A Hot Dog Is a Sandwich - How To Invent New Vegetables ft. Dan Barber
Episode Date: December 4, 2024Today, Josh and Nicole are joined by Dan Barber, chef and co-owner of Family Meal & Stone Barns to discuss the logistics and possibilities of inventing new vegetables! Leave us a voicemail at (833) DO...G-POD1 Check out the video version of this podcast: http://youtube.com/@mythicalkitchen To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This this this is mythical
This episode is sponsored by better help Nicole. You know my favorite part of the holidays is lighting shiva candles
That's top eight at least but I'd say it's curling up on the couch. It's getting cozy
It's drinking a nice warm mug of peppermint tea. I'm a peppermint tea guy sue me, but
You know what sometimes the sads it starts creeping in Nicole, and you know what, sometimes the sads, it starts creeping in, Nicole.
You get the sads?
I get the sads.
I really do.
No, I have been going to therapy for it.
But a great way to get that little warm, cozy feeling in your mind is to see a therapist
and talk to someone about it.
Because the holidays specifically can also be really hard for some.
I know people who have gone through certain family traumas, it always gets a little bit
tougher this time of year, especially when you see other people celebrating like that.
So I've always found it very helpful to talk to a professional about it.
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That's BetterHelp, H-E-L-P dot com slash hot dog.
This episode is presented by Pepsi.
A hot dog is a sandwich.
That deserves a Pepsi.
This episode is presented by Pepsi.
A hot dog is a sandwich.
That deserves a Pepsi.
Nicole, what's your favorite mixed breed, Labradoodles or Maltypoos? Neither, mine's sweet garlic. Huh? My vote is with sandwich. That deserves a Pepsi. Nicole, what's your favorite mix breed? Labradoodles or Maltypoos?
Neither, mine's sweet garlic.
Huh?
My vote is with her.
This is a hot dog is a sandwich.
Ketchup is a smoothie.
Yeah, I put ice in my cereal, so what?
That makes no sense.
Hot dog is a sandwich.
A hot dog is a sandwich.
What?
Welcome to our podcast, A Hot Dog Is A Sandwich,
the show we break down the world's biggest food debates.
I'm your host, Josh Scherrer.
And I'm your host, Nicole Inayati.
And today we are joined by a very special guest.
He's the chef-owner of Michelin-starred Blue Hill at Stone Barns in New York.
He's the author of The Third Plate, Field Notes from the Future of Food, and he's the
co-founder of Row 7 Seed Company, which is changing the face of vegetables as we know
them.
Chef Dan Barber, welcome to the show.
Welcome.
Thank you, team.
Love to be here.
Appreciate you.
Despite the fact that Row 7 Seed Company
was almost responsible for thwarting my relationship
with the woman I'm about to marry in six weeks.
Thwarting.
A quick anecdote for what happened.
I have an antidote, what is that, anecdote?
I have one later.
And you have the antidote to the neurotoxin
that we've been pumping into this room.
So, so, so, I was on my first date with my now-fiance.
This is almost five years ago to the day.
And we are at a restaurant.
It's called Nightshade in Los Angeles.
A beautiful moment in time.
And the server comes by and he says, this crudo is served with a habanada pepper.
It is a habanero that has been bred to not have the capsaicin in it.
And I, after meeting this woman from Hinge the Dating App
for five minutes said, excuse me,
what farm is this pepper from?
Because I had a sneaking suspicion it was row seven
because I had been reading about it at the time back in 2018
and my date almost got up and left when I asked
what farm the pepper was from because of how pretentious
I am.
So despite that, Dan, we have survived. Oh, it sounds like a Portlandia skit.
I swear. If I were her, I would have walked out too.
100%. I should have walked out on myself. But flashing forward five years from the Habanada
pepper showing up on a very fancy menu, now you walk through the rows of Whole Foods and you see row 7 seed companies,
see the advertisements for them, you see sweet garlic right next to the broccolini in the
produce section and it's really, really cool to see it come that far.
Thank you.
I mean, that's a nice plug for the company.
We went from a first date and now we're committed to the supermarket aisle.
I love it.
Row 7 and my romantic life have gone hand in hand for a long time.
Josh is learning the art of commitment
and you think it's going really great.
Thank you so much.
We have a little anecdote too.
So I was lucky enough to go to a dinner
that was hosted by row seven at Osiria Mozza
and I had some delicious dishes made with sweet garlic.
I had this burrata with sweet garlic oil
with some frizzled garlic on top.
Wasn't that great? Oh, I had so much fun. I was so oil with some frizzled garlic on top. Oh, wasn't that great?
