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    First Aired - 11/02/2011 12:00PM
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    Hosted By
    Restaurant-guys
    Sponsored by
    Fairway
    Mark and Francis discuss why super fine dining restaurants are on the decline in popularity and how what people are looking for in restaurants has changed over the years they've been in the business. Their guest is Kathy Gunst, author of Notes From a Maine Kitchen: Seasonally Inspired Recipes. They discuss Maine staples such as lobster, blueberries, and maple syrup and how you don't have to be in Maine to enjoy these typical Maine foods. This episode was sponsored by Fairway Market.

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    First Aired - 09/01/2009 04:00PM
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    Hosted By
    Filtered
    Sponsored by
    Picnick
    On this week's At the Root of It, Part I of Erin's interview with Lee Campbell of Louis/Dressner Wine Selections. Topics covered: organic and biodynamic wines, the stigmas attached with these labels, and the expanding Dressner portfolio.
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    Good, Clean and Fair Wine (12:55)

    Tags:
    Will Goldfarb, Will Communication, wine force in NYC, Louis Dressner selections, founded by Joe Dressner, sustainable wines, natural wine making, specializing in wines grown as close to New York as possible, portfolio also includes wines from all over France and Italy, did not develop taste for wine until late, Chambers Street Wines, Harlem Vintage, high level of wines coming out of Provence, mistral winds keep grapes dry and clean and healthy, optimum for organic viticulture, wine no longer considered the preserve of the upper classes, now everyone believes they have the right to enjoy wine, India and China now making wine, getting good clean expressive soulful wine to the masses, Lee Campbell, one of the smallest and most powerful companies in business, female personalities were also missing from the sommelier scene in NYC, Lee's West Indian background, Picnick,

    Debunking Organic and Natural Wine Myths (14:13)

    Tags:
    organic wine, biodynamic, debunking myths about certain wines, wine at its purest and truest is an organic product, wine construed as elitist product, whatever compromises consumers are willing to make for organic food they should be willing to make for organic wine, American puritanical disconnect, many producers don't even bill themselves as organic, wineries just want their products to speak for themselves, the return to terroir movement, buyers must learn what else is out there, terroir is king, good wine transcribes feelings and emotions of the earth, a good winemaker is a conduit, Dressner Portfolio lets terroir speak and celebrates it, no artificial or synthetic herbicides or pesticides, no machine harvesting, hand harvested, few high-tech techniques, no ambient or added yeast, the wines choose you as much as you choose them, www.louisdressner.com, Lee deals with finest wines in the world but drinks rather ordinary ones at home,

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    First Aired - 10/08/2012 05:30PM
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    Hosted By
    Annepage
    Sponsored by
    Susty-small
    On this episode of Cutting the Curd, Anne Saxelby and Sophie Slesinger are joined by Kate Arding of the American Cheese Society. Kate is also the founder of Culture Magazine, and British farmstead cheese expert. Learn about the decline of artisanal British cheeses after the Industrial Revolution. Hear about mechanized cheese production, and the practice of coloring cheese. How did Neal's Yard Dairy revive the British cheesemaking? Learn more about the role of distributors in the cheese business, and how they help to popularize small producers. Tune in to find out more about Kate's work with American cheese, including a delicious cheese accident that occured during her time at Cowgirl Creamery! This episode has been sponsored by Susty Party.

    "Farmhouse cheeses were increasingly on the back burner [after the industrialization of food]. The methods of production and efficiency for cheap food were eclipsing flavor." [5:36]

    "A lot of the attention understandably gets put on the producers... You can be making the best cheese in the world, but unless you have the other links in the chain in place i.e. the retailers who are going to act as the translator to the consumer- all of these things have to me in alignment in order for it all to work." [23:14]

    -- Kate Arding on Cutting the Curd

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