Avsnitt

  • Whether it's anticipating busy days between work and school, heavy project days writing or working in the garden or canning, postpartum or surgery recovery period - there are many reasons why having a stocked freezer supplied with ready to go meals and ingredients is an enormous benefit to living an ancestral, locavore style life. For many reasons - financial, ingredient concerns, sourcing concerns, access - many of us are not able to rely on the fallback of quick easy prepared foods from a grocery store or restaurants, and many of us don't have a village around us that can supply emergency meals in time of need, much less meals that would comply with our sometimes complicated or weird dietary requirements.

    Building the routine of freezer stacking has been invaluable for our family, and in this episode I hope to share some of the ideas, meals and ingredients that have been helpful for us. Of course I thought of many more as soon as we finished recording, but there is plenty here to work with!

    There is a bonus download for this episode available to all listeners, where we included recipe links for many of the foods we are going to discuss. If you are in our supporter community, we look forward to hearing your freezer ideas and contributions in our discussion boards on Discord. Let’s get the ideas flowing and keep those freezers stocked!

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    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

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    What we talked about:

    Leah's business, which relies on freezers!The free bonus download for this episodeWhy and when freezer meals can play an important roleIdeas to consider when planning your freezer mealsAll-in-one prepared meals and casserolesSidekicks, or parts of meals that can be paired with morePrepped ingredients, meant to be use in a dishContainers and storage solutions

    The personal views and opinions of our guests do not necessarily reflect our own personal views or opinions. We recognize that our guests are whole persons and this may include views we or our audience actively disagree with; our guests are invited to the show because we feel they have something valuable to share with us all, and we do not ask them to censor their personal views on air. Our sharing of their work is not necessarily an endorsement of their personal views.

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    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

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    Resources:

    Ketchikan Sam’s podcast link or go to Ketchikan Sam’s and use code ANCESTRAL26

    For more recipe links and our working notes, check the download here

    Industrial Sharpie

    Non-Gummy Masking Tape (I use for everything in the kitchen)

    Souper Cubes

    Spaghetti Sauce

    Swedish Meatballs

    Enchiladas

    Mexican Lasagna (not Mexican, and not lasagna)

    The Pastured Pork Cookbook

    Meals at the Ancestral Hearth Cookbook

    Do you have memories, documents, recipes or stories of those who cooked ancestrally? Visit our website here for how to share

    The podcast has a website here!

    Stay in touch with Alison via her newsletter at Ancestral Kitchen

    The podcast is on You Tube here

    The podcast is mixed and the music created by Alison's husband, Rob. Find him here: Robert Michael Kay

  • We get lots of questions from supporters and listeners about milling your own flour and thought it was about time we brought them all together a Q&A.

    This episode is packed with information:

    We start with troubleshooting bread made with freshly milled flour, including:

    why your bread might not be rising as muchwhy you might have experienced your bread pancakingand why freshly milled flour breads need more water and how best to transition to that

    We then go on to talk about sifting, how to do it, and the nutritional effects.

    We talk about storing grain, whether we're personally concerned with the heat that grinding grains at home produces, and then how we store excess flour.

    We cover freshly milling gluten-free grains, including a deep dive into oats.

    And we talk about all the other things you can use your home mill for, and there are lots of them.

    Whether you have a mill or whether you're just thinking about getting a mill, this episode will bring you something new.

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    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

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    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

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    Resources:

    Ancestral Kitchen Podcast Guide to Home Milling

    The Grain Flavour Wheel Project

    Alison’s article on making stone-ground oatmeal in the mockmill

    Mockmill Milling Guide

    Bread Lasagna

    Do you have memories, documents, recipes or stories of those who cooked ancestrally? Visit our website here for how to share

    The podcast has a website here!

    Stay in touch with Alison via her newsletter at Ancestral Kitchen

    The podcast is on You Tube here

    The podcast is mixed and the music created by Alison's husband, Rob. Find him here: Robert Michael Kay

  • Saknas det avsnitt?

    Klicka här för att uppdatera flödet manuellt.

  • What was the last thing you ate? This is the question we always begin our podcast episodes with. The reason is because we always want to know what the other is fixing and cooking! What’s going on in your kitchen these days? What’s fresh and good? One of our earliest episodes recounts everything in our refrigerators at the moment! That was a lot of fun to record.

    Part of what drives this interest in what we are eating is developing the ideas and understanding of what a day in the life of ancestral food looks like in a world where you may be the only person you know who is eating anything like an ancestral or ancestrally inspired diet. A world where once upon a time it would have been the norm to eat this way, but now you are trying to create a life, habits, rolling tasks, completely on your own, and without the benefit of examples from your childhood or the people around you or expert cooks who live nearby and can give suggestions and show you a good way to use up chicken carcasses or how to feed a lot of small children filling food day after day. And another reason why is - there is something intangible we learn when we travel to a place, stay in a home and break bread with someone. It is an intimate communion that tells us something about that person.

