82 episodes

A documentary food podcast about what and how we eat.

Produced and hosted by Lucy Dearlove

lecker (German): delicious {adj} [food], tasty {adj}, mouth-watering {adj}

Logo design by Holly Gorne

Lecker Lecker Interviews

    • Arts

Listen on Apple Podcasts
Requires subscription and macOS 11.4 or higher

A documentary food podcast about what and how we eat.

Produced and hosted by Lucy Dearlove

lecker (German): delicious {adj} [food], tasty {adj}, mouth-watering {adj}

Logo design by Holly Gorne

Listen on Apple Podcasts
Requires subscription and macOS 11.4 or higher

    The Terroir of Aubergines with N.S. Nuseibeh

    The Terroir of Aubergines with N.S. Nuseibeh

    Welcome back to the Lecker Book Club. Every month I’ll pick a newly released food related book and talk to the author about the process of writing it.

    This month: Namesake: Reflections on a Warrior Woman by N.S. Nuseibeh.

    Namesake is a collection of essays exploring what it means to be a young, secular Muslim woman today, told through the lens of stories of the author's ancestor, Nusaybah, the only woman warrior to have fought alongside the Prophet.

    N. S. Nuseibeh is a British Palestinian writer and researcher, born and raised in East Jerusalem. In Namesake, she weaves her own experiences of anxiety, of racism, of joy, of illness, of cooking in shared houses, of aubergines, with the myths and legends told of her ancestor. All of this makes this a book that I think should be required reading for everyone.

    You can find a transcript for this episode at leckerpodcast.com.

    Namesake is out now, published by Canongate. Find all of the Lecker Book Club reads on my Bookshop.org list.

    This month, all the revenue I would normally get from  Patreon, Apple Podcasts and Substack will be donated to mutual aid requests from Gazan people on Operation Olive Branch. If you would like to make your own donation, send me a screenshot and I'll comp you a subscription.

    Music is by Blue Dot Sessions.

    • 44 min
    Hands On

    Hands On

    A reflection on learning – and teaching – the fermented arts at the School of Artisan Food.

    You can find a transcript for this episode at leckerpodcast.com.

    Support Lecker by becoming a paid subscriber on Patreon, Apple Podcasts and now on Substack.

    You can buy zines on BigCartel. You can also order print-on-demand merch at Teemill.

    Music is by Blue Dot Sessions.

    This ep isn't sponsored but I was invited to attend the school for free at the press day Thanks to the School of Artisan Food for hosting us. Special thanks to Martha Brown, Sally Ann Hunt and Kevan Roberts for the mini workshops (and the lunch) and to Alison Swan Parente for being part of this episode. Thanks to Emily Leary for all her work in getting us all there.

    • 46 min
    Scraps 02: Whoosh Whoosh Beep Beep

    Scraps 02: Whoosh Whoosh Beep Beep

    Scraps is a new monthly Lecker essay series for subscribers! Thanks for being here.

    I recently did a 10 minute talk at Interesting24, a conference organised by Russell Davies where 10 people do short talks about interesting things. I had such a good time at the event, despite it being super nerve-wracking and really enjoyed hearing people talk about taps, compost, pensions and many other fascinating topics.

    The event wasn’t recorded but I’m recreating my talk (fairly) faithfully for you here. I did actually record myself practising it the morning of the event and I was going to share that version but it featured me telling off my dog in the middle because i could hear her licking the cereal bowl I’d left in the living room. So here is a slightly cleaner version for you, hope you enjoy. And thanks to Russell for having me and everyone in the room for being such generous listeners and clappers.

    Edition 01 was a written essay on Substack and Patreon but this is an audio essay, and I'll endeavour to make all future written essays available as audio versions for paid Apple subscribers.

    Against Food as a Benign Good with Lottie Hazell

    Against Food as a Benign Good with Lottie Hazell

    Welcome back to the Lecker Book Club. Every month I’ll pick a newly released food related book and talk to the author about the process of writing it. I’ll also be writing about it on Substack and Patreon. Join me there as well!

    This month: Piglet by Lottie Hazell.

    I first came across Lottie’s writing when she contributed to the first Lecker zine I curated and published in 2019: Plum Jam, a piece of short fiction about a funeral, an underset blancmange and a broken tooth. I still remember how the piece unsettled me, placing complicated family relationships alongside difficult or reluctant pleasure derived from feeding others; or being fed by others. Her debut novel, Piglet, came out earlier this year and its writing is deeply rooted in what food can mean to us: physically, emotionally and socially.

    I loved talking to Lottie about Piglet so much! As you’ll hear me tell her in the episode, it was such an interesting experience to encounter such luscious, detailed writing about food in a fictional setting, particularly set alongside scenes of such discomfort. The book made me squirm, in a really intriguing way and I loved how the dishes and tablescapes Piglet makes and consumes dressed the set of her home and work lives.

