Ologies with Alie Ward - Astrobromatology (SPACE FOOD) with Maggie Coblentz
Episode Date: December 10, 2025Dehydrated eggs. Airborne tortillas. Pouches of chicken. Tang. Work up an appetite for space food with artist, designer and Astrobromatologist, Maggie Coblentz. She shares how the intersection of desi...gn and science led her skyward, doing experiments on zero G flights, and shipping miso into space. We also talk Martian gardening, stinky roommates, booze bans, contraband corned beef, velcro fatigue, the ethics of space tourism, how to make barbecued wings in orbit, and addressing the conspiracy of astronaut ice cream. Visit Maggie’s website and follow her on InstagramA donation went to AstroAccessPods Fight Poverty is raising money for Rwandan families via GiveDirectly.org/ologiesMore episode sources and linksOther episodes you may enjoy: Cosmology (THE UNIVERSE), Areology (MARS), Selenology (THE MOON), Entomophagy Anthropology (EATING BUGS), Futurology (THE FUTURE), Gustology (TASTE), Gastroegyptology (BREAD BAKING), Microbiology (GUT BIOME)400+ Ologies episodes sorted by topicSmologies (short, classroom-safe) episodesSponsors of OlogiesTranscripts and bleeped episodesBecome a patron of Ologies for as little as a buck a monthOlogiesMerch.com has hats, shirts, hoodies, totes!Follow Ologies on Instagram and BlueskyFollow Alie Ward on Instagram and TikTokEditing by Mercedes Maitland of Maitland Audio Productions and Jake ChaffeeManaging Director: Susan HaleScheduling Producer: Noel DilworthTranscripts by Aveline Malek Website by Kelly R. DwyerTheme song by Nick Thorburn Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Oh, hey, it's the lady with her overcoat sticking out of the car door.
Allie Ward, this is Ologies.
I hope you have an appetite for airplane food like no other, astrobermetology, and it's
delicious.
Is it?
Let's talk.
But first, thank you to all.
The patrons who were hungry for information about this Ology, you send in your questions
ahead of time.
You too can support Ologies and join Patreon.com slash Ologies for Elizabeth Buck a month.
Huge shout out to patron Jillian Dugan, who this week got an Ologies tattoo.
Jillian, it is wonderful.
to spend life with you. I could not be more honored. Also, thank you to folks out there
in lower commitment, ologies merch from ologiesmerch.com, including shirts and hats and totes.
Smologies is our spinoff show of shorter kid-friendly and classroom-safe episodes you can find
wherever you get podcasts. Also, thank you to everyone who reviews the show. I read them all,
and they help so much to remind me I'm not recording in a dark room just for myself.
like this week's from nature lover Katie Two Shoes, who wrote,
Thank you, I am richer for your work.
And mushroom screams, I appreciate you taking ologies along on your owl banding trip.
Also, thank you to the sponsors of the show who make it possible for us to donate to a charity of the ologist choosing each week.
As long as I've got you in the giving mindset, I wanted to fill you in that from our trolleyology episode in late August,
the wonderful site, Giving Multiplier, set up a custom ologies URL to donate,
donate to your favorite charity and then split the donation with highly effective global charities.
In those few months, ologites have raised over $690,000 via give directly.org slash ologies.
We will link it in the show notes.
You have helped lift 25 households out of extreme poverty, provided 1,500 children's seasonal malaria
prevention, given over 120,000 kids vital vitamin supplements that have saved 7,000.
70 kids' lives, plus so much more good I would need a whole hour, at least to list it off.
And through December, we're in a competition with 23 other podcasters, including Yale
Professor, Dr. Lori Santos of the Happiness Lab podcast, who was in our eutomology episode.
So if you are looking to donate to both your favorite charity and highly effective ones,
the site give directly.org slash ologies is amazing.
We get nothing and we win nothing.
This is just a friendly competition to raise some money.
We will link GiveDirectly.org slash ologies in the show notes.
If you're looking for a less consumery holiday season, requesting a donation to your favorite charity can be a really great gift instead of another pair of slippers.
So that's give directly.org slash ologies.
Okay, onto Astrobromatology.
Astro means celestial body or star in ancient Greek.
And Broma in Greek means food.
So, of course, space food.
This ologist is an artist and designer-turned scientist who got their master's in industrial design for Mizdi.
They have researched space food at MIT.
They worked in the science division at the Nat Geo Society.
They've sent miso to ferment on the International Space Station.
They've studied solar ovens in Norway, looked at breadmaking in space, and attended the UN's meeting of the committee on the peaceful uses of outer space.
They also founded an initiative called Fieldscape that connects.
artists and scientists to work creatively and collaboratively, which is great.
We'll talk about that intersection as well as powdered meats, orange breakfast beverages,
Martian gardening, espresso in zero-g, how eating without gravity is like having COVID, canned stews,
stinky roommates, contraband, corned beef, Velcro fatigue, wearing a space helmet on the roller coaster
of a parabolic flight, and the future of food with artist, researcher, space food expert,
and thus astro-bromatologist Maggie Koblenz.
Maggie Koblenz, she her.
I talked to so many people, Maggie, I asked them about their jobs,
and you have one of the weirdest.
It's so cool. It's so, like, space food? Like, who does that? And the answer is Maggie. That's nuts. Does it come up at dinner parties? Does it come up at, like, let me introduce you to Maggie. She wears a helmet on a vomit comet to smell sizzling Mirapua. Does that come up? It does. I have a lot of names from friends, Space Maggie. I have a friend who calls me Astro Gastronomer.
space witch we have a friend who works at nassau who works in spectroscopy we call her the mistress
of space rainbows oh i love that and i think that just means you're very well loved um i feel like
the question you must get the most is like how can i do this does that come up a lot yeah or i think
it's more just this maybe bewilderment how did you come to do what you do or yeah why do you do what you do i'm not
I'm not sure how many people are aspiring space food experts, but there's always a lot of questions.
When the Martian came out, did you feel like that's it.
I'm going to talk about potatoes to acquaintances for the rest of my life?
It's been 48 souls since I planted the potatoes, so now it's time to reap and re-sow.
They grew even better than I expected.
I now have 400 healthy potato plants.
I thought that was so cool.
I was just so excited that the Martian was actually interviewing Space Food,
experts and bringing research into their process. So it felt like, okay, this is, there's a lot of
directions. One could take this. Okay, quick aside, Andy Weir's 2011 book, The Martian, was made
into a movie in 2015, and in it Matt Damon tried to grow potatoes on Mars. Afterward, NASA consulted
with the International Potato Center to see if this could be done, because it would be helpful
to have potatoes on Mars. So they tried with this Mars-esque soil from Peru, but,
But Mars dirt is toxic to human and plant life.
So five years later in 2021, this astrophysics professor figured out that certain bacteria might gobble up the toxic compounds in Mars soil.
And as of a 2024 article titled, Detoxifying Mars, the biocatalytic elimination of omnipresent perchlorates.
NASA announced that it'll try this method for cleaning the soil and the mostly subterranean ice on Mars.
Mars. So perhaps space taters might one day be on the menu when we bail on this planet. So science,
it imitates art. Now, you also, you have a background in art and design too. How did this all
kind of come about? It's a really wide general question. And I'm sorry, but I literally don't know
even where to begin because it's so cool. Sometimes I also don't know where to begin. But it's true.