    For this episode, we decided to track our meals for an entire week so you could see the shape of them - where some were more interesting, some were new and exciting, and others were leftovers, scraps, things we were just trying to use up. An ancestral diet is often made up of the mundane and simple, but exquisite foods. Pure in their sourcing, flavour, freshness but simple in their preparation and humble in their serving.

    To create a supporter bonus, I reached out to our supporter community and asked if they were willing to contribute a week of their meals as well, to be published as an accompanying booklet to the episode. The incredible booklet for podcast supporters that accompanies this episode includes at last count 50 pages with about 20 delicious menus, real menus made by families eating ancestral and home prepared meals ranging in size from empty nesters to 7 children in the home, including a special weekend with 12 children to be fed!

    There is also an aftershow - we wanted to go over some details from these contributed menus and we were really pushing the limit on podcast length so we continued recording some of those discussions as an aftershow which supporters can find in the podcast feed. Now without further ado, let’s find out what is on the menu in ancestral homes today.

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    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

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    What we talked about:

    What we ateA lovely review from a listenerWhy talk about a week of meals?An incredible download for supporters, contributed to by supporters!The beauty of the mundaneWhere our concept of mealtimes came fromAlison's upper-class menu styleAlison's notes on her menu: low histamine, gluten-free, and moreAndrea's notes on her menu: winter fare, gluten-free, an outdoor weekOur week in meals, alternating daysThe most common concerns listeners had about their menusSharing samples from some listener menusSupporters can visit the private podcast, Kitchen Table Chats, to see the aftershow for this episode and hear more from the listener menus.

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    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

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    Resources:

    Supporters can download A Treasury of Ancestral Menus, Volume I in the downloads section today!The Evolution of MealtimesWhy and How to Study Food History - hour long YouTube lectureThe Little-Known Evolution of LunchThe Regency Town House: MealtimesMegan's Ranch SeasoningSending in a menu? Include how many adults/children (and the children's ages!), any special dietary needs, and roughly where you are in the world (country/state or major city if you like), and Firstname/Last initial. Any other details you feel are pertinent such as sourcing, what you grew, special processing info or food prep, is all delightful and adds to much color! Photographs and recipes or instructions are welcomed. We are most interested in the menu you actually ate, not the menu that was planned - it's what actually ends up happening that tells us our story! We cannot guarantee your menu will be used in a future volume, and we are honored to receive it regardless! Volumes may be available for sale in the future and submitting information implies you consent to your material being included. Menus can be sent to [email protected].

    Do you have memories, documents, recipes or stories of those who cooked ancestrally? Visit our website here for how to share

    The podcast has a website here!

    Stay in touch with Alison via her newsletter at Ancestral Kitchen

    The podcast is on You Tube here

    The podcast is mixed and the music created by Alison's husband, Rob. Find him here: Robert Michael Kay

  • Ancestral Kitchen Podcast is five years old! A birthday that, when we started this adventure in late 2020, we could never have imagined. In this episode we will finally take you inside the podcast. You'll hear what goes on behind mic including plenty of the disasters we've had. We'll share with you three exciting announcements about how you can get more Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your life, We'll also go over all the ways we can support you (because we've amassed a lot more than just the podcast episodes). We'll talk about what's happened in our own lives in the last five years and finally we'll share a few things we think you'd never guess!

    To join the podcast community at the new Fellowship level, or at any of our levels, go here: ancestralkitchenpodcast.com/join

    If you are interested in sponsoring an episode of the podcast, go here: ancestralkitchenpodcast.com/sponsoranepisode

    To check out our sustainable, ethical merchandise, go here: ancestralkitchenpodcast.com/merch

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    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

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    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

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    Resources:

    To access the podcast downloads mentioned in the show go to ancestralkitchenpodcast.com/downloads

    To access the ancestral kitchen downloads mentioned in the episode, go to:

    The Beginner's Guide to Rye Sourdough BreadThe Heritage Oat Collection

    Alison's 10 Tips to Create & Maintain a Sourdough Starter

    The rest of Alison's courses can be found here

    Do you have memories, documents, recipes or stories of those who cooked ancestrally? Visit our website here for how to share

    The podcast has a website here!

    Stay in touch with Alison via her newsletter at Ancestral Kitchen

    The podcast is on You Tube here

    The podcast is mixed and the music created by Alison's husband, Rob. Find him here: Robert Michael Kay

  • How do you know if you are ancestral enough, and what really qualifies as "doing the thing"? Is there somebody out there with a list of ancestral things you need to be doing so you can "count" as being truly ancestral, or is it just a moving, non-linear line we are constantly progressing along with our intention and heart oriented the right way? It is this question, the always-haunting subject of imposter syndrome, and others that we are going to talk about today in this delightful interview with one of our podcast supporters and listeners, Jaycie, of Hazy River Homestead & Ranch in Idaho, USA.

