Mick Unplugged - Breaking Bread and Barriers with Andrew Zimmern
Episode Date: November 10, 2025Andrew Zimmern is an Emmy-winning TV host, James Beard Award–winning chef, and one of the most influential food personalities in the world. Renowned for his adventurous spirit and groundbreaking sho...w “Bizarre Foods,” Andrew has dedicated his life to exploring global cultures through their cuisines. Beyond being a culinary trailblazer, he is a passionate advocate for food as a connector and healer, working to address hunger and sustainability both locally and globally. Andrew’s curiosity, honesty, and genuine drive to make the world a better (and tastier) place set him apart, whether he’s sharing a meal with reindeer herders in Lapland or with friends at home. Takeaways: Food as a Universal Language: Andrew believes food has the power to heal, connect, and break down barriers – sharing a meal brings out the shared humanity between people regardless of background. Purpose-Driven Passion: Despite monumental success, Andrew’s “because” is rooted in giving back, making amends, and never ceasing to be curious about the world—a relentless pursuit to make a difference through storytelling and action. Eating for the Future: Through his new “Blue Food Cookbook,” Andrew advocates for sustainable, ocean-derived foods, arguing that diversifying and responsibly sourcing our diets is paramount to solving global issues from hunger to climate change. Sound Bites: “If we diversify our diets, we can save this planet. We can save families.” (Andrew Zimmern) “Co-regulating with human beings before operationalizing with them is the most crucial thing that you can do.” (Andrew Zimmern) “We are universally humanized by that experience... sharing food is a neutral ground over which we can communicate with each other, and it has immense value.” (Andrew Zimmern) Connect & Discover Andrew: Website: andrewzimmern.com Instagram: @chefaz Facebook: @AndrewZimmern YouTube: @andrewzimmerndotcom Book: The Blue Food Cookbook 🔥 Ready to Unleash Your Inner Game-Changer? 🔥 Mick Hunt’s BEST SELLING book, How to Be a Good Leader When You’ve Never Had One: The Blueprint for Modern Leadership, is here to light a fire under your ambition and arm you with the real-talk strategies that only Mick delivers. 👉 Grab your copy now and level up your life → Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Books A Million FOLLOW MICK ON: Spotify: MickUnplugged Instagram: @mickunplugged Facebook: @mickunplugged YouTube: @MickUnpluggedPodcast LinkedIn: @mickhunt Website: MickHuntOfficial.com Apple: MickUnplugged Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Sometimes the best gifts aren't gifts at all.
Their experiences, journeys, something that unwraps them.
This year, help them explore their past with Ancestry DNA.
Help them discover where they come from and who they're connected to.
Now with even more regions, exclusive features, and incredible detail.
They can see where they're from and the paths that shape their family's story.
This holiday, give more than a gift.
Give AncestryDNA.
Visit Ancestry.ca for more details.
Terms apply.
Ladies and gentlemen, one of the coolest episodes I've ever done is this episode that you're about to listen to with Emmy winning TV hosts, James Beard, nominated and winning chef, Andrew Zimmer.
We're going to talk through a lot of things and maybe not all the things that you actually think of when we talk about a chef.
We're going to talk about life.
We're going to talk about food as a healer.
Absolutely.
Make sure you listen to this entire episode because we're going to give you the goods.
If you're into food, if you're into life,
if you're into wanting to be healed,
this episode is for you.
Ladies and gentlemen,
I present Mr. Andrew Zimmer.
Andrew, how are you?
Good, Mick.
How are you?
I am awesome, man.
I have been a huge fan of you for a long time.
You know, I called it bizarre foods in the intro,
but just, you know, foods that the everyday person like me
wouldn't think that, oh, yeah, I'm going to go eat that.
I'm going to go prepare that.
When did you know that was a thing?
for you. The day
magically that they
told me that my travel food
idea that I had finally
gotten into the boardroom
to pitch at Travel Channel
in 2004
was a PBS
show and not a
commercial television show. And
I had this idea called the Wandering
Spoon. Worst
name for a food travel
TV show of all time.