Oh, I had so much fun.
I was so lucky.
I actually sat at your table.
We chatted.
We noshed.
We talked about lighting Shabbat candles with our family.
It was very cute.
And it's probably one of my favorite food media experiences I've had in 2024.
So thank you for facilitating that.
It was really, really fun.
Thank you.
I had a blast.
But we're so honored to have you here. Now, my question is, Dan, how do you invent a new vegetable?
Because I thought all the vegetables were already invented by God,
but it seems like you and some other people just decided to invent some new ones.
No, we are a strict creationist podcast.
We did decide that.
That's right.
So, I just want to know, I'm sure that it's a very, very detailed process,
but if you could give us like a few sentence us and the
listeners a few sentences about how you go through the process of like creating
something new. In the case of sweet garlic it was wasn't me I want to take
all the credit in the world for it wasn't me. All right. It was a breeder by the
name of Hans Bangers. Incredible. He's out of the Netherlands.
And he is actually a very famous alien breeder.
Like if you're a breeder of aliens, you know Hans Bongers.
I thought you said alien breeder.
And I'm like, what are you talking about?
I thought Hans Bongers was a hard style DJ.
Onion and leeks.
Anyway, he had a dream and his dream was
to create the love child of a leek and a garlic.
Something that doesn't happen very easily.
In fact, I don't think it's ever happened before.
He felt like the cross to create the offspring was possible
and he spent 10 years trying to get it.
Wow. And he get it. Wow.
And he did it.
He's actually now retired.
But the company said, this is very cool.
It's very delicious, but there's no market for the love child of a garlic and a leek.
And the president of the company called me and said, we don't think there's a large enough
market for us to put any marketing dollars to to get it out there
So if you want it you can have it
Which I found fascinating because of course there's no market for the lovechild of the gargoyle. There is no such thing as the lovechild
The gargoyle is you're introducing something new and that's a good
Example of what row seven does you know?
We're about we're about the Ellis Island of like all these vegetables that no one wants
to take because there isn't a convenient or definable slot or skew as they say in the
business.
And we take it, we take them and we champion them and we nudge our way into the produce
aisles as Josh just mentioned.
So that's our ship.
That's our power, Row 7. And to answer your question,
though, I don't in the case of sweet garlic, I didn't invent it. But in the case of a lot
of vegetables, it's a conversation with breeders. And that just that alone is like actually
a very iconoclastic. It's a very provocative conversation because chefs and breeders don't
talk to each other. People who like food and breeders don't talk to each other.
People who like food and breeders don't talk to each other.
Chefs and people like food talk to farmers.
At farmers markets, there's a directive, but we don't talk to breeders.
And breeders are the architects of the food system, actually.
They really do create the blueprint for how a farmer grows his or her vegetables. And so I came upon this idea just by
luck, by a conversation with a breeder 15 years ago that opened my eyes, the fact that, you know,
this breeder's not being tasked with selecting or creating vegetables with flavor because he's
talking to the wrong people. He's talking to the industry. And as you know, the industry
isn't interested in flavor. they're interested in yield and
storeability and shelf life.
So that started a series of conversations with breeders around the world that led to
all these vegetables seeing the light of day because they're so delicious.
Yeah, that's one thing that I find really interesting is there is all the environmental
and the economic and the accessibility arguments to why we
need to grow better crops and whatnot.
But you said something in the third plate, which a lot of it was sort of breaking down
the promise of the farm to table movement and where the shortcomings might have been.
And you said something interesting about appealing to hedonism, like appealing to flavor.
No matter what side of the political aisle you are on, something that tastes really
good in your mouth is absolutely universal. How much of the emphasis was on just pure flavor
and hedonism versus the, say, more environmental ethical side?
Well, that, see, that's the thing. There isn't the versus. I stopped,
interrupted you at the versus. That's what I learned. It's not the versus. I always thought
it was the versus too. It's like, either you have your hedonism over here or you have your high
moral ideas over there. That's a very Puritan look at the world. The truth is they're wanting
the same thing. Show me a vegetable that has been grown from the right seed in the right soil with the right kind of farming attention and picked at the right
moment that isn't stunningly delicious.
I mean, it doesn't, there is no such thing.
So there are variations on that, but the truth is really delicious flavor comes from good
seed and good soil.
So I don't, and it's also good for you.
So all these things sort of coalesce around the same idea.
And that's why hedonism I think is so powerful because if you're greedy for something that's
hedonistic in the world of food, especially vegetables, you are chasing after the right
things for our environment and for our health.