    Jaycie and Andrea both live off the grid with solar and generator power, and we had fun discussing some of the challenges that come with that lifestyle, as well as some of the benefits! You can see Jaycie's beautiful farm at www.hazyriverhomestead.com. This was a very early-morning call before the crack of dawn and it was a heart-warming, encouraging delight, so grab a hot beverage and let's settle in.

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    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

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    What we talk about:

    What was the last thing you ate?Imposter Syndrome and how to know if you are really doing the thingTime investment: Some rewards we only see after layers of foundational years' workEating out of our pantries - how this shapes the way we cook (and the recipes we need!)And more!

    The personal views and opinions of our guests do not necessarily reflect our own personal views or opinions. We recognize that our guests are whole persons and this may include views we or our audience actively disagree with; our guests are invited to the show because we feel they have something valuable to share with us all, and we do not ask them to censor their personal views on air. Our sharing of their work is not necessarily an endorsement of their personal views.

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    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

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    Resources:

    You can find Mason and Jaycie at www.hazyriverhomestead.com

    Do you have memories, documents, recipes or stories of those who cooked ancestrally? Visit our website here for how to share

    The podcast has a website here!

    Stay in touch with Alison via her newsletter at Ancestral Kitchen

    The podcast is on You Tube here

    The podcast is mixed and the music created by Alison's husband, Rob. Find him here: Robert Michael Kay

  • Beans, Beans, the magical fruit, the more you eat, the more you absorb valuable minerals and proteins, improve your cardiovascular function and the health of your arterial walls as well as cholesterol and fat absorption, boost your digestion and gut bacteria health, and enjoy an array of bright and colorful foods - but what about that other, turbulent side benefit?

    In this explosive episode, we will break down, like an enzyme breaks down an oligosaccharide, the compounds in beans and the processes in your body that can cause the possible noxious side benefits, as well as what ancestral peoples did to deal with this - aside from cracking ancient jokes that never get old. We will discuss in detail a patented process purported to eliminate ALL of the potentially thunderous side-effects using only water, time and heat, and we will additionally talk about herbs that can be cooked or served alongside beans to quell the claps of cheeky applause.

    There is a copious amount of additional material that I could only include in the show notes for reasons of being too inappropriate to read on air, and they can be found on our website, ancestralkitchenpodcast.com by clicking the Episodes drop-down. I tested the absolute technology limits with the length of show notes today and ran out of room on our podcast apps, so go and enjoy the mountains of links and additional text I put there for you to enjoy.

    In this episode I hope you will find the critical information you need to understand the possible pitfalls of beans and where those pitfalls come from, and leave feeling confident in how to deal with them and enjoy not only beans, but all their benefits - and none of their possible sound effects. Researching this episode left me all the more in awe of the incredible, ancient value beans bring to our diet, and more determined than ever to include them in a variety of meals across the week without what the Bard called any "strange eruptions".

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    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

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    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

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    Resources:

    Check the show notes for this episode on https://ancestralkitchenpodcast.com/category/podcast/ . Additional show note material doubles the content you see here! On the website you will also see the ancestral jokes alluded to in the episode, as well as the newspaper clippings from the Duke of Windsor's wedding including the advertisement for bile beans!

    Corned Beef recipe

    How long have humans been eating beans?

    The Story of Beans in Mexican Cuisine

    Karen Hurd’s research on beans and bile - story starts at about 8 minutes in

    London Musem bile beans

    Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron utilization of RFO (raffinose family oligosaccharides)

    What is Raffinose?

    Article about Steve Sando and Rancho Gordo (behind a paywall, but new viewers are allowed an article or two before paying)

    Sumerian Jokes

    Ancient Anatolian bread

    The Rise and Fall of Çatalhöyük: A Neolithic Matriarchy?

    Neolithic Site of Çatalhöyük

    Did Vikings and ancient Norse peoples eat beans?

    When were potatoes introduced to England?

    Does epazote reduce gassiness?

    Epazote seeds from Mountain Rose Herbs (organic)

    Yerba Santa

    Fonda san Miguel

    What do digestive bitters do?

    What does epazote do to beans? “Epazote’s ability to reduce gas production is thought to be due to its carminative properties. Carminatives are ingredients that help to relieve gas and bloating in the digestive system. Epazote’s carminative properties are believed to work by reducing the amount of gas produced by bacteria in the large intestine. This is achieved through the inhibition of the growth of gas-producing bacteria, as well as the reduction of the amount of oligosaccharides that are fermented. As a result, epazote can help to reduce the discomfort and bloating associated with eating beans.”

