The Food Podcast

Lindsay Cameron Wilson

The Food Podcast is a show where personal stories are shared through the lens of food. Join host Lindsay Cameron Wilson, a best-selling cookbook author and journalist, as she takes you on an adventure through sound, story, music and memory. Food is the launching point, the portal. Human stories, however, are at the heart of each episode. It's a food and story podcast, if you will, released monthly, after a long simmer, when the flavour it just right. lindsaycameronwilson.substack.com

  1. 04/30/2024

    Everything We Need Is Here

    Welcome to the final episode of Season four. If you’ve been here for a while, you’ll know that ‘season’ is a loose word. Season one lasted about 5 years… Since then we’ve tidied things up around here with eight episodes per season. And here we are, at number eight. There’s never been a theme to the seasons, but looking back over season four, I see a thru-line connecting the episodes. The theme is Nova Scotia - the place where I produce these episodes, the place where I live. Above is an image of the Halifax Central Library where I record The Food Podcast. It’s a bright, white space with stairs, bridges and atriums connecting the five stories. On the second floor is a sound studio that’s open to the public. It has become my room of one’s own, my quiet space, uninterrupted and sound proofed from the outside world, just two blocks from my house. In episode one of the season - Balancing in the Middle- I promised to look back at where we began, where we’ve ended, and what we’ve learned in between. So here I am at the library, in a red room, feet on the floor, headphones on, balancing in the middle, looking back over the season. Thanks for exploring life through the lens of food with me. It means so much. I’ll back back with Season 5. Take care in the meantime, x Lindsay PS - here’s a taste of the season - Credits: Hosted by Lindsay Cameron Wilson Edited by Abigail Cerquitella Theme song is One More Night by Jenn Grant  Follow: @thefoodpodcast and @lindsaycameronwilson Get full access to Food Stories at lindsaycameronwilson.substack.com/subscribe

    17 min
  2. 04/16/2024

    Puddings, Cakes and the Space In between

    Cake, Pudding and the Space In Between with Colleen Thompson -  is officially live! Yes we are back to regular programming after a little pause in the season. I haven’t been toes up and eating cake - I mean pudding - this whole time. I’ve been sorting out the semantics of dessert. It can be confusing, so the episode begins with a short primer on the sweet and savoury world of cakes and puddings, and how their names vary from place to place. The cake above, a Malva Pudding, is where a pudding and a cake intersect. It is also where the magic of science comes into play. The sponginess of this pudding happens when baking soda and vinegar meet- sweet bubbles and growth, that’s what this pudding/cake is all about.  And the space in between? That’s the story that lives in this cake - its journey from South Africa to a little restaurant in Canada, and the story of writer and photographer Colleen Thompson who wrote a cookbook capturing the flavours of these places. And woven through the in between is music, because as Colleen writes, “music, like food, has an incredible ability to shape us. Songs describe the longings, the passions, the small details we might otherwise miss.” And like recipes, when we record these songs, we remember who we were when we loved them. I hope you enjoy this story of life, through the lens of a sweet, spongy, storied pudding.  x Lindsay Links: * Dark Angel - featured in this episode with permission from Jill Barber, Rose Cousins and Jenn Grant * Colleen Thomspon - writer, photographer and raconteur Instagram @monkeyweddings * Monkey Weddings & Summer Sapphires - South Africa to Nova Scotia: Stories, Recipes and Memories (General Public Inc, 2020)  * 32 Songs to Live and Cook By - Colleen Thompson * Field Guide, Halifax - Malva pudding is still on the menu! * Mrs. Beeton’s Cookery Book Malva Pudding - from Monkey Weddings & Summer Sapphires, reprinted with permission. Yield: 4-6 servings INGREDIENTS 1 tablespoon unsalted butter 1 tablespoon smooth apricot jam 2 teaspoons white wine vinegar 1 cup flour 1 teaspoon baking soda Pinch of salt 1 cup granulated sugar 1 large egg 1 cup milk Syrup ½ cup sugar ½ cup heavy cream  3 tablespoons unsalted butter ½ cup hot water (this is where some might add a splash of booze - Cognac if you have it!) * Preheat oven to 400°F and grease a square 9” baking dish. * In a small saucepan, over medium heat, melt the butter, apricot jam and vinegar together. Remove from heat and allow to cool for 5 minutes.  * In a mixing bowl combine the flour, baking soda and salt.  * In a separate bowl, mix the egg and sugar together until the mixture is pale yellow - about 4 minutes. Add the butter, apricot jam and vinegar mixture to the eggs and sugar together with the milk and mix.  * Add the flour mixture bit by bit and mix well.  * Pour mixture into the baking dish and bake for 30-45 minutes until the pudding is golden and baked through (a skewer inserted should come out clean).  * In a small saucepan, over medium heat combine all of the syrup ingredients and simmer until the sugar has dissolved. Pour the syrup over the cooked pudding and allow to cool for about 10 minutes. Serve with heavy cream, custard or vanilla ice cream. Credits Hosted by Lindsay Cameron Wilson Edited by Abigail Cerquitella Theme song is One More Night by Jenn Grant  Follow: @thefoodpodcast and @lindsaycameronwilson Get full access to Food Stories at lindsaycameronwilson.substack.com/subscribe