And by the way, to throw in the bucket of goodness, democratic ideals too. I mean,
you know, right now, four companies control 65% of our seed supply, and they have absolutely no
motivation to select, breed, and promote vegetables or grains that are stunningly delicious or healthy
for you because they
don't make money on the seed. They lose money. They make the money on the chemical intervention.
So I would say if you're growing a seed that's grown in the right way with the right farmer,
it means you're growing it in a diverse landscape. If you're growing a diverse landscape, you're
growing it regionally. You're not shipping it from far away. Monocultures come from far away.
Farms that grow 10,000 acres of carrots, that's from far away.
If you're eating a local carrot from an organic farm, you're probably eating a carrot from
a diverse farm.
And once you're in diversity land, you're probably in a better pay and equity for the
farm workers and a kind of social
justice is attached to that kind of farming system.
So it really is a virtuous carrot, this local organic carrot.
It's also just stunningly delicious.
So I like to go back to that one because look, you know, to be an army of virtue is pretty
boring compared to being, you know, like boots on the ground, hedonists,
you know? I mean, it just, it just, it always wins the day. So I'm, I'm, I'm an evangelist
for the pleasure principle.
It's funny because a lot of this does come down to how to eat, how do we actually convince
people to eat more vegetables, right? And I think about the way that we grew up thinking
about Brussels sprouts, right? The Brussels sprouts is that the biggest PR victory of the last 30 years of any vegetable.
Brussels sprouts were a punchline on Saturday morning cartoons because of how gross they were.
And then we went to restaurants and they were roasting them.
There was a bacon jam and a cider reduction.
And then now how many billions of views on TikTok do you see of pan-roasted Brussels sprouts?
You could say that same thing about kale.
Yep.
You could say that same.
Sure, the kale renaissance, yeah.
Right, the kale, I mean, you could say
that tons of kohlrabi, there's so many crops
that you're like, where did those come from?
And part of the problem over the last 50 years is,
yeah, we've become ingrained with this idea
that vegetables are sort of a joke, a punchline, right?
Because we haven't been breeding vegetables to be delicious.
We haven't bred them to be center of the plate.
We bred them to be side shows for protein mostly.
And we've done that at great disservice
to our health and our pleasure,
but also to the environmental health
that good farming can provide.
I mean, right now, you know, farms are just,
you know, are part of the problem
with degrading environments,
where they could be part of the solution.
But, you know, farms are responsible for 33%
of global greenhouse gas emissions.
33 to 35%.
One third is agriculture, you know. I mean,
that's just it's more than trains, planes, and automobiles combined, you know. So what we eat is
like critically important and the fact that we're eating meat in general or more and more meat
at the expense of vegetables has something to say about the fact that vegetables have been
discarded for the side of the plate and because they have been have been discarded for the side of the plate
and because they have been selected to be for the side of the plate where no one really cares.
And that I want to change that. We all want to change that. But it has to start with seed.
So that's why we started the company, RoSeven. Yeah, it's really interesting. I'm passionate. I
love it. Watching every single part of this because I think so many people, they want a
unilateral solution, right? how do we fix the world.
But it's awesome hearing you talk about such a like 360 approach and even down to the marketing
you walk into Whole Foods and the badger flame beeps immediately peek out to you because
there's cool packaging there's marketing dollars behind it.
Packaging rocks.
And then getting people to cook it actually, tastes really good.
My question is though,
you are even from a flavor and hedonism perspective, right?
There I think is a certain ceiling
that a badger flame beat can hit
that the like hyper palatable ultra processed foods, right?
A badger flame beat can never be a cool ranch Dorito
from a scientific flavor perspective.
How do you sort of convince people
that they could take
the same pleasure from that, if that makes sense?
How could they take the same pleasure from a work-a-day beat as they do from a Dorito?
Yes.
Yes.
It's a very silly question.
It's not a silly question.
I don't think it's silly.
It might be the essential question, actually, because we're drunk on the Dorito.
But as you know, there's a great book by Mark Schatzker
who wrote about the Dorito effect,
which is fabulous because what it uncovered
is the chemical concoctions that are in those Doritos
that really are about craveability,
and craving more and more
where your body doesn't know how to shut off
or say that it's full or satiated. Uh, and it can– and it– it continually, uh,
goes to gorge, uh, in the pursuit. It's actually sort of a sad story. It's like you're pursuing
nutrients and minerals that aren't there. And when you eat a beet that's filled with
all things I just said, actually, you know, you have a few bites of it and you feel very
satiated and very happy. But look, I'm saying hedonism
and delight and pleasure for good food. You know, you can't just put sugar on top of everything
and say that that's hedonistic. Because at the end of the day, is it? I mean, it really,
it isn't. I mean, it's not like I don't appreciate a good Dorito or a good, you know, processed
food thing once in a while. I mean, that's part of life. I'm not, it's just that our diet
has become so dependent on it
and at the expense of what,
of true nutrition and true flavor.