    Other carminative herbs

    More carminative herbs

    Sources - Garden Treasures (they do not sell online), Rancho Gordo, Hodmedods

    Pressure canning book

    Soaking beans

    WAPF...

  • What foods will you find in an ancestral pantry in a modern world kitchen? Today we will share some of the foods we store in our pantries to keep our regional, from-scratch meals on the table on a daily basis, as well as talk about modern tools that help us to turn some inexpensive, bulk raw products into value-added products. We will travel back in time to visit ancient and old pantries and look at what people were eating and how they were storing it, and we will also talk about ancient tools, some of which we still use today.

    Supporters of the pod can check their private podcast feed for an aftershow where we share some of the foods we used to keep in our pantries “Before” ancestral food; and, everyone can check the show notes here for some of our favorite resources for reading about pantries and food in times past.

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    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

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    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

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    Resources:

    For the photos and descriptions mentioned in the show, see our show notes at www.ancestralkitchenpodcast.com

    Ruth Goodman video, “What the Tudors really ate”

    Tudor Monastery Farm, BBC/PBS

    Food in History, Reay Tannahill

    Five Children and It, E. Nesbit

    The Diary of a Farmer’s Wife 1796 - 1797, Anne Hughes

    Food In England, Dorothy Hartley

    Lost Country Life, Dorothy Hartley

    The Domestic Revolution, Ruth Goodman

    Do you have memories, documents, recipes or stories of those who cooked ancestrally? Visit our website here for how to share

    The podcast has a website here!

    Stay in touch with Alison via her newsletter at Ancestral Kitchen

    The podcast is on You Tube here

    The podcast is mixed and the music created by Alison's husband, Rob. Find him here: Robert Michael Kay

  • Fat is one of the cornerstones of ancestral eating. But getting hold of good saturated fat is not easy and can be eye-wateringly expensive. Making it at home, as Andrea and I do, you can cut your costs incredibly and also feel sure of the provenance and processing.

    This episode will talk you through everything you need to know about rendering fat. We'll explain the different types of fats, their names, their properties and how you can use them. We'll then demystify the ways you can render fat in your kitchen, no matter what equipment you have, giving you step-by-step instructions. We'll clarify how you'll know your fat is done, what to do with the leftovers, how to clean up, the many different ways you can store your fat and how to know if it's gone bad.

    This episode is peppered with real questions from real ancestral cooks about fat rendering – thank you to every supporter who sent in their query.

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    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

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    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

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    Resources:

    Tallow price online link

    Lard price online link

    How to render lard in a slow cooker

    7 ways to use lard (including a lard crackling spread recipe)

    Pane con Ciccioli recipe

    Do you have memories, documents, recipes or stories of those who cooked ancestrally? Visit our website here for how to share

    The podcast has a website here!

    Stay in touch with Alison via her newsletter at Ancestral Kitchen

    The podcast is on You Tube here

    The podcast is mixed and the music created by Alison's husband, Rob. Find him here: Robert Michael Kay

  • When Alison and I were starting this podcast, she asked who was on my dream list of people to talk to. I said Tara Couture of Slowdown Farmstead and today that is what happened. In an incredibly long and appropriately slow morning we sat down together to talk for the first time and it was like visiting with an old friend I had waited a very long time to see again. Tara once shared her life on Instagram and I followed her avidly there, listening to her wisdom both practical and philosophical on butchery and growing and shifting, and how in the midst of life we are in death. Taking words from the screen to the printed page, Tara recently wrote a book, Radiance of the Ordinary. Since I had dropped off social media and Tara soon would herself, I was no longer reading her words, so when my copy arrived in the mail it felt like unwrapping a long-awaited, much anticipated letter from a beloved mentor.

    In this episode we discussed many things including what does it look like to be living life at a human pace, as a human, in an ever-increasingly inhumane world? Is it even possible or practical to be a human in a world that expects you to be, and treats you as, a machine? Tara and I went through a lot of tea and boza over this long conversation so I invite you to settle in and join in with us, and let's be human together.

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    One Earth Health make the grass-fed organ supplements we use and trust. Get 15% off your first order here and 5% off all subsequent orders here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    The personal views and opinions of our guests do not necessarily reflect our own personal views or opinions. We recognize that our guests are whole persons and this may include views we or our audience actively disagree with; our guests are invited to the show because we feel they have something valuable to share with us all, and we do not ask them to censor their personal views on air. Our sharing of their work is not necessarily an endorsement of their personal views.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

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    Resources:

    Slowdown Farmstead | Tara | Substack

    Radiance of the Ordinary by Tara Couture

    Against the Machine by Paul Kingsnorth

    Do you have memories, documents, recipes or stories of those who cooked ancestrally? Visit our website here for how to share

    The podcast has a website here!