For me, it fits, but it also feels like a little bit of a jump. I think space is changing so much, the field of space. So it's not just scientists, engineers, technologists, but there's a lot of different disciplines who are contributing. My goal in starting this research endeavor was not actually to get a job, although that's where I landed with space food. I was approaching it very much with the designers or industrial designers lens and looking at how do people live in space. I thought that was such a
a weird question and really stretched to my imagination. So investigating the design of the
International Space Station and how it's built, what's inside, what kind of furniture do they have,
what are the space suits like, what is the food like, how does this inform the way that they can
conduct their work, how they bring culture up there, the systems in place who's allowed to go,
who's not allowed to go because of these different designed objects in zero gravity and how
everything flips on its head once you get to space. So as a designer and art,
someone who loves to make things, this entire process changes in zero-g. So with food, it's fluid
dynamics. Do you need to be strapped to the wall while you eat or while you conduct to your work?
This was my entry point as a designer. Do they have models on the ground of the space station
for you to kind of conceptualize? Or do you have to go based on renderings and CAD and photos?
For me, I was going off of photos when I started this investigation. So I was looking at things online
and interviewing people and a lot of anecdotal insights from astronauts just to describe in their
own words what this space looked like. And then testing came later when I joined a new research lab
and started to have access to things like zero-g flights. There must be so much Velcro, right?
There's a lot of Velcro. Everything's strapped down. But one of my favorite stories about the
ISS, it actually didn't even include a dining table at first. So it was just thought that these
humans almost treated like robots we're just going to go up there float around velcro their food
to the walls strap themselves to the walls while they why they ate and of course naturally human
beings want to gather they want to have a place to come together and enjoy this you know very
limited break in their day and so one day an astronaut just found some scrap piece of material
and strapped it to the wall to make a table which really has no practical use in space as you
say, like, you need Velcro. You can't just have something sitting on a table, but still,
it was this human nature to have some kind of design intervention for a meal and for socializing
with their fellow crewmates. As you can see, this is an open concept. I imagine that your work has
to encompass anthropology, technology, physiology, gastroenterology, promptology. It must involve so
many different disciplines. Coming from an artistic background, is that part of what is exciting about
it? Is that kind of learning and tinkering? Yeah, indeed. I borrow pieces from all of these
different fields or ologies to create something new. What are they eating up there in general?
I always feel like if you grew up, you know, pre-2000, like you might have heard of astronauts
drinking a lot of Tang. The astronauts do some things you do. In space, they drank Tang. They mixed it like
this in a zero-g pouch, because with no gravity, it would fly all over. You don't have that problem.
So Tang was born in 1957. It was created by Food Daddy William Mitchell, who also made
such Franken Foods as Cool Whip, Quick Set Jello, and the eternally baffling pop rocks.
Now, the parent company, General Foods, had military contracts. No surprise. And in tests
shelf-stable Tang with its sugar, multidextrin, and vitamin C helped mask the taste of the space capsule
water supply. So in the early 1960s, Tang was sent into space, and John Glenn thus became an astro
influencer, and Tang took off like a rocket. Now, in 2013, NASA's Apollo 11 Buzz Aldrin astronaut
publicly stated during an awards show, Tang sucks. When you sort of started this,
and you started logging, okay, like, how are they eating? What are they eating now? What was the
baseline? What were they eating? The history of space food is so fascinating that the different
space agencies have their own dining modules or their own cooking equipment. So NASA and the European
Space Agency seemed to share different systems for preparing food on the ground to go up to space
and then how do you actually prepare the food in space. So originally it was canned, which is extremely
heavy and not the most practical, although it is a mode of preserving food, but this is
heavy and costly to actually get to space. So at some point, we're creating freeze-dried
foods. So this is just a dried food like tang, but it's not always powdered form. It
usually looks more like a sponge. I actually have some sitting in front of me right now. So
it's a burger patty that's been snapped in half and packed into this plastic wrap with all
of the liquid removed from it so it weighs practically nothing. A tiny circle of Velcro on the
side. So an astronaut could attach it to a wall and there's a barcode on it because astronauts are
everything that they eat is monitored from the ground. So they would scan in what they eat so that
their nutritionist could supervise this for them. And it tells you how much water to add.
So there's a little spout on the top of the package and they would attach it to something called
the Rehydration Station, which is on the International.
Space Station. It's something almost like 90 or 99% of the water that's used is recycled from
human urine, human perspiration, and then that gets processed and you put that back into your food
as a warm or hot water and then let it sit and cut the package open with scissors and eat it
directly from the bag. So a lot of these foods are modeled after MREs, which are military rations.
So quick background, given the astronomical shipping costs to destination orbit, the price to ship water up there is roughly $83,000 per gallon.
So you got to recycle, folks.
The International Space Station's WPA or water processor assembly involves harvesting water vapor, and that's in conjunction with a UPA, which is short for urine processor.
assembly. Don't you dare wretch. Don't do it. I hate to break it to you. Where do you think your
water comes from? A huge sparklets barrel in heaven? No, dude. Your now gene is filled with liquid that
used to be frog snot and cruise ship toilets and elephant tears. So according also to a
2023 space.com article titled NASA just recycled 98% of all astronaut pee and sweat on the
ISS and engineers are thrilled. The end result of this water reclamation is far superior to what
municipal water systems produce on the ground. So yeah, if you drink a glass of earthling tap water
with your MRE or meal ready to eat, it is technically grosser than what they eat miles above the
planet. They're like it's war chow. Exactly. You do it, right? Shut up and chow down.
Exactly. But today it's different. There's, I think, LaVaza sent up an espresso machine because the coffee is, again, just powdered like an instant coffee. You add water. Another company called Zerote Kitchen sent up an oven so they could bake the first cookie in space. There's lots of people who are trying to help these poor astronauts with food.
When we're talking like first space flights, I imagine this wasn't even a concern for decades because they were up and back pretty quickly, right?
Right. When did they even start worrying about like you're going to need a snack?
Yeah, I guess it would be around the Apollo era when astronauts started going to space for longer term
and they would actually need to bring days of food supply and keep it in their capsule with them.
And then now the food plans are changing even more where the current food system is supposed to last five years.
And they have the deep space food program at NASA at least to start to think about what is food for Mars.
And what are the challenges associated with preparing those foods,
how will different space environment conditions impact the food?
Will it degrade?
Will the color, texture, nutrition value change for these trips where the return date is not even known?
So the Deep Space Food Challenge concluded in 2024, and the three winners were a professor and student team from UC Riverside
who invented no lux, which means without light, to grow plants and fungi in a dark little chamber using acetate to stimulate growth.
instead of light. And another winner of this challenge was this nifty contraption called
Sated, which stands for safe appliance, tidy, efficient, and delicious. Okay. And it uses
centrifugal force to press food against a heated cylinder, thus enabling the layering of foods,
such as the coveted slice of Zah in space. But the grand prize of the deep space food challenge,
went to this Florida team who created something called nucleus. Again, they love an acronym. It
stands for nutritional closed loop eco-unit system. And that helps farm greens and vegetables and
edible bugs with minimal effort from the crew. It's kind of a set it and forget-it-on-pop-peel
situation. At that point, are they trying to terraform and grow, you know, Matt Damon
potatoes in a bubble? Sometimes I'm sitting in a room and
I don't know if I'm on a set of a science fiction film or if I'm actually in a real science meeting
because you think, is this really what's happening right now? There's, you know, the veggie project
on the ISS that's growing fresh ingredients in space, but these are really just herbs and little
pieces of lettuce that are more for emotional well-being to add a sprig to your food. It's unrealistic
that an astronaut could truly sustain themselves off of what is possible to grow in space,
at least with what technology we have now.