And what I did was, I wanted
to
you know, teach the world about diving into other cultures through food. There was, at the time,
unbeknownst to me, because you have to remember, we're pushing our show, 2002, three, four,
five. Tony had yet to Anthony Bourdain, had yet to make Cook's tour, which was on Food Network
that got bought by Travel Channel, and they basically re-aired what didn't work on Food Network
and renamed the show, No Reservations, and
move forward with that show that became so legendary there was a a huge part of my life where looking in
the rearview mirror i was eating whatever it was that was in that place when i was seven years old in
Spain with my dad, I ate Angoulas baby eels, and we ate whole roasted partridge, red-legged
partridge in Asturias together in little restaurants. And they were shot by a hunter. You had to
be careful of eating any shotgun pellets. And then there was a tiny little resting cradle,
looked like a chopstick rest. And there was a heavy knife there. And the idea was you would flip it
and use the handle and crack the skull and eat the brain and yeah you know this was something that
was just been traditionally done for ever and ever there you know i was a little kid i was
eating bigno little french periwinkle snails in leo with my father when i was five baby i mean
literally two days you know past being fetal lamb and and pig in vali de los cayados uh in spain
with my dad you can't just roll past that like just a few days past birth it's the most delicious
you know that it's a single portion right you get a whole one yourself but the the first
six eight nine weeks it varies between hoofed animal species before they go on to grass
when they're just eating mother's milk that's it the the animal is at its tastiest it's at its
delicious regardless of what animal it is. It's why when I'm in Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand,
I love being out in the jungle markets and villages where they're taking tiny little birds,
often little ducks or chicks, and dipping them in boiling water, removing all the feathers
and deep frying them whole, and then you just eat them with a little bit of nuocham and
you eat the whole thing except the beak. When birds,
birds, hoofed animals, and so the first couple weeks of life, they are at their, at their most
delicious. But the point is, is that I didn't think there was anything of it. My father was the kind
of person who was like, you know, when in Rome, what the Romans eat, right? So flash ahead to 2004-5,
I'm pushing this show and about travel and they rejected it, but they let me come back the next
day to repitch it because they said, look, if you can reverse this, give us 75% entertainment
instead of 75% education in this show, we think we can do something with that. And so I came back
the next day. I didn't have a clue in the world. And lucky for me, instead of them saying,
have you thought about it, what's your idea? In which case I would have said, I have nothing.
Pat Young, the head of travel channel, threw me a laser pointer, hit a button, a map
of the world came up on the wall in the Discovery boardroom.
There were 20 different executives there at the time and me alone at the other end.
And he said, take me through episode one and then season one.
and I just saw all I saw because I was standing on the North American side of the map and I could
see the Philippines straight ahead of me. I just hit the laser pointer. I said, well, we would go to
the Philippines and try balut, which is a fertilized duck egg. And then I just made my way around
the world. And I realized I was about two, three examples in, I realized I had mentioned foods that for
those people in the room were new.
They hadn't heard of them.
And they were exotic and different and unique.
And I was getting quite a reaction from them.
And I, the only thing, one of the few smart things I've ever done in my whole life was I read that room the right way.
And I just kept going and I put the pointer down.
And I think I'd named 30 foods and 30 countries.
and they were like, okay, go find a production company and let's make this show.
And the rest, as they say, is history.
The rest is history.
And so that was 2004.
And one of the reasons I adore you so much, Andrew, is just that passion, that energy, that
creativity, it's like it continues to evolve, right?
Like, you're never stale.
No pun intended from a food standpoint, right?
But like, you're always fresh.
You're always palatable.
And so I wanted to ask you what I ask all my guests.
Like, what's your because?
What's your purpose?
What's that deeper thing that's deeper than your why for you to continue to do the things that you do?
Because I'm going to say what Andrew won't say.
You've accomplished so much, brother.
You've accomplished a lot that if you wanted to, you could say, all right, I'm good.
But you continue to do.
What's your because?
Because I...
spent 10, 12, 14 years being a user of people and a taker of things because I owe the world a debt that I don't think I can ever repay because I have such a lack of self-appreciation, I guess, that I continue to want to do more.
because I'm endlessly curious, and so there's always something that I want to put out there
in the world, another story, another idea, another way of looking at something to try to make
the world a better place. And I don't say that in a Pollyanna sense. I mean that really
seriously. I believe, as I did when I created bizarre foods, that if we diversify our diet,
we can save this planet.
We can save families.
We can lower prices on food.
We can, I mean, you just look at what's going on in the supermarket today.
The reason, you know, meat prices and seafood prices are so high is that we eat like four things.
And that's it.
And when you put all your, your eggs in one basket and that basket hits the ground, some eggs are going to break.
And that's why ground beef is, which America literally.
lives on as a nation is almost $10 a pound. And I would argue that, you know, fish raised in
aquaculture situation, if it, if it received the investment it deserves, which is not that
much more because it's almost been perfected, is would would be able to feed an ever increasingly
and hungry planet cheaper and more effectively. And, you know, I got a lot of becauses, right?