    Stay in touch with Alison via her newsletter at Ancestral Kitchen

    The podcast is on You Tube here

    The podcast is mixed and the music created by Alison's husband, Rob. Find him here: Robert Michael Kay

  • Humans have been eating porridge (of which the American oatmeal is just one example) for, as you’ll hear, at least 32,000 years (that places it comfortably in the ‘paleo diet’ era!) Listen in to hear us cover just some of the history of this word and the comforting dish associated with it, as well as taking a tour of the many, many ways it is made throughout the world. Then we’ll focus in on oats - sharing surprising ways in which oat porridge has been served and eaten in the United Kingdom. We'll also explain the different types of oats used, the best ways to cook porridge and the myriad ways you can serve it.

    If you love a bowl of steaming, creamy oatmeal, get ready to wrap your hands around this enlightening, inspiring episode.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    One Earth Health make the grass-fed organ supplements we use and trust. Get 15% off your first order here and 5% off all subsequent orders here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

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    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

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    Resources:

    Millet Polenta

    Different Types of Oats and How to Use Each the Traditional Way

    Heritage Oat Collection

    What is Sowans?

    Ollebrod recipe

    How to Roll Your Own Oats (and 3 Good Reasons to do It!)

    Gerty Milk article

    Episode 70: Fermenting Oats

    Do you have memories, documents, recipes or stories of those who cooked ancestrally? Visit our website here for how to share

    The podcast has a website here!

    Stay in touch with Alison via her newsletter at Ancestral Kitchen

    The podcast is on You Tube here

    The podcast is mixed and the music created by Alison's husband, Rob. Find him here: Robert Michael Kay

  • Everybody always wants to know - is a nourishing diet an elitist, privileged ideal, inaccessible to people without a huge budget, and only for the super wealthy? In this episode we are going to share five complete meals. Each meal serves a family of five, and each complete meal can be made for about $5USD (£3.71GBP).

    Balancing these inexpensive meals against the more expensive meals that can turn up in an ancestral menu is one way you can bring the overall annual food budget down. You can make all five of these menus, combined, for less than it would cost to take your family of five out one time for the cheapest option at McDonald’s - and that’s not even accounting for the life-giving, health-sustaining benefits of your nourishing meals.

    Each of these menus has an option for gluten-free and dairy-free, if they aren’t already, and they can also be made ahead, prepped ahead, or even frozen or canned for absolutely speedy preparation. We’ve shared a few books rich in ideas at the end of the episode, and supporters can find our notes for this rather note-heavy episode in a download available at ancestralkitchenpodcast.com.

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    One Earth Health make the grass-fed organ supplements we use and trust. Get 15% off your first order here and 5% off all subsequent orders here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

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    What We Cover:

    What we ateReview from HeatherThe cost of food todayNine ancestral principles for cutting down a food budgetHappy Meal costs! The expense of eating out and Alison's shock at the costThe ideas behind the food: Seasonality, Availability, Fasting or Feasting, Preference and AbundanceMeals 1 - 5 and cost for each, and each componentAlison's chicken carcass aside - should we do an entire episode on this!?A few inexpensive treats and beveragesBooks chock-full of ideasDiscord discussion on what we can be growing and raising vs buying and barteringINCLUDED Aftershow: The kombucha experiment and extra savings!

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    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

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    Resources:

    Alison's Gluten-Free Millet Sourdough StarterEpisode 103 – 10 Nourishing Traditions Dishes – Cheaper Than Supermarkets!Meals at the Ancestral Hearth CookbookEpisode 116 – Leftovers and Scraps in a Frugal Ancestral KitchenNaturally-Fermented Staffordshire Oatcakes RecipesCheesy Pinto Bean RecipeSimple Apple Crisp

    Extra Recipes

    Pressure-Canned BeansOne-Pot Pinto Beans and RicePinto Bean Soup with GreensCream of Corn SoupAndrea's Kombucha Recipe

    Books

    Make the Bread, Buy the Butter by Jennifer ReeseTwelve Months of Monastery Soups by Brother Victor-Antoine d'Avila-LatourretteA Cabin Full of Food by Marie Beausoleil (Amazon link)Pressure Canning for Beginners by Angie Schneider

    Further Reading

    The Nella Last diaries give an intimate, day-by-day picture into life with war-time and post-war rationing in England
  • Sausages, bacon, crackling – good pork can be heavenly food. But both of us know that, sometimes, in the ancestral food world, pork is viewed as the poorer cousin to grass-fed beef or pastured chicken. That needn't be the case and this episode will put real pork where it deserves to be - at the centre of our plates. We'll give you some fascinating history bites, we'll talk about how the Industrial Revolution changed mainstream pigs, and we will lay out how buying real, pastured, pork is a positive, health-giving and delicious choice for you and those you love. Expect to be inspired by hearing us talk about the many ways we cook the products of the pig, from the nose to the tail.