And this suitcase-sized ISS garden launched in 2014, and it's grown Mizuna mustard, red Russian kale, some edible zinia flowers, and some Chinese cabbage.
So it's just nice to have a sprig here and there, but it is no hometown buffet salad bar because you are very far from a hometown.
And NASA does not have the budget for all you can eat.
Also, hometown buffet doesn't even exist anymore.
Since the start of COVID, people were not down.
with just a plexiglass sneeze guard.
So America's favorite unlimited cafeteria experience went belly up.
Do you have to look through a lot of research on what do the astronauts say?
Were they like, this is dog shit?
Like I couldn't even eat this.
So for me it was more interviews, anecdotal reports from astronauts, mostly ESA and NASA astronauts.
And oftentimes when interviewing them, they sort of start off by saying, you know, food doesn't matter.
This was my life dream to go to space.
I was perhaps trained in the military, and it's no concern for me because I'm just in space.
I'm just happy to be here.
But then you get a little bit deeper into the conversation, and then the complaining starts.
It's horrible.
And they don't have anywhere to put their food waste, so they get this tremendous food fatigue
because they have to eat their food out of this plastic, and they can't just throw it out
because it could rot or even combust, so they actually have to lick all of the packages clean
after every single meal. There's no fridge to store their leftovers. One Italian astronaut, Palo and Spali
told me the chocolate's horrible. So he's complaining about the chocolates and the truth comes out eventually.
If you're thirsty for more tea made from used water, let's peer into the September 2025 article
from Frontiers in Psychology titled Food Acceptability and Selection by Astronauts on International Space
mission informed strategies and risks for deep space exploration, which surveyed 15 astronauts on
the International Space Station. What are some takeaways? The breakfast foods and the lack of
vegetables sucked the most, and quote, astronauts limited their menu selections to personal favorites
early in the mission and did not consume foods they did not like, a habit that could compromise
nutritional intake. And this is nothing new. As far back as the 1963 Mercury flight astronaut L. Gordon Cooper
was served the first freeze-dried meals. And through his 34-hour mission, he ate only 700 of the
2,400 calories available to him. So space food, is it the ultimate appetite suppressant?
Unfortunately, sometimes yes. So the 2017 study initial assessment of the nutritional
quality of the space food system over three years of ambient storage in the journal microgravity
indicated that potassium, calcium, vitamin D, and vitamin K concentrations in space food may not be
adequate even before storage. And then during storage, they observed the degradation of it,
so decreases in certain vitamins just from sitting around. And there was a 2025 article in
nature titled Feeding the Cosmos, tackling personalized space nutrition and the leaky gut
challenge. I was like, what? And that found evidence that suggested increased intestinal
permeability, referred to as leaky gut syndrome, which further disrupts nutrient absorption
and immune regulation. How does one fix that? The authors propose bioengineering some really
nutrient dense crops, adding antioxidants to the meals, and
tailoring foods to specific astronauts' genomes. Now, if there were a Yelp for NASA,
what would the reviews say? We're lucky because in that food acceptability study I mentioned
before, astronauts who are identified anonymously, I guess so was not to hurt anyone's
feelings, dished up their real thoughts. And one remarked, there are not enough vegetables
and fruit. And these go fast. Too much nuts and too much soup. So we're always down to
just soup and nuts. Ha ha, they said, because vegetables and fruit get eat more quickly.
Astronaut B said, I have noticed that items are becoming a bit dull. Variety and new foods at this
point in the mission is the most welcome addition. Jay begged for sauces, saying almost everything
could benefit from condiments. Astronaut B again submitted some remarks. It read like the
confessional booth on a reality show. I'm living for them. Bitching that.
I have a crew member that is eating a specific diet because of their food choices, we burn through
many of the foods I like very quickly. The perceived variety is reduced and the repetition of food
selections is increased. This specific diet by one crew member, they said, has an adverse effect
on the rest of the crew. So imagine someone stealing your keesh from the employee fridge at work,
but you are 250 miles above your home planet.
You share a cubicle that smells like gym shorts, and you have to drink each other's pee.
I would have gone on an untethered spacewalk by like day three.
I'm out.
Did you have to eat any of it?
I have eaten some of it.
I have a personal collection of space food with me at all times.
I have a few really special ones.
I'm waiting for the day.
I don't know.
This one I'm holding right now is from March 2016.
It's steak.
Wow.
It's actually not freeze-dried.
It kind of feels like a piece of rubber.
So I'm waiting for a special day to open that, and it may or may not be eaten if I'm next to a hospital.
Ooh.
Okay.
The ice cream sandwiches that we used to get at like Discovery Zone centers and things like that.
Do they like them up there?
Can they eat the whole thing?
Do they eat them up there?
So that is not really space food, which is probably, I know.
It's very disappointing news.
I actually did a school presentation on space ice cream, I think, in grade two, which life is full circle.
But that is a demonstration of the freeze drying technology, but at least it would not be eaten
in that form because it has to be rehydrated.
Otherwise, these little crumb flyways, if you've ever actually had a chance to eat these
ice cream bars or freeze dried ice cream, it crumbles almost as soon as you take a bite into it.
So those little flyways in the space station are highly problematic.
I lived a lot.
So, okay, let's say that you have a couple of bars in your pantry, which, to be honest, I do because for some reason, I've always loved dehydrated ice cream bars. I don't know why if there's just nostalgia or if it's just like, when else can you eat chalk? But should I be rehydrating that in hot water and then eating it as a goopy mess to really get the astronaut experience? I will report back on this ice cream rehydration experiment later in the episode. It's soaking right now. But for now, expeditions to the
International Space Station usually last about six months. And it's a joint operation between Europe,
the United States, Russia, Canada, and Japan. Now, the craft itself, the ISS, is around the size of a
football field. Inside, though, the habitable area is 13,000 cubic feet, which is about 1,300 square feet,
or the size of a small, one-story, three-bedroom house. Typically, there are seven crew members on the
ISS at a time. But as they're swapping out or if you get marooned up there, which happens,
there might be more. The record is 13 at once. 13 people in a three-bedroom house,
all breathing each other's air vying for one fresh arugula leaf drinking lukewarm instant
coffee. So if you're out there, if you have two roommates and you're eating a can of
progresso for dinner, you're living the high life. Oh, speaking of canned food,
Maggie is giving me more of a show and tell here, which I would take any day over a taste and smell.
You know, it's not the kind of can you would feel comfortable actually opening and eating.
Wow.
It's from the European Space Agency, brazed calf cheeks with vegetables in balsamic vinegar sauce.
So I think the European Space Agency maybe has a different take on the menu than NASA.
