Bad Table Manners

Bad Table Manners

Bad Table Manners pushes the boundaries of food storytelling in South Asia. Despite a universal love of delicious food, South Asian communities’ narratives and food practices maintain social hierarchies, caste inequalities, and racial and gender discrimination. In spanning both “high” and “low” food cultures, this podcast deconstructs monolithic notions of South Asian or “Indian” food by diving into micro contexts of households, restaurants, neighborhoods, streets and communities. It also reveals how hyper-regional and local culinary expressions are shaped by global gastronomic histories and trends. Hosted by Delhi-based anthropologist Meher Varma, Bad Table Manners is narrator-driven, ethnographic, and playful. It will take you to the seaside, through bustling markets, and the intimacy of the kitchen table in private homes. It reminds you that when good table manners are tossed, great conversation begins. Bad Table Manners is part of Whetstone Radio Collective. Whetstone Radio Collective creates storytelling dedicated to food origins and culture, with original content centering the perspectives of global majority populations and diasporas. You can learn more about this podcast at whetstoneradio.com, on Twitter @whetstoneradio, on TikTok and Instagram @whetstonemedia and subscribe to our Spotify and YouTube channel, Whetstone Media, for more podcast content. You can learn more about all things happening at Whetstone at WhetstoneMedia.com.

Episodes

  1. Ripples and Tipples: How Partition Changed Indian Food

    09/02/2022

    Ripples and Tipples: How Partition Changed Indian Food

    In 1947, the British finally left India after 300 years of colonial rule. They created many arbitrary borders as they left, the most prominent of which was the line that was to separate India from Pakistan. The aftermath of this divide resulted in the greatest migration in human history, as millions made their way across hundreds of miles in the hope of creating new homes. The impact of this critical event is mirrored in what has become known as Delhi’s food culture, both at home and abroad. The well-known food historian Anoothi Vishal reminds us how partition lives on in India’s capital, while Jonathan Nunn, editor of the shape-shifting newsletter Vittles, shows us how the event created ripples in the imperial city of London. Partition transformed “Indian food,” in both colony and empire, and still shows its effects in new Indian restaurants today. Topics covered in this episode: Min 0:00: What is Partition? Min 1:35: Meet Meher’s grand-aunt, Jeeti Nani Min 2:30: Meet Anoothi Vishal Min 3:42: From Mughlai cuisine to a dominant Punjabi cuisine Min 8:31: Jeeti Nani’s account of dining practices pre- and post-Partition Min 12:17: Collapse of a feudal order Min 15:14: Meet Jonathan Nunn Min 16:25: Ripple effects of Partition in London Min 21:55: Complexities behind the modern British-Raj aesthetic Min 27:19: Regional cuisines in London beyond Punjabi tandoori food Learn more about this episode of Bad Table Manners at www.whetstoneradio.com, on IG and Twitter at @whetstoneradio, and YouTube at WhetstoneRadio. Guests: Anoothi Vishal (@anoothivishal), Jonathan Nunn (@jonathandnunn)

    34 min
  2. The Dream of Two Kitchens

    19/01/2022

    The Dream of Two Kitchens

    This episode presents a micro-history of contemporary Indian kitchen design, as told by Manju Sara Rajan, the editor of a prominent design magazine, and Madhav Raman, an award-winning architect in New Delhi. We look at what lies behind the urban, aspirational dream of two kitchens — one visible and one concealed — which has roots in a historical wet and dry kitchen binary. We also look at what interventions open and modular kitchens have made in this history, and what it means for gender and caste politics that still lie at the heart of Indian kitchen design. How do urban Indians negotiate the waves of aromas and the inevitability of oil splatters that come with making Indian food with their desire to showcase their Scandinavian-inspired kitchens in India all at once? We talk about how in urban India, the aspiration is really to have it all. Topics covered in this episode: Min 1:25: Meet Manju Sara Rajan Min 1:58: Concept of the wet and dry kitchen Min 4:30: Meet Madhav Raman Min 4:57: Economic liberalization in India Min 9:50: How the new apartment kitchen transformed the way people cooked Min 13:53: The front-of-house and back-of-house split Min 17:25: The fridge’s place in the Indian kitchen Min 23:06: Vastu-compliance Min 25:04: Future of Indian kitchen design Min 26:01: Gendered labor divide Min 30:07: How COVID affected Indian kitchens Learn more about this episode of Bad Table Manners at www.whetstoneradio.com, on IG and Twitter at @whetstoneradio, and YouTube at WhetstoneRadio. Guests: Manju Sara Rajan (@manjusararajan), Madhav Raman (@anagramarchitects)

