Logo

    studio atao

    Explore " studio atao" with insightful episodes like "Growth: From Tech to Tomatoes", "Put the Giving Into Thanksgiving With the Neighborhood’s Table", "Estrangement, Identity & a Wok with Jenny Dorsey", "Play Me a Recipe: Jenny Dorsey makes Barley Tofu with Chili Oil" and "Screens: A Virtual Gateway to Food" from podcasts like ""Meat and Three", "Tech Bites", "My Family Recipe", "Burnt Toast" and "Meat and Three"" and more!

    Episodes (8)

    Growth: From Tech to Tomatoes

    Growth: From Tech to Tomatoes

    What can a nascent fruit tree tell us about camaraderie? How can increasing investments alert us to the challenges of capitalism? Meat and Three explores what HRN’s shows are saying about growth. We’ll nurture curiosity in the garden, weigh the pros and cons of the fake meat industry, and consider the role of restaurants in gentrifying neighborhoods. 

    Further Reading and Listening:

    Learn more about starting your garden journey on Feast Yr Ears episode 202: Garden Now!

    Enjoy our episode about peaches on our podcast for kids: Time for Lunch episode 7: Peaches!

    Dive deeper into ideas about combating gentrification through intentional hospitality on Tech Bites episode 250: Put the Giving Into Thanksgiving With the Neighborhood’s Table

    Find The Neighborhood’s Table Community Survey Results here.

    Listen to the full episode of Tech Bites episode 248: The Age of Unprecedented Investment in Food Tech with Rachel Konrad to hear more on investment in food tech. 

    You can read more of Alicia Kennedy’s writing on her blog, “From the Desk of Alicia Kennedy.” 

    HRN is home to transformative exchanges about food. Our 35+ member-supported food podcasts empower eaters to cultivate a radically better world. This month, we’re asking you to join us. Become a monthly sustaining member at heritageradionetwork.org/donate.

    Meat and Three is powered by Simplecast.

    Put the Giving Into Thanksgiving With the Neighborhood’s Table

    Put the Giving Into Thanksgiving With the Neighborhood’s Table

    On this holiday episode of Tech Bites, we’ll look at paying it forward to building better communities with Studio ATAO’s The Neighborhood’s Table. Host Jenifer Leuzzi talks with Edric Huang, Head of Programming at Studio ATAO, about combating gentrification through intentional hospitality and their current fundraising project. Make it a real black Friday this year and keep your favorite non-profit organization out of the red. Check out these episodes of Tech Bites to discover some new organizations we talked with this year: 245 The Forge, 235 The Barrio Fridge, 232 With Warm Welcome, 220 Spicy Green Book, and 217 Toast Ale.

    Photo Courtesy of Kyung Ji Chyun.

    Heritage Radio Network is a listener supported nonprofit podcast network. Support Tech Bites by becoming a member!

    Tech Bites is Powered by Simplecast.

    Estrangement, Identity & a Wok with Jenny Dorsey

    Estrangement, Identity & a Wok with Jenny Dorsey

    Jenny Dorsey was 28 when she decided to lay claim to a cultural heirloom: a wok. This tool is synonymous with Chinese cooking but for Jenny it was couched in complex emotions and family memories. She speaks about her childhood and the pressure immigrant families face to assimilate. Jenny also unpacks how her wok became a symbol of sadness, shame, and ultimately forgiveness. 

    The second half of the episode transitions from the personal to the political, honing on Jenny’s work as a chef, food writer, and the founder of the non-profit community think tank, Studio ATAO. Jenny shares her thoughts on the impact and limitations that personal essays pose to the food media landscape. Host Arati Menon talks with Jenny about exploring the honesty and beauty of a personal essay while maintaining boundaries so as not to exploit it.

    Read Jenny’s original My Family Recipe essay. Check out Studio ATAO’s toolkits addressing tokenization in food media and how to achieve equitable representation

    My Family Recipe is created by the Food52 Podcast Network and Heritage Radio Network, inspired by the eponymous Food52 column.

    Play Me a Recipe: Jenny Dorsey makes Barley Tofu with Chili Oil

    Play Me a Recipe: Jenny Dorsey makes Barley Tofu with Chili Oil

    If you like this show, head right on over to the Play Me a Recipe show page for more episodes; we play new recipes each Friday. 

    On Play Me a Recipe, your favorite cooks will walk you through their most treasured recipes, offering all the insider tips, stories, and tricks you won't get from a written recipe—and you'll be right alongside them, every step of the way. Feel free to pause, jump back, or navigate the steps via the podcast chapters.

    If you're cooking along, here's the recipe we're making today. Go ahead and grab the ingredients below (Jenny starts listing them at 3:02) before starting the episode.

    Barley Tofu
    Serves 2

    Barley "tofu"

    • 3/4 cup (100 grams) barley flour
    • 1 3/4 cups (375 grams). water
      1 teaspoon kosher salt
    • Neutral oil, for frying

    Chili oil

    • 8 dried red chili peppers
    • 1 tablespoon whole red Sichuan peppercorns
    • 2 teaspoons whole white peppercorns
    • 2-inch knob of ginger, peeled and minced
    • 3 stalks scallion, stemmed and minced
    • 5 cloves garlic, peeled and minced
    • 1 cup neutral oil
    • Kosher salt, to taste
    • White sugar, to taste
    • White vinegar, to taste

    Barley "tofu"

    1. Whisk together barley flour, water, and salt until smooth in a medium pot.
    2. Heat mixture over medium heat, whisking continuously for at least 10 minutes, until it thickens considerably and the raw flour taste is gone.
    3. Quickly transfer barley mixture to a small nonstick loaf pan or brownie pan, and place plastic wrap directly on top of the mixture.
    4. Place a flat, heavy item directly on top of the plastic wrap to flatten the mixture until it’s smooth at top. Ideally, the mixture has now been pressed into a rectangular shape that meets the edges of the pan you are using.
    5. Let rest 4 hours or more before unmolding and slicing.
    6. Remove barley tofu from pan, and slice into rectangles or squares of your choosing.
    7. Heat oil in a large nonstick skillet over medium heat until slick and shiny.
    8. Add barley tofu and pan fry on all sides until golden brown.
    9. Drain on paper towels, and serve with sauce(s) or garnish of your choice.