But NASA, they do have scrambled eggs.
It looks like your dish sponge.
So it's a cube of yellow that you add water and eat.
They have terriaki chicken. I think that's super popular. Apparently the fish is not a fan favorite because your crewmates don't enjoy the smell. It's a tiny capsule. So you can imagine that anything you eat or heat up and open is going to add its own special aromas into this shared space. I recently encountered Jacks as menus. That's the Japanese Space Agency. And I decided if I'm going to space, I'm signing up for their menu. All of the foods are made from different research institutes.
and universities. So I think already that's just adding a lot of flavor and excitement. And they have
soy glazed eel and fried chicken and all sorts of different mochi desserts. I'm on board.
But to file under the only thing in the world improving in 2025 is European Space Agency
astronaut Sophie Adenos, personal space selections. So she tapped the world's most
Michelin-starred and internationally lauded female chef.
and Sophie Peak to craft the bonus food items she'll get up there. And they include foie gras cream
on toasted brioche with candied lemon, lobster bisque with crab and caraway, parsnip velutee with curry
and smoked haddock. So to the long list of spacecraft words that I don't know, add valute.
Actually, take that back because I looked it up and it's a buttery, savory gravy that means
mother sauce, which probably sounds much more elegant in French. Now, other international bonus
items have included maple cookies for a Canadian, rice with beef, flavored stew, and mackerel
with terriaki sauce for Japanese crew members, and beef ravioli and beef stroganoff with noodles
for the U.S. team. I'm surprised that there's so much beef. Did that surprise you at all,
like what sources of food were selected? It wouldn't be my take, but I think it actually didn't
surprise me. It felt like, okay, this is, again, sort of telling of how at least the current NASA
menu is being designed. And for who protein is probably important in space, not that you can't
get that from vegetarian food or other options. But it did seem quite, yeah, meat-heavy chicken,
beef. Yeah, like meat and potatoes. Like a kind of classic American menu. Yeah. And the most,
you know, internationals, as I said, like karaoke chicken, but it's still kind of an American take
on that dish. And you mentioned something about fish smells, and I know that your work deals with the
aromas that we might be missing on Earth and the sounds of cooking. Do the senses work
similarly, or is there anything that's blunted? It's very different, at least from what
astronauts report, you know, if you're having lunch at the office versus your home versus a beautiful
beach backdrop, your experience of eating is going to change. It might not be something that we
think about. So eating food in this tiny capsule that's louder and smaller than an airplane is
already not the best place to start. There's physiological changes in the body happening to
astronauts. So it's something they call space face. So they almost look like, not quite like a chipmunk,
but their cheeks puff up. So they have fluids are rising in the body in zero G. So they have a bit
of congestion in their face, which affects how they can smell and how they can taste. Some astronauts
reported that it was almost like if you have a cold and you can't really taste your food or
things just taste a little bit off. And then the second thing is just the environment of space.
So, well, first, you're eating something out of a plastic bag, including your coffee or drinking
from a straw. So you're not having this experience of sipping your coffee, feeling the warmth
on your face, the aromas are rising, all these different things. Astronauts tell us that this
space station smells like a gym locker because it's a tiny space. I mean, I already described,
how their water is made from urine and perspiration,
when they have to work out for hours of the day.
What do you do with your sweaty shirt?
You can't just dry it or wring it out,
so they'll often hang them in front of the ventilation systems.
Oh, dear.
There's lots going on.
So a recent article titled,
What does the International Space Station smell like?
Published by the Hill,
divulged that former NASA astronaut Scott Kelly
likened the odor to a jail he once visited,
describing it as a combination of antiseptic,
garbage and body odor. He said, we use deodorant. We wipe, rinse off, shower, but there's a little
body odor going on for sure. He continued, mostly it's just exercise clothes people wear for a couple of
weeks without washing. He also added, per the article, that in zero G, bodily smells, such as farts,
tend to linger. I should note that on all of the menus that I looked at, I only saw beans once.
I can absolutely feel and smell that and almost taste it, which is so, it's so challenging, but it's a dream.
So I totally get that, but at the same time, you really have to make sure that morale is up in order to perform well, right?
So there's the stereotype that seems to be true.
that astronauts love hot sauce. And I think that's one of the reasons just to try to, you know, add
salt, add hot sauce to boost that flavor. When it comes to those smells and the sounds too, I think
one thing that's really interesting about your work is, you know, you've been on these flights
to test out cooking. And I'm like, oh, is there cooking in space? I always figured that they were
just like eating like granola bar, which are too crummy. But I didn't even think about the preparation.
Like, where does the preparation come into it?
The preparation at present is mostly on the ground.
So, yeah, all this food is prepared in different lab contexts and packaged and probably
put into some kind of quarantine tested and then goes to space.
Even the vegetable project I referenced earlier where they're growing herbs and different
things in space to see how it works.
The astronauts usually aren't allowed to eat them and even, like, touching them
or interacting with them is extremely restricted.
I mean, I won't get into toileting on this conversation, but you can imagine there's a whole long list of challenges to do with that and zero gravity.
So they're very concerned with astronauts getting sick, getting food poisoning in space because what would you do?
So for that reason, most food is not actually prepared in space.
Join me, if you will, in reading the 2013 NBC News article, vomit in space, astronaut tells why it's not so easy, which number one wrongly assumes that I thought it'd be easy.
but it continues that TLDR, they have really good double-sealed barf bags.
And a 22 Popsie article took a downtown with the piece,
what happens if you get diarrhea in space?
The thesis is the vacuum toilet per usual plus emodium.
Or the more wearable solution, a space diaper.
And you've created something that's like a helmet where you can actually smell and feel your food more, right?
Like, how did that design come about?
My space food helmet came about because I was going to go on this zero gravity flight. And because I was working with food and liquids and small edible things, they were concerned that, you know, this could get in the way of other people's experiments because this was a research flight. So we had, I think, around 20 different engineers and scientists on this flight, all conducting quite serious science experiments. And they wanted me to have a glove box, which is commonly
used in science. So it is basically what it sounds like. It's a box, a clear box with gloves where
you can insert your hands and then you don't actually put your hands inside the box because
you're really putting your hands inside the gloves inside the box, if that makes sense.
And then you can see yourself conducting the experiment. Everything is very contained and
sterile and scientific. I didn't want to use this because it didn't really make sense for food.
How could I eat? Because my face is over here. My hands are over here. So then I decided I will
just make a glove box around my face. And this became the space food helmet where I had. And I also
just had this vision of myself, almost like a goldfish, like, you know, trying to catch my food with my
mouth. So I had this giant aquarium. I actually found this aquarium supplier, manufacturer,
who produced these different sizes of clear domes and spheres. And so I ordered one for my face.