And, you know, maybe I like solving global problems because I don't want to turn the mirror around and solve my own.
It has been, I'm not proud of it.
I just, I learned a long time ago to answer a question, honestly.
And I think it's way more interesting for people to hear because I think there's more people out there who can relate to a human being who screws a lot of stuff up.
Relationships, fatherhood.
I mean, I make a ton of mistakes every single day.
And I'm constantly trying to evaluate it before I go to bed at night and try to get better.
And one of the places that I can both simultaneously hide and make a difference is at work.
And so I keep doing what I'm doing.
And I just, I don't know, there's, you know, I want to keep working.
I want to die in the saddle.
I mean, I don't, I have no interest in stopping and going off and playing golf and all the rest of that kind of stuff.
I'd like to spend more time with my friends.
I'd like to spend more time with my family.
I'd like to do a couple other little things in there.
So do I want to keep going 90 miles an hour?
No, I don't think that's sustainable.
But I'm going to go down to 50 or 60, whatever the speed limit is.
and just keep cruising along.
You know, I want to go there, man, because again, I'm getting therapy from you by having this
conversation.
I run hard, right?
I mean, I'm, and you get it.
I don't have to explain that to you.
You've got a lot of velocity in your life, just like me.
How do you find that balance?
Because I try to make sure, and I hate saying the word, try.
usually don't have that in my vocabulary, I put, I put importance on making sure I give people
time, even though I'm running hard. But what people don't see is there are moments where I just
need to exist just by myself, right? But you have to be committed to be the best parent, the best
husband, the best friend that you can be all while still running at 150 miles an hour.
how do you balance that because I need help and this is me being honest I need help I'm in the
same well well they were really screwed because I was hoping you'd help me with that when you were
starting that last sentence the I don't know because I struggle I mean I had a friend text me
the other day that's who told me that I had gotten lousy responding to text fast enough and he
wasn't talking about immediately he said like you know you know I'm one of your two or three best
friends what what's the you know within a day you get back to me i'm asking you about important stuff
about your your your kid your relationship you know whatever it is i mean and and i didn't and i know
that my son needs more time from his father and i know that in my primary relationships be they
at work or at home need more time from me but i'm a mile long long
and a quarter inch deep and I want to get I was I use a football metaphor here I no longer want to
have a spread offense and be a wide receiver all the way at the end I'd rather be an interior
lineman at this point I need to I need to be an inch deep and a quarter mile long and so that's my
that's my goal how how i get there is with legitimate action steps i think and it's never one
thing i had a behavioral scientist who i was talking to at a conference about 15 years ago say
something that i've never forgotten he he said he said in any human dilemma where you have
choice because a problem exists the solution to the problem and the cause of the problem is
never one thing he said as human beings we tend to look at it one way right oh mix background on his
on our recording is is dark and mine is light that's a prop you know like that's that's that's
the reason i'm having a bad day or we want to pick one thing yeah he said in fact it's usually eight
nine or ten things that when taken together either pile up on each other or in some cases
relationships, business, many of them can be intertwined.
And so you really have to separate them and use what he called astronaut logic,
which we've all heard of before, one task at a time in sequence.
And so unraveling that and attacking that is what I try to do more of every single day.
It's just tough, especially when dad's job takes him away, right?
And I'm not around the people in my life.
And I'm going, you know, because primarily what I do is television, even though I'm shooting fewer days a year than I used to, I have a lot of days where from seven in the morning to seven at night, that phone is off, right?
And so I'm not around to answer test.
And I get home and I'm exhausted or back to the hotel room.
I just want to watch the football game or two episodes of whatever show I'm binging or whatever it is to relax because I need my me time.
And, you know, we all hear about take care of yourself, put your own oxygen mask on first.
So I rationalize not responding to solving the problems at hand in my life, even the little small ones.
I've learned I'm better off handling those smaller problems.
I'm less weary.
I'm less world weary when I do that.
The other thing that I've learned recently that I think is really fascinating and I talk a lot about this.
when I'm giving the talks in the wellness space.
I, you know, schools, universities, conclaves, gatherings of any type will call my lectern agent,
and they're just as likely to have me talk about wellness as they are to have me talk about
travel and food.
Just because I spent a lot of time in this space and, you know, long-term sober and
am fascinated about creating better human beings, starting with myself.
Yeah.
And I have found that the greatest tool for helping my, which is why I answered your question,
honestly, at the very outset, is if co-regulating with human beings before operationalizing
with them is the most crucial thing that you can do.
