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Greenhorn Radio: Sandor Katz (25:00)
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Greenhorn Radio, Severine Von Tscharner Fleming, live from the 101 North, the green is emerging in Northern California, Sandor Katz from Tennesee, there is a lot of fermentation going on, it was a late and stressful harvest, everyone in Tennesee is relieved to have some rain, Sandor is the Elvis of fermentation, Wild Fermentation .com, Sandor wants to demystify fermentation so people can reclaim this important art and aspect of agriculture, on Saturday Sandor did a workshop at Long Hungry Creek Farm with Geoff, Poppin, daikon radishes, 70 gallons of raddish 'kraut chee', the classic 'problem of abundance', preserving the abundance that appears at certain parts of the year, sauerkraut is a more short term process in the summertime, this is something people who don't farm can do to connect with people who ARE farming, a network of friends and food producers who can exchange foods allows people to specialize and not have to grow everything, gardening collaboritavely, sharing a kitchen together, Sandor likes to make wine and mead and always has ideas about what to do with abundant foods, people also ferment foods to make them more digestible and to enhance their flavor, so many 'gourmet foods' are the result of fermentation, there is a real fear of aging food sans refridgeration in the US, fermentation is not rocket science, the young farming community, fermentation adds value to the products of agriculture!, making cheese and alcoholic beverages and kimchee and pickles, there are opportunities for people connected to farmers to create small businesses making fermented value added products with the farmer's food, this is the next step to relocalizing agriculture: not just creating more farms & markets but creating smaller scale enterprises to embark on these transformational value added endeavours, sustainable food is not a spectator sport, should i quit my job and become a farmer?, its hard to leave the perks and security of having a 'regular job', its essential that more people get directly involved in expanding our productive capacity in order to expand the food choices that exist within a regional area, intermediate steps, The Revolution Will Not Be Microwaved, Wild Fermentation, Sandor has another book about fermented foods in the works, The, Barefoot, Farmer,Download MP3 (Full Episode)
"As a group, these cultured foods or fermented foods, are more than incidental culinary novelties. They are really at the core of our cultural identity. The word culture itself comes from the Latin word for 'cultivation'- and so there's the sense that culture is a form cultivation, beginning with cultivating the soil for the food we eat, and on through all the other things we have learned to cultivate in different ways." -- Sandor Katz on Cutting the Curd
The Art of Fermentation (36:11)
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Sandor Katz, fermentation, The Art of Fermentation, culture, bacteria, yogurt, culturing, music, religion, totality, fermented foods, cultivation, preservation, harvest, sauerkraut, cheese, milk, stable, creativity, microbes, society, sterile, the war on bacteria, fungus, symbiosis, digestion, nutrients, reproduction, immune system, pathogens, raw milk, wine, salami, refrigeration, pastures, healthy animals, unhealthy animals, urbanization, microbiology, Louis Pasteur, flavor complexity, organisms, biodiversity, wild fermentation, metabolic byproducts, biodiversity in cheeses, species, genetics, genetic fluidity, biology, physiology, autism, obesity, HIV, health, digestive problems, live foods, sour pickles, lactic acid, macrobiotic diet, kefir, Tennessee, abundance, culinary traditions, fungi, rotten food, spoiled food, tropics, cassava, cyanide, starch, organic, fermentation education, workshops, kimchi,Download MP3 (Full Episode)
"By some estimates, as much as one third of all the food that human beings put into our mouths has been subjected to the transformative action of microorganisms before we eat it- and that's what fermentation is."
"We are only beginning to understand the importance of the bacteria in our bodies."
-- Sandor Katz on Let's Eat In