And then 3D printed this harness so I could, yeah, put my hands inside. And they couldn't say no to me,
because I followed all the rules. It was a slightly different format. They just wanted to make sure
that I had to practice my helmet removal strategy. So if I started choking in zero-g, I could
like have this quick release or throw, you know, if I threw up, which isn't common on the vomit
comet comet. How was the vomit comment? I had an amazing time. I think everybody on that flight was my
mouth. I've never smiled so big in my life. I was smiling ear to ear. It was such a blast. I mean,
there's 20 parabolas. So the plane is going in this parabolic maneuver, pitching down at 45
degrees and then up at 45 degrees. And then you experience zero G and hyper G at the base of those
parabolas. And hyper G is also wild experience. I think that's around 1.8 G. So you feel like you're
at the bottom of the ocean floor. You have to quickly get to the bottom of the plane, lie yourself
down. You can barely move your head. You feel like you have the weight of the
world on you. A friend described it to me, like, if you ever had one of those dreams where you feel
like someone's pinning you down, it kind of feels a little bit like that. So you have that,
and then all of a sudden you start floating. And then you have to take advantage of this 30-second
moment in weightlessness to conduct different aspects of your experiment. So I designed mine around
a tasting menu, so these small bites of things that I could smell something, hear something,
taste something at these different moments of weightlessness.
What did you gather from that research?
Like what worked and what didn't?
I think what I gathered was what you can do in 30 seconds of weightlessness is unsurprisingly
very limited.
So that was a huge challenge.
I also gathered that being in weightlessness is a lot of fun and it's so fascinating,
but just having to relearn how you use your body for the most basic,
tasks, including eating, including switching a knob, turning on your camera, how you position
your elbows. And it's just a really surreal experience, almost like being a baby and trying
to learn how to walk. Your legs are not needed, which is also really interesting to think about
accessibility in space and things that are useful here on Earth are not necessary in a zero-gee
environment. So you get to think through all of these ways of existing differently. So that's like
at the holistic experience that I took from it and then just the pure joy and playfulness
that at least through this experiment we were able to bring to it, which I think when you look
at an astronaut schedule, their entire day is planned into these 15-minute increments of different
tasks and operations. Their time is so valuable when they're up there on space. They barely have
time to do anything. And so for our experiment, same thing. It had to be line by line exactly what
you're going to do, but can we intervene and leave room for mistakes and leave room for
improvisation? During one of Maggie's food tests on that zero-g parabolic flight, horribly nicknamed
the vomit comet, she wanted to see if eating rehydrated meals while listening to the sounds
of crackling, frying food improved the experience, or if smelling aromas of food
enhanced the bland taste. And then with astronauts, I conducted some on Earth,
taste tests and interviews with virtual reality to kind of customize these different experiences.
For one, astronaut who grew up near an apple orchard, they wanted to have this experience
of eating outside. So could they, you know, eat something freeze dried while using this
virtual reality to kind of have this nostalgic feeling of being back on Earth? And at least in this
context of this experiment, they, you know, was highly effective and at least like evoked these
stories and help draw out what the importance of culture and ritual and food was for them
in an environment where that's not always part of the discussion.
Do they eat less up there or more up there because they're going through so many calories,
like exercising to keep their muscle mass and bone density?
Like, do they need to eat more?
Like, is it important for them to keep their appetite?
I think they're eating less up there because they're reporting to experience this food
fatigue for all the reasons that we, you know, generally unpleasant. There's another story I love
of these twin astronauts, Scott and Mark Kelly. One went to space. One was an astronaut, did not go
to space. And they wanted to conduct this really interesting genetic study on these individuals
because they were identical twins. So really understanding what happens to the body in space
compared to, you know, the second version of yourself on Earth. And they wanted the twin who did not
get to go to space to have, eat the identical menu to his brother. And he said, absolutely not.
There is no way. If I'm not going to space, there is no way you're forcing me to to eat that food.
So there were some gaps in the being able to understand like what really happens to the body with
this diet. But I think that they're heavily monitored and encouraged to eat specific things.
And each, each meal lists the calories that I'm sure is customized for the astronaut and their
body type and they would do lots of different testing on earth before they went to space to
understand their metabolism and working with nutritionists and different consultants,
which I think can be quite frustrating. Oh, I'm sure. I think that putting that kind of restriction
on yourself when there's not necessarily like a primal need to is really difficult. Food is so
personal. Right. How do we give autonomy to human beings in space? How do we let people make
decisions around their own health and well-being in an environment that's incredibly controlled
because you have to jump through all of these hoops, so much bureaucracy, so many safety
protocols, which I sometimes call these excuses, and how can we like find ways around that
that include a bit more personality or something different? Yeah. And that's incredibly exciting.
What are some of those restrictions? Like, what are some of those excuses that you came up against?
I just think the level, and this isn't necessarily an excuse.
I think a lot of this very much is legitimate and necessary.
Designing the experiment, I had to log every detail to the type of ink that was in my pen that I was using to label.
Oh, wow.
The glue that the precise tape that I was using, of course, like the materials, if I was 3D printing something,
because they want to understand, you know, how these materials might interact with something else.
Is it flammable? Is it toxic?
could it produce an aroma?
So in the case of the experiment, I sent to the space station.
At the very last minute, somebody, when it was just about to be loaded into the SpaceX rocket,
it was like, it's producing some smell and we're very concerned.
And then I had to remind them, like, this is a food product.
So it does smell a little bit, but it's not just concerning.
This is fermentation.
It is food.
It is food.
Like we worked hard on that smell.
Yeah.
Can I ask some questions from listeners because they had some really good ones?
Okay.
But before we hear your questions, let's donate to a cause theologist choosing this week, Maggie chose astroaccess.org, which is a project dedicated to promoting disability inclusion and human space exploration.
And since its founding in 2021, Astro Access has conducted five microgravity missions in which Astro Access ambassadors, disabled scientists, veterans, students, athletes, and artists.
perform demonstrations on board parabolic flights with the Zero Gravity Corporation.
And Astro Access says, if we can make space accessible, we can make any space accessible.
So a donation will go to astroaccess.org.
Thanks to Maggie and to sponsors of the show.
Okay, let's float some Patreon questions to Maggie.
MJ, first-time question asker, sleepy John Candel, Olivia Ford, Sonia Bird, Curtis,
Stag, and Estacia Press, Cedar, Lauren Harder, Glittered Tornado, Ashley,
Ashley Buford and H.C. wanted to know. H.C. asked, has there ever been a vegan person in space before? M.J. was like, first-time question asker. Are astronauts, do they have anything specialized for food allergies or religious purposes? Wanted to know, is it just too bad so sad for these guys? Sleepy John asked, how do they handle food allergies? How do they minimize things? Olivia asked to avoid things that might cause dietary discomfort. That can't be.
comfortable in space. So yeah, do you have to take that into consideration or is it really
like, yo, you want to be an astronaut, you better not be celiac? I don't think it's that
strict. I think things have definitely improved. There are quite a few menu options. I mean,
peanut butter is easy to avoid, but let's say it was something like soy or something else that
could be integrated into other products that would be probably pretty difficult. And I think
this is where ethics really come into play is, especially for, you know, thinking about deep space
missions, whether that's Mars or even just return to the moon or long-term space missions of another
nature. Can you select people based on their ability to tolerate certain foods and different
conditions? And I'm not, I'm not sure what the resolution on that is, but I think it's super
complex. So bad news, vegans, non-dairy folks, egg allergists, NASA is not down with your diet.
restrictions. Kind of like an elderly aunt on Thanksgiving. They're like, it's too hard. I'd
have to make too many dishes. Not everyone wants to eat. But people and space agencies can evolve.