And I just had a friend in my office who I haven't seen in a decade and I rang him up and he's in the coffee business and I'm trying to work on a coffee project for a client.
And so he came here and as he's leaving, he said, I'll ask you this question.
He said, my daughter's a teenager.
She's having her first party at our house.
How many people is a good number?
You know, you're a dad.
Your kids are older.
How many is a good number to have over?
And I said, well, you're turned it around.
What you should do is you should ask her what's a good number.
And then you should ask her why that's a good number.
And then you should ask her what she wants the evening to look like.
And you should just keep asking questions until you don't have anymore.
Let her tell you everything before you respond.
Then you can tell her how that makes you feel, right?
That you will then be co-regulated.
She's told you.
You've told her.
And then you can say, so what do you think now?
You know, like, because maybe one of your concerns is too many people would, for a first party,
might be not dangerous, but, you know, put too many people at risk.
She's only 15.
You don't need 40 people there.
Maybe 20 is a good number.
Maybe that's better for economic reason, whatever it is.
But co-regulating before operationalizing allows you to connect with people on a very meaningful,
direct way almost literally in real time, very, very, very immediately.
And I have found that to be of infinite value as I navigate my way through life.
Good stuff.
Good stuff.
Ladies and gentlemen, you didn't know you were getting life lessons from Andrew,
but that's what we're here for.
And part of this, Andrew, you know, I said it in the opener again.
And you're one of the greatest storytellers that I've ever seen.
And to me, that's an art.
Like, I know the culinary art that you have and the passion that you have, but you're
also an amazing storyteller.
And I've heard you say many times that food is like a universal language, right?
In Andrew's way, can you give us an example of how you've seen food heal or comfort or
bring people together?
Does the story come to mind?
Well, sure. I mean, I've got millions of them. I do think the concept deserves a moment
or two of of illumination. We only do only do several things all the time. And one of them is
eat. Now, not everyone in America in 2025 has a food life. We have
to be very careful about that.
It's one of the other things that drives me.
It's another because, right?
I've made a lot of money off of food.
I have a lot of success because of food.
I have made an impact because of food.
And yet, I'm also part of the problem because I fetishize food while 20% of Americans
don't know where their next meal is coming from.
So I work really hard to try to solve hunger and waste issues here in Minnesota, nationally,
in America and internationally with my work with the UN World Food Program.
But because we do this every day, food is a universal, right?
So I'll give you a couple very general examples, perhaps from shows people have seen.
In every episode of Bizarre Foods, we always had a family meal, every single one.
We didn't put a circle around it.
We didn't put a lower third graphic underneath it.
We didn't flashlights to let everybody know, here's the family meal.
But we always sat down with a family in every single episode in eight.
And the reason why I insisted on that, along with several other storytelling silos,
I wanted a how it was made story.
I wanted to, because I wanted there to be something for everyone to take from this experience in this culture.
And,
we always had a family dinner episode because I wanted people in Finland to see how people in China ate
and I wanted people in Uruguay to see how people in China ate. I wanted people in Arizona to see
how people in Uruguay ate. And I did that very consciously because I wanted people to see how
much they had in common with each other in a world that was increasingly defining itself by the
things that divided us. So even though I may speak a different language, have different color
skin, worship a different deity, listen to different music, have different sexuality and on and on and
than whoever I was with, if we were sharing a meal, amazing things could happen, right? And we would
find out that we wound up having way more in common, even though on the face of it, it may appear
that we were very, very different people from very, very different walks of life.
I believe our humanity, in the general sense, with a capital H, is what defines us,
not all of those other things.
And I remember being in Finland, we went up to Lapland, and we were having a dinner with
some reindeer herders and his family.
And we did the usual thing, you know, shots of the reindeer.
and I was milking a reindeer, which is very difficult.
They give off, they have the richest milk in the animal kingdom,
but they give off the least of it because it's so intense.
And then we made little pancakes with it.
We forage for berries and we gathered crayfish in the river.
And then we wound up at his family table with his wife and her parents and
he and his wife's kids.
And there's like eight of us at the table and me.
And we edited it.
But before when we were there live, it was, what comes off as a minute in the show took two hours, right?
And we're sitting there, it always does.
And we're sitting there with this family.
And the grandmother is, is looking at the kids, you know, with this look, very stern and opening up her eyes and kind of turning away from me and like using her head, kind of like a woodpecker.
at them and I look over at the kids and they're getting fidgety and you know they're like six
and eight right and they've got to sit at this table for two hours no kid can do that anywhere
on planet earth I've watched and you know it is that's something every parent around the world
can relate to and then they were I could hear the mom whispering to the kids across the table
I did not speak their dialect at all, right?