    This episode is accompanied by a fabulous pork cookbook which we've gifted, as a thank you, to all our current supporters. So if you're a supporter do go check your email. The book, with over 25 pork recipes is also available to buy from the podcast's shop, you purchasing a copy will be directly supporting Andrea and I to continue this work. Find it here:

    Pastured Pork Cookbook

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    One Earth Health make the grass-fed organ supplements we use and trust. Get 15% off your first order here and 5% off all subsequent orders here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

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    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

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    Resources:

    www.robertmichaelkay.comThe new oat recipe downloadHow to Render Lard in a Slow CookerPane con Ciccioli (lard crackling bread)7 Ways to Use Lard (& a Lard Crackling Spread Recipe)How to Make Lardo (Italian Cured Pig Fat) at HomeSlovakian Lard Crackling Biscuits from Naomi at almostbananas.netEating to ExtinctionEpisode 29 - True Historical Italian FoodEpisode 33 - The Fats We Love, The Fats We LeaveEpisode 38 - Fat Rendering, Traditional Food Gems & Eggs, Eggs, Eggs!Episode 49 - Traditional Slovakian FoodEpisode 23 - Traditional Slovakian Pig ButcheryThe roast pork crackling recipe Alison loves

    Do you have memories, documents, recipes or stories of those who cooked ancestrally? Visit our website here for how to share

    The podcast has a website here!

    Stay in touch with Alison via her newsletter at Ancestral Kitchen

    The podcast is on You Tube here

    The podcast is mixed and the music created by Alison's husband, Rob. Find him here: Robert Michael Kay

  • Why eat local? What if it isn’t easy? What if the things I want aren't available? What's the point? Alison and I have both considered these questions for ourselves and factored them into decisions that we’ve made about how we live our everyday lives. We didn’t make the changes overnight, and we don’t even suggest people do so. After the many books we have read, the real-life experiences we have had, and guests we have interviewed on the subject of factory farming vs humane peasant farming, we have come to some conclusions about eating local that might surprise you. They might not be the conclusions or the “arguments” you were expecting.

    This episode features an aftershow which could possibly be described as a little bit salty, where some spicier opinions came to the fore. It was impossible to include everything we had to say and keep the main episode at a reasonable length of time. If you want to hear this aftershow as well as over 140 other episodes on our more informal, private podcast Kitchen Table Chats, hop over to ancestralkitchenpodcast.com/join and join at companionship or above level. Thank you for your continued support and to all the supporters, reviewers and listeners who made this episode possible.

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    One Earth Health make the grass-fed organ supplements we use and trust. Get 15% off your first order here and 5% off all subsequent orders here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

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    What We Covered:

    Simple breakfast, and pheasant in BritainA new, free rye resource from AlisonWhat countries are our listeners coming from?How do they listen?See the full list on our podcast websiteShout out to young listenersWhy do we eat local?Eating like a human - behaving like a humanWhat is farm-friendly foodIs everything we eat local?Healthcare spending and food spendingMoney mattersOur plan to save the world (it might shock you)What we can doWhat is our responsibility?

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    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

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    Resources:

    To see the countries where we have AKP listeners, visit www.ancestralkitchenpodcast.com/downloadsTo get Alison’s Beginner’s Guide to Rye Sourdough, pop your details in the sign-up box that’s nestling inside either of these informative blog posts on her site:

    https://ancestralkitchen.com/2021/01/04/everyday-wholegrain-sourdough-rye-loaf/

    Or

    https://ancestralkitchen.com/2025/04/14/how-to-make-sourdough-rye-bread-from-scratch/

    Each of the episodes mentioned here includes an entirely packed show notes of further reading and links on that specific topic!

    Episode 46: Sir Patrick HoldenEpisode 116: Leftovers and Scraps in a Frugal Ancestral KitchenEpisode 103: 10 Nourishing Traditions Dishes Cheaper Than Supermarkets!Episode 102: The Guide to Getting Out of SupermarketsEpisode 74: 14 Tips for Changing Your Food HabitsEpisode 69: Fake Food v Small FarmsEpisode 66: 50 Ways to Save Money on an Ancestral Diet Part IEpisode 67: 50 Ways to Save Money Part IIEpisode 50: 20 Small Steps to an Ancestral KitchenEpisode 4: The 5 Most Expensive (and Yet the Cheapest) Foods

    Suggested Reading

  • Back in episode 117, we gave you 26 nuggets of ancestral wisdom. We’ve got more. Another 24 to be precise. And just because these are in this second episode doesn’t mean they are any less important!