So I think, you know, that's why chefs
are the leaders of this company.
You know, you just, I think you just,
it's not a gratuitous question,
it's at the center of it
because who's curating food for the future
that the food culture is gonna prioritize as something
they wanna pay a little bit more for or they wanna take a little more time to actually
cook.
Like where's that gonna come from?
You know, we don't have our grandmothers around anymore doing that.
And so, you know, I think chefs play a role in this actually, which is why the company
by Gros7 was founded really with 200 chefs around the country who are advocating not
only for
pure pleasure and ingredients that make us look like better chefs, that's at the heart of this,
of course. We always chefs always want to look like better chefs. But also, you know, every chef
wants to get what they're doing outside of the walls of their restaurant. You know, every chef,
every chef wants to democratize, especially white tablecloth chefs. They want to democratize this
and get into homes.
We look around, we feel like you'd have to be really turned off to not see
the health crisis that is upon us in America.
And food is at the heart of it.
So start with seed, and we have a chance at, I think,
and I think people are coming around to the idea that
we got to change this thing. We got to change this thing and it's nice that chefs are good
ambassadors for the right thing. That would be my sense of it.
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I am craving a big slice of pizza and an ice cold Pepsi for lunch today Nicole
What if I told you you have the power to make that happen?
I do yeah, and you know how I know that cuz you're real real smart
That's one of the reasons the other reason is that I had the same dream that you had except
This is a couple days ago
We basically lived parallel lives, but I was craving an ice cold Pepsi and a big old slice
of pizza.
And I was at the airport and I was coming back to LA.
And so I like really needed some food to get me through that last leg of the journey.
And I was on the plane and I opened my pizza and the flight attendant came by and I got
the free chips and I got an ice cold Pepsi Zero sugar.
And I will never forget this borderline spiritual experience of eating that spicy from the pepperoni
salty chewy pizza, going to the crispy chips and then resetting my palate with ice cold
refreshing Pepsi Zero sugar, that perfect amount of acid to just cut through all that
fat in your palate and then back to the chewy pizza, crispy chip, refreshing Pepsi, chewy
pizza, crispy chip, refreshing Pepsi.
And it made the flight so, so much better.
My lunch was absolutely saved. I love story time with you, Josh. It's a crispy chip refreshing Pepsi and it made the flight so so much better. My lunch was absolutely saved
I love story time with you Josh
It's my favorite but moral of the story is Pepsi makes your food taste better
Everybody knows that so grab a Pepsi zero sugar for your next meal as food deserves Pepsi
You know initially when you know
I was born in 1992 and so I kind, when I became 18 and really into food
and had a fake ID to order a $15 cocktail at a restaurant,
you know, the farm-to-table movement was in full swing,
and my first kind of reaction to it was like,
well, these seem a bit like bourgeois concerns, right?
Like, the average American is never going to be able
to benefit from this because these are all
very fancy restaurants, but you were talking to a farmer in the third plate
and he said the phrase,
if you are trying to solve a problem
that can be fixed in your lifetime,
you're not thinking big enough.
So obviously when you start from seed,
this is going to take not years,
not decades, maybe generations.
But what have you seen shift that gives you hope
in the last 20, 25 years?
Hey, Josh, great question, man.
You did your homework for this interview.
Right.
You really read the book, man.
This shift that I'm seeing is, this is going to sound very straightforward to a very good
question and I don't mean it to be.
It's just the truth is that as much as I say, when things actually taste good,
people are going to line up and be all over it. Um, but then to actually do that thing
and watch it happen is crazy. It's really crazy. It's like, I tasted that garlic the
first time, how many cents? I was just like, this is going to be enormous. You know, I
say that in a little bit of hyperbole
because I'm so excited.
But then when it actually turns out to be enormous,
this is great.
And the beat, like the Badger Flame beat,
that was a beat that was rejected by the entire industry.
And the breeder, Erwin Goldman,
an Orthodox Jew from Madison, Wisconsin,
why did he breed the Badger Flame beat?