And in fact, in this part of Finland,
they don't even speak the language
that the people in Helsinki speak.
Yeah.
They have their own diversion of Finnish.
Mm-hmm.
And I don't speak a word of it,
but I understood everything that she was saying.
She was saying,
I told you I'd give you that candy and cookies when you got you just have to be nice while
the the strange people from the other part of the world are gone they're just you know and and and
you know you promise me so just sit on your hands try to be quiet you and your sister can
whisper to each other you know because that that's what I would say to my kids right and so I
didn't need to know the language right so we are universally.
humanized by that experience. I was and so were they because I didn't react to them, right?
I just let them do what they wanted to do. I didn't lean over and say it's okay or anything like
that. I just let it happen. I'm just there to experience their life. I don't want to impact it.
I don't want to ruin anything magical that might happen on the TV. Once we start,
eating and the kids are eating. They're occupied and we're telling jokes and things are being
translated because the dad spoke English, right? And which is why we cast this family. And all of a
sudden, the kids are kind of liking me, right? And so what starts off as an awkward,
fidgety, awful thing. Even grandma started to think that I was an amusing fellow. Now, this is,
is a very simple basic example of how our shared humanity is so much bigger than the things
that you would think might divide us, right? I would go all the way to a glass of juice
that I had with one of the world's most famous terrorists who lives in seclusion in Jericho
with Israeli tanks on a hill trained at his house. We did a story.
in one of our shows about a woman's cuss-cus cooperative in Jericho.
There are no men that live in this little village on the outskirts of Jericho.
They all are either dead or off fighting jihad somewhere.
The women, it's a patriarchal society.
The women decided, screw this, we need a clinic, we need a library, we need a school, right?
So several the women got together and said, we're going to hand roll kuscus, dry it, and sell it.
It's an exquisite beautiful product.
And through the sale of this product throughout the Arab world, and it's even imported
here into this country, at least it was, we're able to fund the school, the library, the
clinic, and improve the lives of all the people in this village outside of Germany.
So we spent all day shooting the scene. It was unbelievable. I rolled kuskos with them. Then they all cook lunch together, eat lunch, and then they go home because they do the work early in the morning and end about noon when the heat of the day just gets too hot at that time of year. The woman turns to us, the person who was really the driving force that started this whole thing, and says, would you come home to my house? My husband would like to meet you? We said, sure. As we're getting into.
the vans, several of our security details said to me, do you know who her husband is? I said,
I have no idea. And she said, her husband is, I think it was Abu Abbas. He was the head of the
PLO's propaganda machine when Arafat was in power. He was the person famously for people who are a little
bit older and remember these sort of things in the news. And I think it was in this in the late
70s or early 80s, Mossad, the Israeli intelligence agency put a bomb inside a book that he opened
and it, it failed all of the explosives didn't go off. So he lived, but the gunpowder
streaked his face with streaks of gray and black into his skin. And the Israeli
had had found him confined confined to house arrest hence the tanks on the hill and i was very
eager to meet him and talk to him um and i say this as as someone who i mean i'm jewish and in
the entertainment business in america i mean i'm exactly what this guy has has spent his life
you know rallying against and but i was eager to meet him because i i wanted to see what he was all
about. I wanted to ask him, what's up with all the, why all the hate, dude? You know, and I know that
sounds really flippant, but, you know, I wanted in my own way to see what was, I never had an
opportunity to do that. And like I said, I'm endlessly curious. So we go to the house, we have
some mango juice. He's very polite. He says, I'd love to show you my office. We all go down, by the way,
cameras are rolling. We go down to his office. And on his office, just like, you know, on my
wall, I have pictures of my friends, there's a picture of him with every famous terrorist there
is, you know, and when I say every, I mean every. And I was, I was stunned. It gave me chills.
And I sat there, his daughter, this is like his third marriage, his wife, he was in his
probably 70s, his current wife was in her 40s. They had a five-year-old playing on the ground.
And I said to him, and I said, forget about you and me, but shouldn't your, shouldn't your
daughter and my son be able to live together in peace and harmony? Don't we want that at the
end of the day? And he just looked at me as he sipped his juice. And I mean, very matter of factly,
He neither was smiling nor scowling.
Very neutrally, he just said,
my daughter's daughter's daughter
will bathe in the blood
of your son's children's children.
And sipped his juice.
It's the Nissan Black Friday event where you can, wait, wait, wait.
Isn't it like a month long now?
Nissan Blackfri Month?
Does that work?