And in the 2030s, there is a planned Mars mission that will be all vegetarian. Why is this? Lockheed
Martin, senior research scientist Maya Cooper, told NBC News that meat and dairy don't preserve long enough to
take to Mars, and that, quote, bringing a cow on the mission is not an option. And in terms of
something like severe celiac that could exacerbate medical conditions through cross-contamination,
you might literally be shit out of luck. Luckily, bread's not popular in space, so it's not so much
of an issue. Is it too many crumbs? Too many crumbs. We don't like crumbs in space, apparently.
So tortillas are a fan favorite, and I'm sure they have lots of gluten-free options for that,
because you just wrap it up. You can eat it floating. You know, a few people asked about tortillas. Meg Chatsy
says that they are good friends with someone who was a good friend with Zena Cardman, who's an astronaut,
commander of the SpaceX crew 11 mission that launched to the ISS this August. And they have it on good
authority that tortillas are a hot commodity up there for their practicality, but they're not currently
able to ask Zena if space has been giving her any weird cravings.
So tortillas are indeed a popular item up there.
They are.
Yeah, because you can, I mean, a tortilla is a wrap, it's a plate, it's a vessel.
You can do anything with a tortilla.
That makes so much more sense than instead of like a, yeah, like sourdough is not happening up there, right?
Yeah, and I mean, tortillas last a long time.
They pack flat.
Genius.
Yeah, genius.
Tortillas solving space problems.
Do you ever find that people have cravings?
Anastasia Press, Odyssemus, Odysseus, Peter Scheis, Hekwin, and Michael A. Terrier Mind wanted to know if there have been recorded instances of astronauts who have rogue cravings. Michael wanted to know.
Rogue cravings. Sounds very extreme. I mean, you definitely hear the classic craving for a cold beer. I think a lot of people could relate to that. But I think cold things in general are craved because this.
this rehydration station. It's hot water. It's warm water. It's room temperature water. But
there's not really access to a refrigerator. And I never thought about that until it was
described to me. And cold food might not be for everyone, but a refreshing drink or just like
something, chili and fresh things, of course, all fresh foods, lettuce, biting into something
fresh. Those are all extremely limited. Chocolate, ice cream, real ice cream. Pizza.
It's like basic stuff.
The chocolate, yeah, the chocolate is interesting to me.
I should get back to that.
But Joshua Martin, first-time Quest Chasker, asked,
are you allowed to have a beer in space and do you get hammered off of two sips?
Do they even allow it up there?
Are they like, do you know how expensive this machinery is?
You are not being buzzed using it?
There's got to be some contraband things.
I mean, people are people.
No one's told me anything.
NASA astronauts will not tell me anything.
But I think they get asked all the time,
is there booze?
There has to be booze.
You know, do the cosmonauts bring up vodka and everyone wants to know. But beer, I think, no. I think canned, you know, carbonated beverages are a little bit challenging in space and alcohol, generally speaking. I don't think they like working and drinking up there. Yeah, maybe one day. I'm sure cosmonauts looks like water. Looks like water. Yeah. One European Space Agency astronaut actually complimented the chef saying during a feedback,
survey, interview, that we all agreed that we are enjoying this food, but we have no doubt that
it would taste much better if we had some wine with it as well. But booze is verboten now. Although
in July of 1969, Buzz Aldrin took some communion wine with him aboard Apollo 11. But in terms
of contraband, just a side note, it's not worth it. Just ask Gemini 3 astronaut John W. Young,
who confessed that, quote, I hit a sandwich in my spacesuit.
It was corned beef went to space. The crumbs went everywhere. But back to booze. It's not just
drunk piloting or regrettable social media content at stake here. The chemistry of alcohol
could throw the whole water recovery system out of whack. So don't even think of smuggling a wine
cooler or mouthwash or aftershave or perfume with you, no matter how much stink needs
masking. But without red wine, how are you going to justify a treat for antioxidants?
Well, in 2023, there was a Danish astronaut who developed chocolate bars called
spacecrafted alongside a food scientist, and on the ingredient list were dark chocolate
and nearly 70 other natural ingredients, such as seaweed, kale, probiotics, magnesium.
He didn't just bring his own, though.
He packed 75 to share with his crewmates, which is like a stellar way to win over office
people that you'll be very close with for half a year.
Oh, on that note.
Marin Mali wanted to know, they said Danish astronaut Andreas Morgensen brought specialty chocolate bars to the ISS on his 2020 mission. I'm curious to know more about those and the ingredients. Apparently he also made chocolate moose for his crew during the mission. Do certain astronauts say, like, I got to have this particular chocolate? Like, is it tough to just bring up a Snickers or something? There's always like a technical term for things. I think they call them like crew select items. Oh. So they get there.
choose from their menu, which it could be a hundred or so items. And then they have a few items,
which they can, like grocery store items. They just have to pass certain tests that they can be
repackaged appropriately or meet the safety standard needs. So they get a little, a little thumb,
make them feel special. Oh, they get a tiny treat. Yeah, tiny treat. It's like being a kid.
Right. You're good in the car ride. You can have this later. So Brian Schnanagan's wanted to know,
I realize this may be superficial and silly, but what about treats? Sometimes you just want a piece
cake, gosh darn it. Would this be considered a luxury food and therefore not offered? Does it help morale?
It definitely helps morale. I mean, I don't think, sadly, you can get that piece of cake whenever you want it.
That's life up there right now, but maybe one day. I know they sent like Hagenauze bars or Magnum bars.
I don't know what kind they were, but these ice cream bars. They got sent up to space in a freezer because there was a freezer going up
Oh, maybe with some blood samples.
Like when a freezer is going up to the space station with something for science, because that's priority, if there's space, they might just sneak something in there for the astronauts.
But then when I was talking to one of the astronauts who was complaining about that again, because apparently they gave them only the tiny versions, not the full-size versions, they thought that was really cheap of them.
Oh.
They're like, thanks for this.
Really?
And here we go.
I hope you're hungry for nothing.
Have you heard of The Expanse?
The Expanse books?
Yeah, and I've also, I actually have not read them, and I have, it's a TV show also, as far as I know.
Oh, is it?
Okay.
That's lasagna.
It's voila.
Sit down.
Let's see.
Colby Evans says the Expans Books give a lot of page time to bulbs of coffee and asked if that is already a thing.
And Allison D said there are some fictional instances of space food.
Are there any fictional instances?
instances of space food done right. For example, there is kibble as a presumably low-cost shelf-stable option
in the expanse books. It's not described in much detail beyond color. There's a red and a white
one. But yeah, Alison D is curious about your thoughts about space kibble. Space kibble. That's like
dog food, isn't it? Kibble? Yeah. Like if, okay, so I have a dog on Earth, right? She could be
eating different things every day. But we feed her, you know, frozen pucks, right? Thawed frozen
pucks. And she's fine. The vet is like, this is great for her. Is there any reason why human
beings couldn't just be like, here's your puck with sweet potato and chicken. Have a good life.
I mean, I think that's kind of what they're doing right now, which is a bit sad. Yeah, that makes
sense. Yeah, that's like kind of what it is. But I've never heard of these coffee bulbs. Sounds beautiful.