    42 min
  3. The Juice of Mango Clichés

    05/01/2022

    The Juice of Mango Clichés

    To speak about Indian mangoes may be cliché, but because Indians never seem to tire of the subject, there’s always some juice. London-based writer, Nikesh Shukla, will humorously tell us how to devour one correctly – a skill most South Asians seem to inherently possess – while halfway justifying why our obsession for the fruit can and should live on. A conversation with food historian Vikram Doctor follows as he talks about the colonial legacy that underpins this obsession, and the parochialism that most Indians adopt as they cultivate their specific mango fetishes. I conclude in a kitchen with a Delhi-based pastry chef, Ruchi Vaish, who turns herself in as a Mango Obsessive. For her, mango season is the very best. Topics covered in this episode: Min 00:31: Meet Nikesh Shukla Min 3:27: How to eat a mango properly Min 4:30: Mango in literature Min 7:55: Meet Ruchi Vaish Min 8:02: Ways to cook and bake with mango Min 9:01: Meet Vikram Doctor Min 10:30: Alphonso mango, the “king of kings” Min 12:49: Is mango parochialism political? Min 17:37: The British love for mango pickles Min 21:08: Income hanging from a tree Min 30:20: A mango that’s “good for diabetics” Min 31:55: Making mango cheesecake with Ruchi Learn more about this episode of Bad Table Manners at www.whetstoneradio.com, on IG and Twitter at @whetstoneradio, and YouTube at WhetstoneRadio. Guests: Nikesh Shukla (@nikeshshuklawriter), Vikram Doctor (@vikram.doctor), Ruchi Vaish (@intheknowkitchen)

    36 min
  4. The Scale Show

    15/12/2021

    The Scale Show

    This episode unravels the discrepancy between the illusion of oceanic abundance that our modern pescatarian diets are premised upon, and the reality of our waterways. To tell this story, I travel through Goa’s fish markets, seafood restaurants and jetties with marine biologist and Goa native – Aaron Lobo. We discuss how the modern fishing industry is depleting ocean life at an alarming rate, the implications of promoting the dinner plate-sized filet, and seeing fish as superfoods. It is quite apparent that there are not that many fish in the sea after all, but rather than making a case to stop fish eating, Aaron suggests something more compelling as a solution. Topics covered in this episode: Min 1:20: An intro to Bad Table Manners Min 3:27: Meet Aaron Lobo Min 4:16: Reconnecting with the food system Min 4:51: Meet Samanth Subramanium Min 5:06: Goa’s economy of idleness Min 6:30: The performativity of modern-day fish markets Min 11:20: From artisanal fishing to bottom trawling Min 18:55: The importance of bycatch to ecology and food security Min 24:18: A case for eating lower down the marine food web Min 26:37: An author’s reflections on fishing Min 28:54: Globalization’s contribution to the arrival of new species in Goa Min 32:00: Steps to a better system Learn more about this episode of Bad Table Manners at www.whetstoneradio.com, on IG and Twitter at @whetstoneradio, and YouTube at WhetstoneRadio. Guest: Aaron Lobo (@meenscientist)

    37 min

Hosts & Guests

About

Bad Table Manners pushes the boundaries of food storytelling in South Asia. Despite a universal love of delicious food, South Asian communities’ narratives and food practices maintain social hierarchies, caste inequalities, and racial and gender discrimination. In spanning both “high” and “low” food cultures, this podcast deconstructs monolithic notions of South Asian or “Indian” food by diving into micro contexts of households, restaurants, neighborhoods, streets and communities. It also reveals how hyper-regional and local culinary expressions are shaped by global gastronomic histories and trends. Hosted by Delhi-based anthropologist Meher Varma, Bad Table Manners is narrator-driven, ethnographic, and playful. It will take you to the seaside, through bustling markets, and the intimacy of the kitchen table in private homes. It reminds you that when good table manners are tossed, great conversation begins. Bad Table Manners is part of Whetstone Radio Collective. Whetstone Radio Collective creates storytelling dedicated to food origins and culture, with original content centering the perspectives of global majority populations and diasporas. You can learn more about this podcast at whetstoneradio.com, on Twitter @whetstoneradio, on TikTok and Instagram @whetstonemedia and subscribe to our Spotify and YouTube channel, Whetstone Media, for more podcast content. You can learn more about all things happening at Whetstone at WhetstoneMedia.com.

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