    22 min
  3. 12/19/2023

    A Field Guide To Christmas, once again

    I’m jumping in here to welcome you to a re-leased episode of last year’s A Field Guide to Christmas. For those who celebrate, we do it every year, but somehow, we still need a field guide, a mentor, and calming friend to shepherd us through this beautiful, nostalgic and sometimes difficult time of year.  At least I do, and I know there’s one other person too… I was sitting at a high school football game earlier in the fall, watching my son and nephew play. It was an away game -  A five hour drive. But the last of the fall leaves were still hanging on, there were thermoses of coffee in the cup holders, so it wasn’t such a bad drive.  The Cape Breton autumn winds were whipping at our backs as we perched on metal bleachers. (I should say that the field guide to watching Canadian football would include pads to sit on  - we use the little cushions that come with our ikea outdoor furniture - they work like a charm and keep you warm.) Anyway, the turnout wasn’t so good for our team, spectators were thin, but those who were there had clearly read the football field guide and were kitted out in cozy jackets, hats, mitts and were lounging in portable camping chairs. At half time one of the mom’s leaned over and said, I’ve been listening to your Field Guide to Christmas. I know we’re two months away, but it soothes me knowing other people cry on Christmas. And we can laugh about it.  So if you too need a refresh for how to get through the next week with ease and wonder, listen to the rest of this episode, perhaps again, for the first time.  You too might pick up a word I had forgotten in the wisdom shared by writer and long time Christmas host Vicky Grant. The word she drops is outdoorfin - the rush of joyful energy received when you leave the chaos of the home, the chaos of the world, the heat of the oven, the wrapping paper on the floor, and the drying Christmas tree, and GO OUTSIDE.  So with that, I give you our field Guide to Christmas, recorded in December of 2022… and by the way, my sons would say I did spiral out of control last Christmas, just for a little bit, but, not only did I go for a walk on christmas day, I also dipped in the river with my sister and nieces on New Year's Day. A cold plunge in a brackish river on the east coast of canada in winter will give you enough ourdoorfins to last at least a week.  But before we listen I just want to say Thanks so much for being here at The Food Podcast, sharing stories, through the lens of food.  The Food Podcast will be back on the 9th of January with chef, artist and dancer, Lauren Gerrie. Until then, x Lindsay Show Notes * Nigel Slater, The Christmas Chronicles . Or listen to the Christmas Chronicles here - * Anja Dunk, ADVENT - Festive German Bakes to Celebrate the Coming of Christmas * Jenn Grant’s Forever on Christmas Eve Album * Writer Vicki Grant. Vicki says a Christmas party isn’t a Christmas party without Grease Babies. I wrote about them here. As for the recipe, here’s the gist: begin with white bread, crusts cut off. Add a teaspoon of undiluted Campbell’s Mushroom Soup to each slice and spread edge to edge. Roll slice and wrap with bacon. Bake until crispy but still gooey on the inside. They’ll be gone in seconds. Episode Credits Hosted by Lindsay Cameron Wilson Edited by Abigail Cerquitella Theme song is One More Night by Jenn Grant  Follow: @thefoodpodcast and @lindsaycameronwilson Get full access to Food Stories at lindsaycameronwilson.substack.com/subscribe

    23 min
4.9
out of 5
40 Ratings

About

The Food Podcast is a show where personal stories are shared through the lens of food. Join host Lindsay Cameron Wilson, a best-selling cookbook author and journalist, as she takes you on an adventure through sound, story, music and memory. Food is the launching point, the portal. Human stories, however, are at the heart of each episode. It's a food and story podcast, if you will, released monthly, after a long simmer, when the flavour it just right. lindsaycameronwilson.substack.com