Schnitzel & Stories

Angelika Schwaff & Arlene Stein

Schnitzel & Stories is a podcast about the flavors that connect us—and the people who shape them. In past seasons, hosts Angelika, a food writer, and Arlene, a food and hospitality specialist, have explored the rich tapestry of food traditions, tracing how dishes travel across borders and time. Now in Season 3, Schnitzel & Stories shifts focus with “Only a Woman”—a series of bold conversations with women who have transformed the food world. From Michelin-starred chefs to quiet revolutionaries behind the scenes, we uncover what it really means to lead, create, and thrive in a space that hasn’t always made room for them. Whether it’s a recipe with a backstory or a woman rewriting the rules of the kitchen, this is food, with context.

  1. Jun 9

    JP McMahon: Famine, Food Memory, and the Making of New Irish Cuisine

    Chef JP McMahon of the Michelin-starred Aniar in Galway and founder of the internationally acclaimed Food on the Edge symposium is widely recognized as one of the leading voices behind the understanding and evolution of New Irish Cuisine. In this episode we explore the complex relationship between food, colonization, identity, and cultural memory through the lens of Irish history. As a chef, author, scholar, and advocate for Irish food culture, JP offers a unique perspective on how centuries of British rule shaped Ireland's agricultural systems, food traditions, and national identity. Together, we trace the journey of the potato from South America to Ireland and examine how a crop that was never native to the island became synonymous with Irish cuisine. We discuss the social and political conditions that led to widespread dependence on the potato, the devastating impact of An Gorta Mór, the Great Famine, and the lasting influence this tragedy continues to have on Irish culture and collective memory. The conversation also challenges common assumptions about Irish food. Long before the arrival of the potato, Ireland's people relied on a rich diversity of ingredients drawn from the sea, forests, bogs, rivers, and fields. JP shares insights from his extensive research into Ireland's culinary past and explains how modern chefs are rediscovering forgotten ingredients and traditions to create a contemporary Irish cuisine rooted in place and history. From land ownership and food insecurity to seaweed, wild herbs, and the future of gastronomy, this episode examines how food systems can be shaped by power, disrupted by crisis, and ultimately reclaimed through knowledge, culture, and creativity. Join us for a fascinating conversation about resilience, identity, and the enduring story of Irish food. “Think you're escaping and run into yourself. Longest way round is the shortest way home.” ― James Joyce, Ulysses

  2. May 19

    Bettina Iseli: Food Security at the Crossroads of Conflict, Climate, and Aid.

    Joining us to explore the growing complexities of global food security and humanitarian aid is Bettina Iseli, Chief Program Officer and member of the Executive Board of Welthungerhilfe, one of Germany’s largest private aid organizations. Bettina oversees the strategic direction of hundreds of international interventions and brings decades of experience working in some of the world’s most fragile and vulnerable regions. Since 2019, Bettina has led Welthungerhilfe’s global programme activities, guiding the organization’s long-term humanitarian and development strategy. Prior to this role, she headed the department for institutional donors. Under her leadership, the organization continues to expand its work at the intersection of emergency relief, climate resilience, food sovereignty, and long-term development. Founded in the early 1960s, Welthungerhilfe is independent of political and religious affiliations and is committed to the goal of “Zero Hunger by 2030.” Since its inception, the organization has supported more than 11,000 projects across 72 countries, ranging from disaster relief and rehabilitation to agricultural development, water systems, and community-led infrastructure projects. In this conversation, we discuss the realities of delivering aid in conflict zones, the growing pressures of climate change on global food systems, the politicization and fragmentation of humanitarian assistance, and the difficult ethical decisions organizations face when resources fall short. We also examine the shift toward localized aid models, the relationship between food insecurity and conflict, and what citizens and governments in stable democracies should be demanding in response to an increasingly unstable global food landscape.

    33 min
  3. May 12

    Fadi Kattan: Food is Political

    Fadi Kattan’s work sits at the intersection of food, identity, memory, and cultural preservation. Born in Bethlehem and trained in Paris and London, he returned home after studying hotel management at Institut Vatel to found Fawda, where he began reimagining Palestinian cuisine with refinement while remaining deeply rooted in tradition, terroir, and storytelling. Since then, Fadi has brought Palestinian hospitality to an international audience through projects including Akub in London, Louf in Toronto. Across his restaurants, writing, and media work, he uses food not simply as cuisine, but as a way of documenting history, celebrating artisans and producers, and preserving the diverse culinary traditions of Palestine. This conversation was recorded on February 27, 2026 while Fadi was in London UK and was intended to be the first episode of our new season. However, technical difficulties forced us to cut the recording short. The following day, escalating conflict in the region following Israeli and U.S. strikes on Iran further destabilized an already fragile situation across the Middle East. Travelling onward to Paris, Fadi remained stranded there for several weeks, deeply concerned for family and friends caught in the middle of the ongoing crisis affecting Palestine, Lebanon, and the wider region. In our conversation with Fadi reflects on what it means to cook, create, and tell stories from a place shaped by occupation, displacement, resilience, and cultural pride. His work reminds us that food is never just about nourishment, it is also about memory, identity, survival, and humanity.

About

Schnitzel & Stories is a podcast about the flavors that connect us—and the people who shape them. In past seasons, hosts Angelika, a food writer, and Arlene, a food and hospitality specialist, have explored the rich tapestry of food traditions, tracing how dishes travel across borders and time. Now in Season 3, Schnitzel & Stories shifts focus with “Only a Woman”—a series of bold conversations with women who have transformed the food world. From Michelin-starred chefs to quiet revolutionaries behind the scenes, we uncover what it really means to lead, create, and thrive in a space that hasn’t always made room for them. Whether it’s a recipe with a backstory or a woman rewriting the rules of the kitchen, this is food, with context.

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