and we just mimic that process." She paused before continuing: "And in that vat is the only time that machinery is ever used. It is entirely handled by human hands after that. We take it out of the vat in five-gallon batches, and then it goes into 2 1/2-gallon batches, and then it gets put into an eight-ounce jar, where we put the fruit in on the bottom by hand. And our seasonal flavors of like summer peaches and quince are so much fun to make, and we try to make them as authentically as possible. And this is where my dad and I are screaming at each other, 'Yeah, peel the peaches!' 'No, don't peel the peaches! Leave the skin on.'" Homa and her father often argue about whether to automate their production, which led her to talk about what her ultimate goal was, which I found surprising. "White Moustache was such a miracle to begin with," Homa says. "Maybe we hold onto that, maybe we're not a food business, maybe we're an advocacy business. Maybe we kind of set an example for how you don't have to get really big and sell to PepsiCo. Maybe you can stay small and flourish." Who or what determines what’s going to happen to White Moustache? Homa suggests it's not up to her or her dad. But for the full answer to that question, you’re going to have to listen. --- The full transcript for this episode can be found over here at Serious Eats: https://www.seriouseats.com/2019/01/special-sauce-homa-dashtaki-2-2.html

Special Sauce with Ed Levine
Special Sauce: The White Moustache’s Homa Dashtaki Makes the Best Yogurt in the US [1/2]

Special Sauce with Ed Levine

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2019 34:34


I have a confession: Until Daniel Gritzer told me about The White Moustache a couple of months ago, I 'd never heard of it, much less its founder, Homa Dashtaki. Now, after interviewing Homa and trying her yogurt, I can tell you that Daniel was right when he said it would change my life. First of all, the yogurt is so tasty, so thick and creamy, that I can't think of a reason not to eat some every day (which I've done ever since first trying it). Secondly, Homa is a force of nature, someone whose point of view and story might be better than her ridiculously good yogurt, as you'll find out in her two episodes of Special Sauce. Homa even arrived on this earth in dramatic fashion. "I was born the day of the Iranian Revolution," she tells me. "So the day that the Ayatollah arrived in Iran I was born, and my mom had to go to the hospital in a police escort because there was a curfew, and that's probably why I'm so wired to like chaos all around me." After emigrating as a child to Orange County, she ended up going to law school and, yes, practicing corporate law for a while. Why? "Oh, I loved the whole idea of it. You would tell me what you wanted, you'd put down on paper, everything would be clear," she recalls. "And I remember when I first found out about prenups, I remember everyone was very negative about them. I'm like, 'How wonderful! When you're getting into this really intense relationship that everyone would just be above board, you either know how great it's gonna be, or how fucked you're gonna be. It's all laid out.'" Her legal career was cut short after she was laid off from her firm. And, after a period of self-described drifting, she found herself drawn to one of the foods that was a staple of her childhood. "We picked making yogurt because to me it was easy, I was being lazy about it," she says. "I'm like, 'There's only one ingredient, milk, right? Now how hard can this be?'" It turned out that Homa fell in love with making yogurt. "I don't know if you've ever made yogurt at home, but it's a very magical process," she observes. "It's almost like you step into a time portal, and you have to slow down time. In order for your yogurt to take, it has to be coddled. You have to boil the milk, and you have to get it to the right temperature. That's actually no easy task. You have to pay attention to the milk, you can't just set it and forget it." She and her father started out making small batches- eight gallons to be exact- of yogurt overnight at a nearby Egyptian restaurant and selling it at a farmers market in Orange County. She was in heaven, until the state of California shut her down. "I had finally found something that was truly my own, and it felt so- I know it sounds cliché and it sounds cheesy- but it was so authentic, and I was so lost, that to have this thing ripped away from me felt so incredibly unfair," she recalls. "And I just fought back after weeping for days. I mean, it was like somebody had ripped something away from me." To find out how she got her yogurt groove back, you're just going to have to listen to Homa tell the story herself on Special Sauce. It's definitely a story you won't want to miss. ---  The full transcript for this episode can be found over here at Serious Eats: https://www.seriouseats.com/2019/01/special-sauce-homa-dashtaki-1.html  

Cutting the Curd
Episode 327: Yogurt the Right Whey

Cutting the Curd

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2018 42:52


What’s the deal with whey? Homa Dashtaki, founder of White Moustache Yogurt, joins host Greg Blais to discuss the often forgotten byproduct of cheese and yogurt production. Cutting the Curd is powered by Simplecast

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Speaking Broadly
Episode 38: Homa Dashtaki: Advocating for Artisan Makers' Micro-Economy

Speaking Broadly

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2017 49:50


A desire to spend "frivolous" time with her father led Iranian-born Homa Dashtaki to make yogurt the long, slow way. While talking and sharing stories, they turned just two ingredients into a sublime, handmade product, White Moustache, that immediately found a following. Recently, the company launched in LA's Eataly, where she continues to make small batch, old world yogurt. On this episode of Speaking Broadly, Dashtaki talks about the power of "making your art," of finding a like-minded community to support and inspire you, and of the rewards of working with family. Speaking Broadly is powered by Simplecast

Why Food?
Episode 12: The Dairy Queen from Wall Street - with Homa Dashtaki of the White Moustache

Why Food?

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2016 43:43


Homa Dashtaki is the owner of The White Moustache, a coveted New York producer of both Persian and Greek style yoghurts, labneh and whey probiotic drinks. Homa started the company with her father after she was laid off from her Wall Street job during the 2008 recession. This is a story of perseverance - The White Moustache encountered so many hurdles during its infancy which would cause most business owners to give up but Homa was determined the business would succeed.

Radio Cherry Bombe
The White Moustache

Radio Cherry Bombe

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2015 20:09


The White Moustache’s Homa Dashtaki sits down with Cherry Bombe’s Claudia Wu to talk about how she went from California lawyer to New York cult yogurt maker. With flavors inspired by her Persian roots and techniques learned from her yogurt making (and white mustached) father, Dashtaki makes each batch lovingly by hand in Red Hook, Brooklyn. She’s recently expanded the business and launched a line of whey drinks, making use of the byproducts of yogurt manufacturing. Tune in to hear her story. “Dairy is highly, highly regulated…and the attitude in every other place, besides Brooklyn, was we’re gonna shut you down.” [5:00] “Every yogurt maker plays different music [to their yogurt]…I know I sound a little crazy but it’s a live product, it’s a living creation.” [11:00] “Keep your ear to the belly of the beast that is your project, it’s going to tell you the way to go…authenticity is the most important thing.” [16:00] —Homa Dashtaki on Radio Cherry Bomb

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Cutting the Curd
Episode 126: The White Moustache [Yogurt]

Cutting the Curd

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2013 31:24


Anne Saxelby is back on Cutting the Curd! Though broadcasting at a brand new time (Friday’s at 4:00pm), it’s same cheesy show! This week’s guest is Homa Dashtaki of The White Moustache, a father/daughter business that produces yogurt made by local milk from the Brougiere Farm Fresh Dairy. They use only whole milk and a yogurt base, taken from a previous batch of yogurt which makes really thick all natural creamy yogurt. Hear about some of the challenges they face as a small dairy producer in terms of regulations and permits and discover why their yogurt-making process ensures that the final product is as natural and delicious as possible! This program was sponsored by Whole Foods Market. “This tiny little seed of an idea that’s been there in our back pocket is taking off like a runaway train!” [4:00] “This has given me an opportunity to connect with my folks as people and collaborate on something that’s outside of the dynamic we have.” [7:00] –Homa Dashtaki from The White Moustache on Cutting the Curd

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