He bred it because his kids were embarrassed
that he was a beat breeder. So he was like, I'm going to create a beat. First of all, he was like,
why do kids hate beats so much? Have you ever got an answer to that one? He did. He discovered
that kids are very sensitive to what's called geosmin, which is a cluster of compounds that expresses like intense earthiness. You know, kids have like a dialed up radar for that and a rejection of it.
In part because I think it's dirt and kids are, you know, just hardwired to turn off
of something that may not be good for them.
So they're particularly sensitive.
I look at a lot of adults are sensitive beats too.
But you tend to like that radar for j Jasmine tends to recede as you get older. Anyway,
he created a beat that his kids would love and his friends wouldn't be embarrassed if
that was a beat here. And he turned into this like incredible beat. This thing tastes like
a cross between like a mango and a carrot and like the most like
sweet, like light notes of like fruitiness in every bite.
It's just like extraordinary.
So incredibly low in jasmine that you can you slice and you eat it raw.
That's you ever eaten a beet raw?
This thing is like, okay.
So everyone said that he tried to get it out into the marketplace and everyone said,
well, that'll never work because it was shaped like a yam.
And people said, you know, that's not a beet because a beet is around both of them.
And so, I was like, okay, this is going to be the first thing we launched with Roast
Abbot, which we did.
And now it's grown really coast to coast and it's a favorite of chefs.
But the reason I'm telling you the story is because the other day we did a And now it's grown really coast to coast. It was a favorite of chefs. But the
reason I'm telling you the story is because the other day we did a pop-up at a Katz's
deli.
I saw that. Very cool.
And we created a, I worked on it for a year. We created beet pastrami, you know, because
this beet is by the way, so sweet, but also it's so rich. Also when you cook it, like
you cooked it for like two days and smoked it and it turns into pastrami.
So I made a pastrami sandwich out of beets, right?
And we did it at Katz and I flew Irwin in
because I just, I wanted him there.
Anyway, lines around about thousands of people came out
for beet, badger flame, beet pastrami.
You know, and I was like, the NBC News was there.
It was like so crazy.
Yeah.
And you know, at that moment, it was like one of those things
you're saying, like, how do you see it in your life?
I was like, I saw it.
I was, it was so moving to me.
It, there's levels of moving.
First of all, everyone was lining up
for a vegetable at beat, right?
Okay, so that's, that's moving.
So nuts.
You know, and then you've got Orthodox Jew Erwin,
you know, standing on the corner saying, you know,
my like, teary saying, you know, my grandparents probably stood here 100 years ago holding
a bag of beets.
And here I am introducing the world to the future of beets.
It's just this is all of it was like, I was like, wow, man, this is really satisfying.
So there you go.
So what you're saying is when your kids bully you,
it works.
If you're an industrious Jew who wants your kids to look.
Exactly.
This kind of sounds like the plot to the new Adam Sandler
straight to Netflix movie, you know,
an Orthodox Jewish beat farmer
whose kids are ashamed of him.
Didn't they literally make a movie about Seth Rogen being a...
Who pickled himself.
The pickle guy. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Same, same, same, but different.
It's in the same universe, at least.
Yeah, talking about like flavor actually influencing people.
I remember the first time that I cooked with sweet garlic.
It was for a bunch of people who were not super, super into food.
I'd already planned on doing a little cooking night.
It was for my fiance's friends and teaching him how to cook.
We were doing a little taco night,
and I was making an esquite salad kind of situation.
And we actually, we'd just been getting random care packages
from Rose Evans, so randomly...
Thanks so much for that.
That rules.
And again, flavor appeals to people,
because I just got a bunch of sweet garlic
and I was like, well, I can just throw these on the grill,
little olive oil, salt, pepper, get them super crisp up.
Like you would get scallions, like grilled scallions
that are on the side of the next pan.
And then I just hacked them up.
I turned the end of the leaves kind of into ash,
hacked them up, tossed them in the esquites,
and everybody was just like,
what is the thing in this that is not the corn?
And so now you have, you know, 12 West Side dwelling people
who just came to my house to drink wine,
selling me no sweet garlic.
So it is genuinely inspiring to see.
That's awesome, man. That's awesome to hear.
Tell me how chefs kind of end up at the end of this funnel,
because we've talked about...
Have you seen the Devil Wears Prada, Dan?
Yes, I have, Josh.
Nicole, you know the-
Oh, the cerulean?
The cerulean thing.
It's not blue, it's not teal, it's not cerulean.
Yeah, that one.
Yeah, where she talks about how in a runway show
with very, very silly looking experimental clothing,
that eventually ends up in department stores
six, seven years later.
