Food Links, 27.12.2013
- A year in the life of a food bank organiser.
- Facts about food banks.
- Fast food on the front line of US foreign policy.
- ‘Cheap food has been the public expectation for years. But anyone who thinks that it always comes unswicked is a gype.’
- Shellfish and politics in North Korea.
- Why it’s vital to preserve seed biodiversity.
- Gluten and carbohydrates are not poisonous.
- ‘On the world market, the huge amounts of raw coffee stored in the port of Antwerp are a very important buffer between demand and supply of coffee at the world level’.
- On Lawson v Saatchi: by Jacqueline Rose, and Grace Dent.
- ‘I have a PhD and I pick fruit.’
- How fizzy drinks can be used to trace sewerage.
- British foods protected by EU law.
- The science of eggnog.
- There is no wine shortage.
- Farmers‘ favourite cocktails.
- Where to buy bunny chow in Durban.
- A shopping list illustrated by Michelangelo.
- How one family’s Christmas lunch has changed over time.
- A hundred tips for cooking.
- How to make children eat vegetables?
- ‘The opening of a new café in Dubai has, according to sources, made up for a year devastated by wars, natural disasters and economic woes.’
- The Anniversary Slovak American Cookbook‘s Christmas dinner menu.
- I followed the recipe exactly.
- Cocktails are medicinal.
- Make your own advocaat.
- The Jewish delis of Detroit.
- Coffee bean v tea leaf.
- The rediscovery of domesticity.
- Where to go food shopping in London.
- The science of chocolate chip cookies.
- Composer or pasta?
- Nietzshe‘s recipe for angel food cake.
- ‘The survival time of chocolates on hospital wards: covert observational study.’
- Selfies taken by Irish farmers.
- A Nutella sandwich necklace.
- American Chinese food makes it debut in China.
- ‘With Martha, we’re not all in it together.’
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I loved that BMJ article on chocolates – however, I think my all-time favourite is the one on disappearing teaspoons: http://www.bmj.com/content/331/7531/1498
Oh that is *amazing*. I realise, now, that I also need a longitudinal cohort study of disappearing teaspoons in my flat… -Sarah