Yeah, right? I'll have that here. Yeah, seriously, a coffee bulb does sound like just walking down the
street with like a, it sounds like it would have a good hand feel. Yeah, just pluck it off a tree.
Right. What about different like cultural recipes or things that make them feel connected to their
home or make them feel more like themselves? This was also on the minds of Rachel Bayer, A. Ortega,
Nick Reed's storm, fire goddess, Gabia, Shimatite, Aga Gemmon, Marin Mowling, Charlotte Parkinson,
picky eater warlock full time, who subsists on various gruel. Nick Reed and brain shenanigans. Oh,
and Gabiha Semetier wanted to know about cultural considerations and personal preferences.
And if food choices change based on the crew, is there anything about that, you know, let's say that you really miss your mom's curry, you know?
Yeah, I think there's been a few stories that resonated with me.
There was, kimchi has been to space.
I know that.
There was with the first Korean astronaut, kimchi was especially prepared and freeze dried.
so it wasn't a living fermented food, but it was, you know, understood that this is something of
extreme cultural significance and should figure out a way for it to go to space.
In another instance, with Jaxa, the Japanese Space Agency, an astronaut wanted to bring
Sakura flour, not as food, but as a secure flower to space to remind them of home, and it wasn't
allowed to bring this flower. So they used a traditional method of preserving this flower in salt
and almost disguising it as a food product
so that it could be snuck into the menu
and then it could arrive in space like this.
Oh.
Yeah, it's really beautiful.
There's a picture of the astronaut
with this floating flower
and this sphere staring,
lovingly gazing at it,
floating in weightlessness.
And then some of this is food diplomacy too.
I mean, in the case of Kim Chi,
I hope that the astronaut enjoyed it,
but I think it's also decisions
from these governments
and these space agencies
to also make a statement
and bring culture with intention
to the space station.
Yeah.
Yeah, well, several people wanted to know about equipment. Sean Thomas Kane, Agamemnon, Katrina, Victoria Chaplin, Sheridan Kelly, caffeine junkie wanted to know. Katrina asked, how do they heat food in space? Do they have a microwave that would probably interfere with some sensitive equipment or something, right? Katrina asked. Yeah, Agamemnon said, like, how do they make things hot? Sean wanted to know, do electric or gas stove tops? Are they even used in space? Is it all just kind of hot water based?
Good question. Today it is mostly water-based. I think there was this old school method. They had this device. It looked like a briefcase, like truly, and you'd open it up, almost like this Panini press slash briefcase where you would put your food inside, I had these heat pads, and you would close the briefcase, wait, you know, a minute, open it up and eat your food or in the old can days. I think there was even this little hole where you could insert the can and maybe it would heat up around the can. But today it's mostly, mostly water. So no,
No stove tops, no frying, none of those things, sadly.
So, yes, because there's no gravity to influence the heat rising, cool air settling,
and the high energy draws could, like, pop a fuse.
Ovens have been tough.
Also, food floats.
There was an experimental zero-g kitchen oven used to bake chocolate chip cookies
via kind of a bizarre branding deal with Double Tree Hotel,
but that was experimental ovens back on Earth.
And there are some pouch warmers in use, but for now, nothing very appetizing.
Although once again, that 2024 Deep Space Food Challenge did come up with the prototype of a centrifugal canister oven.
And while the name sated, meaning safe appliance, tidy, efficient, and delicious,
could have benefited from an artist's collaboration with perhaps a poet or some punch-up from a marketing copywriter.
It does mean that humankind took one giant leap toward fresh brownies in space.
Not there yet, but we're getting closer.
But with the space food race, China recently whipped our asses,
releasing a video of astronauts on their Tangang Space Station using a new onboard hot air oven,
which is like a very advanced and expensive air fryer.
They were making chicken wings.
They look really good.
I would love a to toaster, like, pop your toast, and then it just floats up into zero-g.
Yeah, but it's got to be a tortilla toaster.
Oh, yeah, it's got to be a tortilla toaster.
And then just like little flying discs.
Kind of like flying saucers, right?
Lynette Davila, Valby listening, Curious Nerd wanted to know about hydration.
Curious Nerd said, I've read that astronauts can become easily dehydrated due to fluid shifts
and low water content of food and alterations and physical mechanisms of thirst.
Lynette wanted to know, do they have to drink extra water because so many things are dried?
Or I imagine, too, having to pee in space is like not the vibe, you know, do they have to drink a lot more water?
That's a really good question. I'd want to say yes. It seems logical that they would have to drink more and they are working out a lot and in this confined space from experience, what I know from like Arctic field work and speaking to a lot of people who do this kind of work as well.
like there's a problem with people almost intentionally or subconsciously dehydrating themselves
because as you said, like going to the bathroom is so inconvenient that you'll try to avoid it at all
costs so you'll like intentionally not drink water so that you don't have to continuously
go through the logistics of peeing.
Which brings me to a question I'm happy and proud to ask on behalf of Katrina, Emily Krieger,
Jesse Cole, and a few other people.
Megan Ratcliffe, Kelly Shaver, and Bopi wanted to know.
Bopi said, what comes in must go out.
My question is, does the amount and type of waste created go into consideration of food available?
Christina wanted to know, does the lack of gravity affect processes like chewing?
Let's see, another person asked about peristosis.
But really, like, to put it simply, Emily Krieger wanted to know,
pardon my asking, but are cruciferous and other fart-inducing foods?
purposely avoided in space. Jesse said, I heard it smells like farts and B.O. on the ISS.
How do they help keep people less gassy? The menu is very much designed with that in mind.
That being said, everyone's body is different. So it's hard to say. What makes you fart doesn't necessarily make me fart. So it's a little experimental. But the body functions in the same way. When astronauts first went to space, I didn't know if they would even be able to pee or do any of these basic functions. But
In fact, muscles and bodies still have their inner mechanics and things go in and come out, as you said.
But the toilet, I heard the toilet's always breaking, so they're very sensitive about that.
Yeah, it's not good.
So plumber, future career, space plumber.
With research stations, they always say the most important people are not the scientists.
They're the people who can, you know, the plumber, the electrician, the firefighters.
And with the space station, they have to be all those people.
people in one. Right. They need more astro trades people. Exactly. Yeah. Trades get a certificate in space
trades. What about the crumbs? How are they picking those up? They don't have a dust buster out there, right?
They do have some kind of crazy vacuum because they use for shaving. So there's these techniques
where you kind of like shave right into the vacuum. And for food, I think it's just try to be clean.
You can't have those crumbs. Actually, in my space food,
helmet this was a big problem i didn't think of this this was a small but large oversight i had these
little kind of like nerd candies if you ever had those they were these popping sizzling candies
because part of my tasting menu was this champagne ritual of just having that or like you can't crack
the cold beer but can you have this fizzing sensation in your mouth so i opened this container and then
all these tiny little candies floating up they got in my nose they got in my ear they got in my
hair. I was picking them out for days. You're like, that's a no-go. Yeah, I was like, none of these.
We're not doing these. Very scientific insight. You don't know until you try it, right?
Yeah, what planet would you want to have dinner on if you could go? I mean, it definitely has to be a
frozen planet. I'm an ice queen. Like, I can't drink a room temperature anything. Yeah, so you've got to
pick accordingly. I have to pick accordingly. You got to get your space. Yeah.