What are examples that you've seen of that,
of these kind of like chef ambassadors taking an idea
and it distilling down to actually hitting
blue collar people in a retail environment?
Brother Josh, this, first of all,
I know this scene very well, not that I'm a movie buff,
but I too have thought of that scene
as like this trickle down idea that comes from up high, not the Republican trickle down, but the trickle down of culture that
is so fascinating. And they nail it in that scene. But the same thing happened to us.
We started the company because 15 years ago, this squash breeder came to my restaurant
and after dinner, he came back to the kitchen.
And my awkwardness, I didn't have anything to say to the guy, what do we say to a squash breeder?
I was just like, you're such a great squash breeder, why don't you breed a butternut squash that
tastes good? Why do we have to add butter and brown sugar and maple syrup, make that thing taste
good enough to serve at Thanksgiving? He got like super serious on me. He was like, in all my years of breeding, no one has ever asked me to
breed for flavor. Oh, wow. No, I was like, Whoa, I what the hell are you talking about? What do
they ask you to breed for? Of course, it's all for yield and all that stuff. So that started this
adventure with him.. He co-founded
the company with me and he went off and ran on trying to get out into the marketplace
a butternut squash actually tasted good. And today now I'm fast forwarding through 15
years, this is in the interest of time. But after everyone said a shrunken butternut squash
which he presented to me like not long after our conversation that I fell in love with. It was a prototype. Oh my god, it's so delicious. I like, you know, sell your first born for another
piece of that one. And everyone said, forget it. It'll never work because this squash was this big
and you know, butternut squash is that big. Right. Right. More for less. And, and the distributor
guy was like, uh, we don't have a skew for that size.
I never forget it.
We don't have a skew for me.
We didn't have a box that fit there.
Everyone said, anyway, okay.
So now 15 years later, uh, it's in Walmart, Costco, Trader Joe's, Whole Foods.
It's grown coast to coast.
It's called the Honey Nut Squash.
Uh, it's in every major farmer's market from here to LA from Michigan to Texas.
And that started in my kitchen 15 years ago and I feel like you know that was so I was
sort of watching that being like man if you talk to the other right conversation with
a breeder all you have to do is just advocate for flavor and you're off and running.
So that's that's is what happened I think it was using the example of Adele Rose Prada
is like using restaurants
as the fashion shows. And then people who have that experience in the restaurant want
to repeat it at home. And that that led to Whole Foods. And now you can get all these
varieties and these genetics at eventually every Whole Foods in the country right now,
West Coast, East Coast, but very soon, middle America and soon the Southeast.
The social awkwardness of a chef and a squash breeder.
Dr. Justin Marchegiani What if I hadn't invited him in the kitchen?
Matthew 10.30 We would not be sitting here right now.
Matthew 10.30 Yeah. And I think like you said earlier, when you think that all vegetables
sort of ordained by God or the things that we grew up with are the things that already exist,
you know, you think back to the Kiwi, right? Like we recently, an old food critic I used to work with named
Patrick Hieu, he's in his 60s, talked to us about him remembering the first time he saw
a Kiwi in a grocery store. And he's like, you all, he's like, it was called a Chinese
gooseberry back then.
No way!
Yes, it was. And then it was remarketed by, I believe, Mary Isabel Fisher was her name.
But the point is that the world is constantly changing,
I think a lot more than we think because we are not getting a sense of deep time. And
a lot of it is changing thanks to the work of Dan and all the incredible breeders and
farmers and other chefs that you work with. And I think that's really rad.
Thank you.
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All right, Nicole and Dan, we've heard what you and I have to say.
Now it's time to find out what other wacky ideas are rattling out there in the universe.
It's time for a little segment we call...
Opinions are like casseroles!
All right, Dan, so we have asked our listeners to give us their hottest takes about vegetables. That's right.
And we're going to read them and then you are going to react to their opinions.
You ready for that?
Yep, ready.
Let's do it.
Alright.
At Pianta underscore Luca says, eggplant is the best vegetable if cooked properly and
the worst vegetable if cooked poorly.
I think any vegetable cooked poorly
is the worst vegetable you can have.
But eggplant's pretty bad.
You have you ever had other-
Eggplant ranks up there, I would agree with her
as one that you really, my whole rule with eggplant
is like you can overcook eggplant,
but if you under cook it, you're really in trouble.
I agree.
I agree with this 100%.
An undercooked eggplant tastes like a sponge.
It's that sponginess, yeah.
And then it's like when it gets oil-logged, it's just like the worst taste experience.
Oh, I don't know.
Oil-logged eggplant is kind of my game.