    Heads up that if you haven’t read the book, we do talk about specific plot points in it so if you’d prefer to be spoiler free, go and read it first! And the book does touch on themes of body image, weight and some implied references to disordered eating, so if those topics are sensitive to you please take care.

    You can find a transcript for this episode at leckerpodcast.com.

    Piglet is out now, published by Doubleday. Find all of the Lecker Book Club reads on my Bookshop.org list.

    Buy a copy of either/both of the Lecker zines on BigCartel. You can also order print-on-demand merch at Teemill.

    Support Lecker by becoming a paid subscriber on Patreon, Apple Podcasts and now on Substack.

    Music is by Blue Dot Sessions.

    I'm speaking at Interesting24 on 15th May at Conway Hall in London! Buy a ticket to come and watch me talk about kitchens.

    • 45 min
    Convenience (Food) with a Conscience with Dabba Drop (Out of the Box #3)

    Convenience (Food) with a Conscience with Dabba Drop (Out of the Box #3)

    Welcome back to Out of the Box, an audio exploration of what surrounds our food. That is, the containers and packaging in which it enters our lives. In this series, I'm talking to people who have taken an interesting and innovative approach to packaging what they cook and produce, as well as exploring some of the broader context around the history of particular food packaging, as well as obviously waste, and the impact that packaging has on our environment.

    Takeaways are a huge part of our food culture here in the UK. Since I was a kid, getting a pizza, or a parmo, or a chicken tikka masala in pila rice, or sweet and sour chicken balls, or what was known locally as a family pack, that I realised later was simply an enormous kebab, has been a part of the English food in my life, as much as scones, or shepherd's pie, or gammon and pineapple.

    And I want to stress that this isn't something that I think we should feel shame or guilt around, unlike how the British media sometimes seems to want us to. But the thing that does make me uncomfortable. is what's left after the takeaway has been devoured. These days, rather than the polystyrene tubs, it's often lidded plastic containers, technically reusable, though I suspect they aren't always used as such, or paper boxes and bags, but the problem is that takeaway packaging has to be durable in order to transport the food to us in good temperature and condition, and that isn't always compatible with an option that's easily biodegradable.

    And often takeaway food is cheap, which is part of the appeal, and it's not seen as an option to raise the price to take into account more expensive, environmentally friendly packaging. I think part of the problem is that actually, with the volume in which takeaways are produced and distributed in this country, there's No one use packaging is entirely sustainable, and this is a thought process that led me to Dabba Drop.

    I've been aware of Dabba Drop for a while, though have never actually had the chance to try their food. The company was founded in 2018 by Renee and Anshu, who wanted to offer something different on the takeaway market. Dabba, quite literally, means box. Filled with delicious dishes, these stacked dabbas are delivered around London by pushbike, e-bike or zero emission vehicles. And the same riders and drivers collect the emptied dabbas the next time around, to return to be washed and filled again.

    I met Renee and Anshu at the Dabba Drop offices in East London to talk about packaging, dishes, and the original inspiration for the model: the dabba walas of Mumbai.

    Reinventing the Milk Bottle with Abel & Cole (Out of the Box #2)

    Reinventing the Milk Bottle with Abel & Cole (Out of the Box #2)

    Welcome back to Out of the Box, an exploration of what surrounds our food. That is, the containers and packaging that it enters our lives in. In this series, I'm talking to people who have taken an interesting and innovative approach to packaging what they cook and produce, as well as exploring some of the broader context around the history of particular food packaging, as well as, obviously, waste and the impact that food packaging has on our environment.

    I'm back after a couple of months break to rest and recuperate, and while I was away, I have some really interesting conversations about packaging that I'm excited to bring to you. One of the types of packaging I feel like I'm confronted with most physically in my own home is milk bottles. Even though there's only two of us in my household, I feel like the plastic really just piles up.

    I obviously recycle the bottles, but It feels like there's a better way. Shouldn't we be going back to the milk rounds of yore? As soon as I started researching this topic, I very quickly started getting some very well targeted Instagram ads for Abel & Cole and their Club Zero milk delivery service.

    Club Zero is actually a branch of Abel and Cole's business that applies to over a hundred products which, like Abel and Cole's veg boxes, can be delivered to your front door in pre filled packaging and you simply leave it out the next week to be returned along with your box. They're now delivering milk to thousands of people in refillable, returnable containers.

    But it turns out it was a pretty complicated process to get to this point. I met Abel and Cole's sustainability lead Hugo Lynch, who has been a major part of launching Club Zero, to talk about all of this and some of the backstory. as well as the challenges of rethinking milk packaging in this way. We were also in the room with Holly Bradley, Abel and Cole's PR manager, who along with Hugo, had very kindly rescued me from the riverbank path when I couldn't follow a series of very simple directions to their HQ in Wimbledon.

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