    Over the next hour, on opposite sides of the Atlantic, with cups of tea in our hands we'll be channelling our great-grandma wisdom and bringing you some ancestral truths relating to food, creativity, family, health, work and life.

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    One Earth Health make the grass-fed organ supplements we use and trust. Get 15% off your first order here and 5% off all subsequent orders here.

    For US listeners, we recommend Grand Teton Ancient Grains. They sell regenerative, organic flours and berries that can satisfy all your baking needs. Stock up and get free shipping at AncientGrains.com

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Resources:

    Alison’s original blog post, 50 Things an Ancestral Lifestyle Has Taught Me

    Episode 86: Your Stories

    Share your stories here

    Against the Machine by Paul Kingsnorth

    Episode 87: Taking Your Health in Your Own Hands

    Episode 56: Preparing Nutrient-Dense Meals From Scratch Every Day

    Episode 12: Why I Gave Away My iPhone

    Link to supporter extra:

    Kitchen Table Chats Podcast Episode 31: Tasting Training with Lizzy Filoramo

    Accompanying worksheet

    Do you have memories, documents, recipes or stories of those who cooked ancestrally? Visit our website here for how to share

    The podcast has a website here!

    Stay in touch with Alison via her newsletter at Ancestral Kitchen

    The podcast is on You Tube here

    The podcast is mixed and the music created by Alison's husband, Rob. Find him here: Robert Michael Kay

  • Khorasan rye, spelt, emmer, millet, quinoa - what do all of these delicious foods have in common? They are considered ancient grains, grasses harking back to a time before industrial development and heavy hybridisation.

    You are what you eat eats, and that goes for grains as well as anything else. The nutrients your grains are pulling up out of the soil are the ones you will find in your finished product. Grains are an incredible source of minerals and micronutrients when grown in a regenerative manner.

    This is why today I am so excited to introduce you to Grand Teton Ancient Grains! You can find this incredible family business online at www.ancientgrains.com and in this episode I got to sit down with Jade Koyl, the owner of this incredible family farm, and learn more about the way they feed the soil, their crop rotations, grain storage, and how their family uses grains in their everyday diet; as well as why they started growing them in the first place.

    Supporters can stick around for a couple minutes in the Aftershow on the private podcast, Kitchen Table Chats, where Jade shared some of the titles he's reading right now and a little more about his family life.

    Everybody can check the show notes for both the link to his company's store as well as a link with an amazing wealth of recipes for utilizing ancient grains at https://www.ancientgrains.com/grain-recipes. Now, let's get to the show!

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    One Earth Health make the grass-fed organ supplements we use and trust. Get 15% off your first order here and 5% off all subsequent orders here.

    For US listeners, we recommend Grand Teton Ancient Grains. They sell regenerative, organic flours and berries that can satisfy all your baking needs. Stock up and get free shipping at AncientGrains.com

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    What we talked about:

    What did you last eat?Farm originWhy ancient grainsRegenerative growing vs conventionalCover crops and rotating cropsHow they replenish their soilHow to increase diversity of grains in the dietWorking with sourdoughHow different grains behaveFresh-milled vs pre-milledStoring grainsHow they mill their floursWhat does never hybridised mean

    The personal views and opinions of our guests do not necessarily reflect our own personal views or opinions. We recognize that our guests are whole persons and this may include views we or our audience actively disagree with; our guests are invited to the show because we feel they have something valuable to share with us all, and we do not ask them to censor their personal views on air. Our sharing of their work is not necessarily an endorsement of their personal views.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Resources:

    www.ancientgrains.comhttps://www.ancientgrains.com/grain-recipesSpelt Sourdough Everyday Cookbook by Alison KayEpisode 104 - Baking with Ancient GrainsEpisode 72 - All About Spelt SourdoughEpisode 81 - Millet: How to use this sustainable, gluten and lectin-free grainEpisode 41 - Wholegrain Sourdough Rye: Mastering the BasicsThe Ancestral Kitchen Podcast Guide to Milling Your Own Flour (and the Mockmill!)

    Do you have memories, documents, recipes or stories of those who cooked ancestrally? Visit our website here for how to share

    The podcast has a website here!

    Stay in touch with Alison via her newsletter at Ancestral Kitchen

    The podcast is on You Tube here

    The podcast is mixed and the music created by Alison's husband, Rob. Find him here: Robert Michael Kay

  • In so many of our episodes over the last four years, we have explored how no food we eat is intrinsically ‘bad’. Instead, it’s what we as humans living in a rapidly globalising and industrialising world, have done to that food that causes problems. The topic of today’s episode, cacao, epitomises this. Originally, in its home, central america, cacao beans were revered and used unsweetened as a drink. Our world has taken and transformed them into an unrecognisable sugary commodity that fills the shelves of shops globally. A commodity that can, as Alison personally knows, through at 20, being addicted to the stuff and obese, ruin health.