But if it's cooked right, you know what I mean?
Like a soft oil-logged, I mean, we make that all the time.
But like whenever you're talking about like one that's spongy in the middle, ugh.
Oh, you go to like a shawarma restaurant and they just drop the slice of eggplant in the fryer and it is just browned and
oxidized and soaked in oil, dusted in salt, and that is still good to me.
It has its place, it has its place. The first time I had a proper, like it was a dry gudrati eggplant curry,
opened up my entire world to eggplants. I love eggplants now.
Okay, we got another one. This is from Mags.
I love water chestnuts. Please recommend me other foods that have the texture of a water chestnut.
Dan, what do you got for water chestnut? I mean, what about a chestnut?
Just an OG chestnut. I mean, I love chestnuts. I don't know water chestnut. It's not really my I
don't I'm not a aficionado of water. I've had them before like Asian restaurants,. I don't know water chestnuts. It's not really my I don't I'm not a aficionado of water
I've had them before like Asian restaurants, but I don't I'm not from that familiar with them
If I had a guess I think what the same fruit. Oh, I didn't have anything in mind. I was just saying. Oh you okay
Yeah, oh, yeah, a jicama jicama. Hey, can you talk about cooked jicama? Oh, yeah. That's a good one
Kohlrabi jicama sure kohlrabi and jicama. Yeah, those are my two. Something like the wintery radish family.
But I think what they're solving for is that we,
I think we grew up with our parents making stir-fries
because it was kind of fun and adventurous.
I always have water chestnuts in my cabinet.
It's the canned bamboo shoots, the canned baby corn,
the canned water chestnuts, it all got frozen vegetable medley in there.
I think, yeah, we need a re-up on what the stir-fry vegetables are.
Okay, Salt Pork says,
onions are as good, if not better than shallots,
and 20% of the price.
Commonality doesn't make them less awesome.
Red onion done right is phenomenal.
I mean, who's gonna argue with that? I don't know.
Who, I mean, sort of a straw man.
When did I say that onions are no good?
I think people...
I didn't even advocate for shallots.
And I like shallots, but I wasn't sitting there saying,
how dare you choose onions over shallots?
I think shallots are like fancy.
They're like the fancy pants.
That's the perception.
They say shallots are red onions with a graduate degree.
Oh, yeah.
Shallots went to Brown.
They studied compilite at Brown.
Compilite.
Yeah.
And I know what that means.
Like for example, I made a example, I made a Thai curry yesterday,
and I used shallot and garlic and ginger.
Didn't use any onion.
A lot of Indian food doesn't use onion.
A lot is for kind of Ayurvedic reasons.
And so onions, though the base of a lot of things,
don't need to be the base of everything.
I run through six onions a week in my own kitchen.
I blend them into every marinade at this point.
They use asafoetida instead.
Sure do. I'm a fan.
Okay, where we go?
Celery is, this is from at which vulgar,
Celery is goated. It's crisp, refreshing, and combos well with various toppings, peanut butter, ranch dressing.
Anyone who hates it should be sent to a re-education camp.
Dan, the context on this is that I have been quoted as saying,
raw celery is the one food that I do not enjoy. So I think it's a personal dig at me, but how do
you feel about raw celery or cooked celery? Well, that's a good question. And my sense of it is,
if raw celery is seasoned right
and mixed with the right things, it can be pretty good.
I think we use it wrong.
Like celery and chicken salad, I don't like.
Me too.
I don't put celery in my stocks.
Interesting. Me too.
Wait, no, hold on, hold on, Dan.
No celery in the stocks.
What's going on with this?
Why not?
I know that's anathema to the French tradition,
but I don't believe it adds the right kind of flavor.
I really like the sweetness of carrots and onions.
I don't like that celery flavor, even in the background.
I'm interested in breeding new varieties of celery
because I think we've bred celery down to like nothingness.
So I actually think if we dig into it deeper,
we could get something very delicious.
Okay, hear me out.
Celery and rhubarb, call it cel-barb.
There you go.
Can you do a love child of celery and rhubarb?
Yeah, yeah, I'll take my cut later.
If you called it rhubelary,
it would just sound like something you need a shot for.
I got rhubelary, now I have a rash.
I love celery, I eat raw celery all the time.
I put it in my salads a lot. And the other
day we made chicken wings and then I had a side of celery with a side of ranch and it
was delicious. Crunching on raw celery is phenomenal. I agree with this. But also being
Persian, horsh to kadaf, celery stew, my mom makes it the best, better than anyone else.
Sounds good.