It's the Nissan Black Friday Month event.
On remaining 2025 Rogan Centra,
Get zero percent financing.
Plus, get $1,000 Nissan bonus on kicks models.
This Black Friday, you've got a whole month to catch all the exclusive offers waiting for you.
See your local Nissan dealer or nissan.ca for details.
Conditions apply.
And I looked at him and I said, you really believe that?
He said, yes, I do.
He says, that's our commitment.
He was filled with so much hate and so much rage that,
that's all he saw as an outcome. And I thanked him for his hospitality and we left.
Now, I didn't, I already didn't like him and his peers going in. Right. But I was, I was in his home.
And a lot of friends of mine were like, why would you even go to his home? I said, I needed to hear it out of his
mouth. Was he really that filled with hate? Was he really that? Was he really living out?
these thousands of years of history and refusing to let go of any other outcome.
And in fact, this gentleman was.
And yet there was, and I mean this in the most serious way,
I understood him and his people who also believe this,
1% more, 2% more.
I didn't agree with it, but I understood it more.
And so at the end of the day, whether it's with a family in Lapland, crushing crayfish and eating little blueberry pancakes made with reindeer milk, or having juice with an internationally known terrorist, sharing food is a neutral ground over which we can communicate with each other.
And it has immense value. Now, I happen to find more immense value when I bring neighbors,
friends and loved ones together to celebrate to take a respite from how hard the world is.
I enjoy it more when I'm visiting you wherever you live and we connect and you take me out
to a restaurant I've never been to before and we laugh and I realize, geez, I've never met
this guy.
Look at how much I have in Kai.
I thought we were just bald dudes with glasses.
It turns out like we're living the same life, right?
There you go.
This is the beauty.
This is the beauty of our time that's here on planet Earth.
And I think the dining table, metaphorically speaking, is the best place to put aside grievances and share with people.
I did it so often that I propose to the production company that we shoot a show called Dinner with the Dictator because I thought, you know, you see all these news guys and anchor women and everyone is going into talk to some international narco-terrorism.
or some evil, you know, autocrat and some faraway country and they get the big interview.
And they ask them all about international geopolitical matters and stuff like that.
And a lot of people, frankly, tune out.
And I'm sitting there talking to this guy about his kid and his office and the pictures and
when was this tape.
We're just two dudes, you know, shooting the crap, you know, until I wanted to ask him the big
question that I was most curious about.
And I think that when you say I'm such a good storyteller, thank you.
I take that as a high compliment from someone like yourself who pays attention to this stuff.
I find that I have a really good editor.
That's number one.
Most importantly, anyone who's in my kind of media, we have great editors, right?
But I also, I think on camera, I have something that I don't have in my real life,
which is the most amount of patience and curiosity.
When the camera is rolling, I understand my job.
I am the avatar for everyone who's sitting on a couch watching it.
And so I try to be like them and channel them and ask the questions I think I would want to know if I was on a couch somewhere.
And I try to be somewhat entertaining.
And along the way, it's worked.
And it's just a muscle that happens automatically.
I leave tomorrow.
I'm shooting something in Illinois for a project that I am not allowed to talk about.
But it's another piece of content that I'm making.
And it's a two or three day shoot.
And my production company is the one who's making the show.
And we had a pre-production meeting that lasted like three minutes.
And the reason was that all these people I've worked with for years making my other shows.
And they said, yeah, you're just going to do what you do all the time.
I'm like, right.
You know, and you can boundary it whoever we want.
I mean, we're not shooting live.
You know, the director can always say, ask this question or don't stand there,
stand here, whatever it is.
But I'm just going to do what I do.
And anyone who hires me for a job knows, I'm just going to do what I do.
I don't, I don't act.
I don't pretend to be something that I'm not.
I'm the same person.
If you and I had dinner, then I would be if you're watching me have dinner with someone on
camera.
I'm that dude.
And it is much appreciated.
It is much appreciated.
So let's talk about something that you actually can discuss and talk about.
So I teased it in the beginning.
For those that don't know, I reached out to Andrew who said, hey, my wife and I has anniversary is coming up.
And Andrew goes, Mick, I got something for you.
And he's going to read this book, The Blue Food Cookbook.
My wife loves seafood.
I mean, I love seafood as well, too, but my wife being a native California,
seafood and tacos.
And if you can figure out how to put those together, like she's in heaven.
So she opens the book and she starts thumbing through these menus.
And it is rare for my wife to say, oh, I like this or I'm impressed by this.
It is rare.
She stops and she says, honey, there's like four recipes and I'm only on the fifth one that I want to like start making like this weekend.