    Chili oil

    1. Preheat oven to 400°F.
    2. Toast chiles on a sheet tray, 1-2 minutes, until darkened but not black.
    3. Remove and let cool completely. Pulverize into powder with a spice grinder.
    4. Dry toast Sichuan peppercorn and white pepper in a small skillet over medium heat until lightly fragrant, approximately 2-3 minutes.
    5. Let cool completely, and grind coarsely with a spice grinder.
    6. Combine chilies with spices, ginger, scallion, garlic in a heat-proof container.
    7. Heat oil in a small pot until it reaches 300°F.
    8. Carefully pour oil over chili mixture. It will bubble and steam immensely. Stir to combine, and let cool completely.
    9. Season with salt, sugar, and vinegar to taste.
    10. Let chili oil infuse in refrigerator overnight before serving.

    Is there a recipe you'd like to hear us make? Email it to us at podcasts@food52.com.

    Lobby Time Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
    Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
    http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

    Screens: A Virtual Gateway to Food

    Screens: A Virtual Gateway to Food

    On this week's episode of Meat and Three, we explore what happens when food is consumed through a screen. From a simple TV or computer monitor to the more complex VR goggles, the sensory experience of food is fundamentally shifted with the mediation of a virtual barrier. 


    Kat Johnson first ponders the significance (or lack thereof) of fruit cameos on cable news. Next, Tash Kimmel looks at how urban foraging is aided through a virtual platform. We then move to the world of virtual reality. Emily Kunkel examines how VR can be used to unlock new therapeutic and utilitarian applications of food, and Dylan Heuer talks with Jenny Dorsey about how she uses VR to bring political and metaphorical meaning to the dinner party format. 

    Further Reading:

    Learn more about Asian in America and Studio ATAO.

    Keep Meat and Three on the air: become an HRN Member today! Go to heritageradionetwork.org/donate

    Meat and Three  is powered by Simplecast.

    Jenny Dorsey: Catching Up

    Jenny Dorsey: Catching Up

    Join cohosts Vallery and Ethan for a catch-up with former Why Food? cohost Jenny Dorsey. Jenny is a professional chef, author and speaker specializing in multi-platform storytelling fusing food with social good. She leads a nonprofit community organization named Studio ATAO and runs her own culinary consulting business. Jenny is a former management consultant and Columbia MBA who decided to completely pivot her career and pursue the world of food; she worked at various Michelin-starred restaurants in NYC and SF as well as corporate food R&D before finding her voice in food as a form of social activism.

    In March, HRN began producing all of our 35 weekly shows from our homes all around the country. It was hard work stepping away from our little recording studio, but we know that you rely on HRN to share resources and important stories from the world of food each week. It’s been a tough year for all of us, but right now HRN is asking for your help. Every dollar that listeners give to HRN provides essential support to keep our mics on. We've got some fresh new thank you gifts available, like our limited edition bandanas.

    Keep Why Food? on the air: become an HRN Member today! Go to heritageradionetwork.org/donate

    Why Food? is powered by  Simplecast.

    Episode 67: Women in Asian Food - Pt. II

    Episode 67: Women in Asian Food - Pt. II

    For our last episode of the season, we’re talking to Chefs Jenny Dorsey of Studio ATAO and Helen Nguyen of Saigon Social in the second segment of a continued series on Women in Asian food. Most of the questions have been sourced from The Cosmos - a fast-growing community for Asian women creators, entrepreneurs, freelancers, and artists to flourish and thrive. We’ll be covering topics such as career changing into food, appropriation vs. appreciation of a cuisine, navigating the industry as a woman of color, mental health, and more.

    Image courtesy of Saigon Social.

    Feast Meets West is powered by Simplecast.

    Episode 39: Meet Your Co-Hosts: Jenny Dorsey & Ethan Frisch

    Episode 39: Meet Your Co-Hosts: Jenny Dorsey & Ethan Frisch

    This episode, we're taking a fun approach to (re) introduce ourselves - by each taking half an hour to interview the other host! First up is Ethan Frisch, Founder of Burlap and Barrel. Ethan started in the food world as a pastry chef and activist ice cream maker before moving into humanitarian work overseas. In Kabul, he discovered he discovered fragrant fields of cumin and it planted a seed for his future. Now, he runs a single-origin spice company sourcing exceptional varieties from all over the world.

    Jenny Dorsey started her career in management consulting and was gearing up for an MBA when she had an existential calling to become a chef. After enrolling in culinary school and working at various fine dining restaurants, she began hosting her own popup dinners, titled Wednesdays, and growing her consulting practice. Now, she’s also exploring the intersection of food and technology as part of her non-profit Studio ATAO.

    Why Food? is powered by Simplecast

    Logo

    © 2024 Podcastworld. All rights reserved

    Stay up to date

    For any inquiries, please email us at hello@podcastworld.io