I love it. It's delicious. It's like mint and celery and just cooked down
with chicken or lamb and it's just cooked until mush
and it's so delicious.
There was a celery dish that changed my mind.
Not raw celery, but it was, there's the French dish,
artichoke beurre goul.
I've never had that before.
I've never heard of it.
Super-praised artichoke.
Yes.
Yeah, he made it with celery and it was for a family meal.
He was just messing around. Nice. And it was just like, it was incredible. And I understood the heard of it. I'm just crazy. Artichoke. Yes. Yeah.
He made it with celery and it was for family meal.
He was just messing around.
Nice.
And it was just like, it was incredible.
And I understood it, the texture of it.
It's great.
It soaks up flavors.
I'm a fan.
I literally, hold on, before you do this, I like make a menu every week for my husband
and I. And today is lemon zata chicken with fennel and avocado celery salad, literally.
Wow.
Like that's literally on my menu today, so.
Wait, can we, while we have Daniel, can we just have him judge our dinners tonight?
What are you making?
I just said it.
Dan, you're gonna tell us whose house you're coming over to for dinner.
Okay.
Lemon zatar chicken with fennel avocado celery salad.
Okay, okay, okay.
Love it.
Over here, so we're doing braised chicken quarters with shiitake mushroom, dark soy, and mirin.
And then what I'm going to do is I'm going to grate turnips and I'm going to steam it
with white rice.
Okay.
Turnips in the rice?
Little blanched bok choy.
Yeah, I'm going to try it.
I was going to braise the turnips, but then...
I would braise the turnips.
Listen, here's the thing.
What kind of turnip are you...
We all compromise for the people that we love.
What are you...
And Julia doesn't like to eat just so much rice because she's dieting for the wedding.
And so if I grate a vegetable into the rice, then I can give an insert to eat a bowl of
grain.
Are you cooking the grated turnip?
And whose house are you coming over to?
What's that?
Whose house are you coming over to for dinner tonight?
Oh man, I'm cooking tonight, bro.
He's like, no, no, no.
All right, good news.
We're going to dance.
Okay, one more?
One more, one more, one more.
One more, one more.
Okay. Baby Joe 206 says lettuce does not belong on anything hot because it gets soggy.
Oh, I don't subscribe to that.
It depends on what lettuce you're talking about.
But if you, if you, you know, I right now I have a dish at the restaurant that we're doing every night,
which is sauteing salad greens for our last course.
I love to finish a meal with salad.
I think it's such a beautiful way, a clean way to end the meal.
So we have, it's a type of romaine that we're using, but if you cut off the green tips and
you use the base of the romaine, it's incredibly delicious.
Yeah, mescaline salad I wouldn't cook.
I agree with that, that writer there.
Now, you know, you don't want to get
weak leafy greens warm because that doesn't do any favors.
But for certain lettuces, it's extraordinary
to bring out some flavor with heat.
I think a lot of people get locked into like
what you should cook and what you shouldn't
cook, right?
Well, you should leave her on what you should cook.
Play around with it, man.
Hot lettuce, cooked lettuce is good.
You know what I think this alludes to?
This alludes to like a Burger King chicken sandwich.
It's the best.
The grease from the chicken actually dresses the salad.
I think this is what they're alluding to is that like a sandwich you get from a fast food
place and then that little like lettuce, if you wanna call it lettuce,
and it all seems together and then you eat it
and there's no crunch.
I think that's the problem.
But I think the lack of crunch kind of adds
to the experience,
cause you got your hot mayo,
you got your chicken,
you got your protein,
you got the bun that's a little soggy
and you got your lettuce that's soggy.
You know what I mean?
It's all about architecture though,
cause if you like,
it's architecture and then like structure. So like in and out, right? It's soggy. You know what I mean? It's all about architecture though, because if you like, it's architecture and then like,
structure, so like in and out, right?
It's an eighth pound patty,
and it's probably a quarter pound of thick iceberg lettuce
that sits together, iceberg stays crunchy,
burger gets cold, Shake Shack on the other hand,
quarter pound patty, single leaf of leaf lettuce.
Leaf lettuce, yeah.
That lettuce is getting destroyed.
So it's all about that.
Well, that's all I have to say about that.
Me too.
Oh my gosh on that note, thank you for listening to a hot dog is a sandwich and Dan
Thank you so much for joining us. Thanks guys. You guys are great. Thank you. You were wonderful. I appreciate you man
You got any last words anything to plug? Plug. I'm just plugging row seven. Eat your vegetables
That's what we all got to do. Eat more vegetables.
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