And I said, yes, ma'am.
So, Andrew, talk to us about the, it says cookbook, but it, but it is a book as well, too.
Talk to us a little bit about the, the why, the because behind the book and what people can get out of.
We have a lot of problems in the world.
I believe eating more seafood and protecting our oceans allows us to produce more out of them.
It's not my idea.
Jacques Cousteau said that in 1957.
Yeah.
The answers to all of our problems, I can tell through food.
And I have several different lenses that say the word food on them that I use to point out what those solutions are.
My most frequently used lens is the one that says blue food on it.
Blue food is all the food, vegetables included, think seaweed and other light.
Vikings and underwater vegetables that are edible, any food that comes from the ocean, the rivers,
the streams, the lakes, the ponds, and there's lots of them. We have confused the consumer
about what to buy and how to cook it. We have tons of myths about seafood. It's too
expensive. It makes my house smell. My kids won't eat it. Ask any mother and skin.
Indianavia or Japan or coastal Africa or anywhere else in the world where there's water
and food that comes from it if their kids don't eat seafood.
Now, it's in America.
It's in America, right?
We have this problem.
Right.
We have, we have done some irreparable damage to our planet, some manmade.
Some is not necessarily manmade.
But the solution to all of it is to pretend.
our oceans, which produce a vast amount of oxygen, and sequesters a lot of CO2, and if we were
able to eat more meals out of the ocean, we would eat fewer meals from the green economy,
specifically from domesticated animals like chickens, pigs, goats, and lambs, and cows.
Now, I love those animals. I am not a vegan or vegetarian, although I eat less.
meat than I ever have in my life currently. But the reason is, is that we're losing
vast amounts of acreage on planet Earth every second, taking down forests to create arable land,
not to feed human beings, but to grow food to feed animals that we eat. So we are literally
devouring our own planet.
It is the least sustainable, least regenerative action in human history.
Yeah.
The ocean has vast amount of food.
However, we only eat a narrow, narrow portion of it.
You know, tuna, halibut, shrimp, add one or two other things, the salmon, right?
Now, do we have recipes for those things in the book?
Yes.
But the majority of the book is about a lot of things that you can do with filter feeders,
like mussels, oysters, and clams, tin fish, smaller species that that are closer to shore
that not only are fresher, not only are being carried now in more seafood shops and supermarkets
than ever before, but also ones that are being farmed on land or at sea, right?
And aquaculture, the farming of seafood, is safe, it is profitable for.
for those that do it. It is cost effective for the consumer because as demand for it rises,
the producers have the system and the distribution points to create more seafood for us to eat,
grown in an aquaculture system. And for the first time in human history, it's essentially,
essentially, yes, there are a couple bad actors out there. It's not perfect. But essentially problem
free. We've eliminated copper netting. The feed ratio is now one to one or better. We are not
growing fish and overcrowded pens. We now have a system to feed them where the food is not
dropping through these pens and causing pollution on the ocean floor. I mean, all the problems
with aquaculture from the 70s have been solved. We need more investment in things like
aquaculture globally to feed a hungrier and hungrier planet and less rainbow chasing
like cell-based fish or seafood that will not scale for 20 years and will still be too
expensive for the average consumer to afford. I believe that there isn't a problem that we have.
hunger, food waste, national security, international security, economic, job equity, gender equity, pay equity, immigration, climate crisis. I've just named 10. I can probably think of more, but, you know, let's just leave it. You get the idea. Yeah. That doesn't have a substantial amount of solution to be found in how we interact with our oceans, river, streams, lakes, our ecosystem.
that's blue. And so the idea was to create a fun, awesome cookbook, 145 great recipes.
Thanks, your wife for me. She's, she got the, she understood the assignment.
She did.
Great recipes, co-authored by my colleague Barton Seaver in collaboration with Fed by Blue
and pictures by Eric Wolfinger, the photography's fantastic, the art illustrations by
Yulia Shevchenko, fantastic.
We all created a book that has these incredible recipes, but we also have 100 plus pages
of how to understand the blue world, how to purchase fish, where to turn to learn today,
which is going to be different than two months from now, is it okay to eat this fish
in this part of the world, right?
because fish are moving around all the time in our oceans, right?
We don't have mercury poisoning in an aquaculture system,
but we hear all the time about tests on fish one day that are fine,
and the same school of fish a month later,
there's rising mercury levels, right?
So we need to know what to eat and when to eat.
It's very confusing for consumers.