Yeah. I just have either that or just like exhaust all the urine cubes from the supply. What about where would you go? Would you need hot stuff? Would you do a Venus? I'm just, I'm a Saturn. I'm a Saturn person. You're a Saturn. All the way. It's just I just want those rings. That's all I care about. I don't even care about anything else. I just, I see myself on Saturn. Whatever I'm doing. That's where I'll be. This is a good question to ask around like the holiday table. Yeah. Where are you going to eat? Where would you be at?
What would you eat?
And Saturn's like, you know those, like a sushi restaurant where they have the conveyor belts?
Yes.
That's me on Saturn.
They're just going by on the rings.
I love that the ring is the conveyor belt.
You would just pluck off like, ooh, corn flakes.
Yeah.
Well, what's the hardest thing about doing this?
What is just what bedevils you, vexes you?
I think it's convincing people in certain rooms.
something matters and like getting to the heart of a thing because sometimes it's just like,
is it practical? Is it efficient? Can we be productive instead of like, okay, we're humans?
Mm-hmm. Like it's so basic, but that's the biggest upwards battle for the work.
Yeah, is trying to find that Venn diagram of practicality, but also like humanity and
enjoying something like reminding yourself you're not a robot. Right. And it's not that I don't
also want to treat space as this frivolous environments and I'm, you know, very intentionally not engaging
my work in space tourism contexts. What happens if Blue Origin is like we're doing five, six hour,
five day, week long trips and they knock on your door to make it fancy as hell?
Not from Blue Origin, but I've had, I have had many knocks on my door. And it's been,
tricky. For example, in one case I had someone call me. Their job was astronaut sales. If you can
believe it, that was their email signature. And their job was to profile top billionaires around the
world to try to figure out of these people like, do they raise cars, are they skydiving? How do they
spend their money? Would they potentially be the profile of a person who might buy a ticket on
such flights and they thought yes wow and they thought that this is a family decision it's going to
cost a lot of money it's risky you know if you have kids or a partner you're probably going to have
to let them know and they might weigh in I was making a space food cookbook at the time that was
speculative and they wanted to purchase this book and use this book as part of their sales package
to send to the partner and kids of these people to say like look what your parent is doing
space, look what they're going to get to eat in space. And that was not for me personally.
I've collaborated with lots of chefs. And I thought, you know, sometimes I think we're working
together on these scientific goals and then finding out later that, in fact, this person wanted
to open a restaurant in space and quite serious about it. And so we kind of have to like
backpedal a little bit like, oh, we're, I didn't realize we were having very different
conversations. Yeah. I'm sure it's really a weird time to see, you know, innovation.
industry and this really, really big wealth disparity and who has access to things like this.
The division between a kind of science and vanity is really interesting, you know.
And that people can do these things. It's not, you know, this job of astronaut sales is an actual
legitimate career path now. Right. Yeah. And you'll have to pinch yourself like,
am I sitting in this room right now? But yeah, indeed we are. What's the thing that gets you most excited about
it. Like what just always gives you butterflies as a researcher and an artist. I love whimsy. And I think
space has so much potential for being whimsical and being imaginative and just stretching my mind
in ways that I didn't think were possible. So that's really exciting in terms of process. And then more on
like a deeper mission level. I think it's the potential to, and I do this, you know, on Earth as well as I, as I am on Earth.
I am a nurse relating on my day to day when I'm not dreaming. And like working with scientists and
field workers to think about different ways to ask these questions, different ways of integrating
knowledge and seeing what that leads to is also very exciting. I've had some fun experiences.
That's for sure. And they continue to surprise me every day. And it must be fun going out to
eat with you because you're probably not someone who just will sit down while they're looking at their
phone, right? Like, are you always the friend that's like, we have to try this place. They're doing
something interesting over here. This is a hidden gem in a strip mall. Are you that friend?
I am that friend, but I don't know. I think for me, it's more like what's happening in the home.
So I, like going out to restaurants, it's always exciting, but I'm equally excited. I've been
like this since I was a kid. Like, I loved getting invited to my friend's houses and meeting their
grandparents and just seeing how somebody makes their toast. How do you make your tea? How do you
cut your lemon. Like, there's no right or wrong way to do something, but it's always telling
something about that person. Yeah, it's such a, it's such a personal, an immediate type of
anthropology, you know, for sure. I cook very differently when I'm alone versus when someone
else is watching. Yeah. I don't wash my vegetables. Yeah, like, it's good for the microbiome.
Don't worry about it. Yeah, exactly. I microwave vegetables that are so soggy. And if I'm tired and
hungry enough. I'm like, I would never serve these, but I will serve them to my own mouth. So
I totally get it. Thank you so much for taking the time to let me ask you so many spacey
questions. Thank you. This has been such a pleasure. So ask spectacular people spacey questions
because the information is just floating around. It's ready to be consumed. Thank you so much,
Maggie, for joining and chatting. And for more on her work, you can see.
Koblens and follow her online at Maggie Koblenz. And we're at Ologies on Blue Sky and
Instagram. I'm Allie Ward on both. And we have shorter kid-friendly episodes called Smologies, S-M-O-L-O-G-I-E-S,
wherever you get podcasts. So download a bunch for your upcoming holiday road trips. Tell your friends.
Ologies merch is at Ologiesmerch.com. You can become patron at patreon.com slash ologies.
Again, the link to donate to your favorite charity and a highly effective global one is give
directly.org slash ologies. We'll link in the show notes. Aaron Talbert
admins theologies podcast Facebook group. Aveline Malik makes our professional transcripts.
Kelly R. Dwyer does the website. Noel Dilworth keeps us down to earth as a scheduling
producer. Susan Hale is our space operations commander as managing director. Susan also did
an incredible amount of backup research for this episode. Huge thank you to Susan Hale.
Couldn't have done this one without her. Couldn't have done any of them without her. And
co-pilot editor is Jake Chafee. And driving the editing shuttle is
is Mercedes Maitland of Maitland Audio.
Nick Thorburn banged out the theme song.
And if you stick around to the end of the episode, I tell you a secret.
This week's, it's that I could not be less interested in going to space.
So consider a slot open.
First, NASA would have me fell out like the most preliminary survey.
One of the questions would be like, how much do you have to pee?
And I'd have to check the box like all the time.
Secondly, once again, I am unqualified.
And I would never pass the psych tests or the drug tests, if I'm being honest.
gummy before Thanksgiving. But my secret, my other secret is I'm going to try this
rehydrated ice cream sandwich. I've had it soaking as I've been recording. And don't
worry, I'm going to cut out any sounds of eating. All right, I got you. I'm going to try this
out though right now. That's actually not that bad. I'm being honest with you. Completely
honest. It just tastes like a melted ice cream sandwich. Wow, how about that? It tastes like when you
make ice cream soup. I think I also put a little bit too much room temperature water, not optimal.
Use less water. You put this in the fridge. Really not that bad. And it doesn't hurt your teeth
like eating styrofoam. So if you have astronaut ice cream sitting in your cabinet and you feel
bad throwing it away because it was a gift, pour a little hot water on that. Let it chill in the
fridge. You got yourself a medium cold ice cream sandwich. Good to know. Okay, bye-bye.
I need some
I need some space.