We also, and pardon me if I made this joke before,
but you know no one ever walked into a supermarket and said can you point me to the wild chickens right
so i don't understand what the problem is with farmed fish we we eat cheap commodity farm chicken
that's probably the worst food for you on planet earth not chicken i'm talking about this the the
really really really bad commodity stuff right yeah we eat that like crazy it's so
awful for you. These chickens that are in confinement cages and so on, cows that are sitting up to
their knees in their own excrement, pig, same thing. The commercialized big ag meat industry is
so much less clean. But they just generate so much income that Washington, D.C. and our state houses
find it almost impossible to legislate or mandate that they clean up their systems.
Yeah.
Right.
They have incredible lobbying groups, you know, beef.
It's what's for dinner.
Pork, you know.
The other white meat.
The other white meat.
You know, these, all of these groups have incredible big lobbying efforts.
And seafood doesn't have an organized body, right?
Because it's spread all over the place.
And because of that, I think we need books like ours to kind of let people know that as a consumer, as an eater, as a good global citizen, you can make a big difference by eating seafood, but you can make even bigger difference for your family, eating healthy, nutritious protein, and do it in a way that I think is stylish and fun and make the world a better place and make your house a better place for everyone who's in it.
amen to that brother amen to that where do you want people to buy and find the book
uh you the blue food cookbook you plug that into you know any search engine and up will pop
you know go to amazon go to your local bookstore uh the if it's before october 28th the book
is pre you can preordered on amazon you can go to andrew zimmern.com you the minute the website opens
the first thing you'll see is where to buy the book um and i'm really excited for the public to
to see it the the advanced copy that you have is is something that when i opened mine and started
flipping through it i was like damn this turned out good we're very very proud of it so
it's different in a very good way i mean you start with stories
you know you start with almost i call it the because it's like it's the because of what we're doing
here amazing photos there's even a recipe so it's it's fall and i love a good crumble and
oh yeah you've got a kelp crumble in here and i told wifey i don't know where i'm going to
get help but we're doing this do you want i was saying that's amazing you know everyone
has different tastes the lasagna recipe with see you know what's
seaweed layered in it was one that Barton developed.
And it was the first one that I made when we were exchanging recipes, you know, because
we're co-authoring this thing.
So we're exchanging all of our work, lengthy process.
And that little bit of brininess, that little bit of oceanic salt.
And people put spinach inside their lasagna all the time.
Well, seaweed is arguably the healthiest thing that you can eat that exists on planet Earth.
Right.
for your brain, your joints.
I mean, nothing has more collagen,
glucosamine, chondroitin,
vitamins. I mean, it is a,
you talk about superfoods,
most seaweed falls into the superfood category.
And whether it's fresh or dried and rehydrated,
treated the right way.
You can use it in all kinds of things.
I am never making lasagna without it.
It gave a counterpoint.
Great food is about contrasts
without getting too chef nerdy on you.
But think ice cream cone,
warm crunchy cone cold soft ice cream right um it is it is a a contrasting flavor and umami bomb
that no lasagna should ever be made without it and we wanted to we have a seaweed salad in
there i think is one of my recipes that's in that section and we have five or six recipes
they're great the brownies with seaweed in it are fantastic it turns out seaweed and chocolate have an
incredible affinity for each other. I know there's people listening to this saying that dude is
crazy. And if you if you watch myself for 25 years, you might be right. However, I would encourage
people to try it once. And then you tell me if those brownies aren't delicious. There we go.
Ladies and gentlemen, this has been Andrew Zimmer. Andrew, brother, I could talk to you and listen
to you all day. I know how busy you are. So I'm just honored that you,
us with your time and energy today, man.
Like, I can't thank you enough for this book.
Wifie, you're going to know, I didn't buy it, but Andrew gave it to us as a gift.
But I appreciate you, brother.
I really, really, really do.
Thanks, Mick.
It's great to finally talk to you.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
And we should do it again.
I know you're busy, but we'll find some time.
And maybe we'll just go through the book.
And we'll talk through a handful of these recipes.
I still want people to buy the book.
I spent a lot of time traveling.
Next time I roll through your town, we'll have dinner.
Let's do it.
Let's do it.
I'm sure our password crossed somewhere, even if it's not here.
We'll be in the same city somewhere soon.
100%.
Cool.
100%.
Thank you, brother.
And for all the viewers and listeners, remember your because is your superpower.
Go unleash it.
You've been plugged into Mick Unplugged.
Don't just listen.
Take action.
Rate and subscribe.
Follow me on social and get the full experience.
at mithuntofficial.com.
Keep building, keep leading,
and most importantly, keep dominating.