    But as ancestral cooks, we need not be scared. And our guest today knows that better than anyone we’ve ever come across. Marcos Patchett is a self-confessed cacao geek and has written two books on this bean’s wonders, the first of which, The Secret Life of Chocolate is 700 pages of incredible research, of which Alison has devoured every page!

    Cacao is an incredibly nutrient-dense food and one that can give us both pleasure and health. Let’s talk about why, and, how, you should be eating chocolate.

    Supporters of the podcast, check your private feed for a fascinating discussion on addiction that we just couldn’t squeeze into the main episode.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    One Earth Health make the grass-fed organ supplements we use and trust. Get 15% off your first order here and 5% off all subsequent orders here.

    For US listeners, we recommend Grand Teton Ancient Grains. They sell regenerative, organic flours and berries that can satisfy all your baking needs. Stock up and get free shipping at AncientGrains.com

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    What we cover:

    Why we should be eating chocolateHealth benefits of cacaoAnti-oxidants and how they workCacao as suncream!Discussion on the stimulant effect of cacao, comparing it to the stimulants in coffee and tea and covering the different types of beansWider discussion on habituation and how 'exciting' foods can be part of our life, healthilyReductionism in food culture and how cacao, just like every food, is more than the sum of its partsHow we should be eating chocolateHow cacao was originally consumed and what happened when it came to EuropeAlison's experience making atolesWays we can maximise cacao's health benefits in our own lives

    The personal views and opinions of our guests do not necessarily reflect our own personal views or opinions. We recognize that our guests are whole persons and this may include views we or our audience actively disagree with; our guests are invited to the show because we feel they have something valuable to share with us all, and we do not ask them to censor their personal views on air. Our sharing of their work is not necessarily an endorsement of their personal views.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Resources:

    Marcos has written two books on cacao:

    The Secret Life of Chocolate (Alison has the hardback but this is also now available more economically as an ebook), and Pharmakakawa.

    If you want to buy a copy of them, he is offering podcast listeners a 20% discount. Use the code CHOC20 on the publishers website: https://www.aeonbooks.co.uk

    Marcos’ Instagram

    Marcos’ herbalist website

    Marcos is on You Tube as The Nocturnal Herbalist

    Alison's course Bean-to-Bar Chocolate with No Special Equipment mentioned in the recording will guide you through making chocolate at home from the raw bean with equipment you already have in your kitchen

    Do you have memories, documents, recipes or stories of those who cooked ancestrally? Visit our website here for how to share

    The podcast has a website here!

    Stay in touch with Alison via her newsletter at Ancestral Kitchen

    The podcast is on You Tube here

    The podcast is mixed and the music created by Alison's husband, Rob. Find him here: Robert Michael Kay

  • Ancestral food is not just all livers and bone broth! You not only can find amazing treats and desserts in the ancestral food world, but this is where delicious, comforting goodness was invented. The modern and industrial versions of sweet treats are like looking through a glass Pyrex pan darkly, and when you are introduced to the ancestral food world and the amazing ingredients we have available to us here you can in fact meet the richness and goodness of delicious treats face to face.

    In this episode we share some of our favorite treats including a range of baked, custardy, dairy-free, gluten-free, or egg-free treats to keep you going all winter and into the spring. And the question I know which is burning in all of our hearts, is chocolate part of an ancestral lifestyle, can it be part of an ancestral life? Find out in this episode.

    We also included a few of our favorite hot beverages - on a cold rainy day there is nothing better than wrapping your fingers around a hot steaming mug of something delicious and nestling in with a good book for a long afternoon … and then of course you gotta get up and put on your overalls and your hat and go back out into the rain and do the evening chores but that's ok, you've got something delicious to come back inside to!

    For supporters of the podcast there is an additional download with a couple extra recipes for you (thank you for keeping us on the air!), and for everybody listening be sure to check the show notes, we linked the heck outta this one. Let us know if there are other sweet treats we should have mentioned or that you love!

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    One Earth Health make the grass-fed organ supplements we use and trust. Get 15% off your first order here and 5% off all subsequent orders here.

    For US listeners, we recommend Grand Teton Ancient Grains. They sell regenerative, organic flours and berries that can satisfy all your baking needs. Stock up and get free shipping at AncientGrains.com

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    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

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    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

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    What we talked about and resource links:

    Tinaktak (Primal, Whole 30, Paleo, Gluten-Free, Grain-Free, Dairy-Free, Egg-Free, Soy-Free)Bonus download for supporters www.ancestralkitchenpodcast.com/downloadsThe principle of ingredientsValerie MacBean, Coconut CookeryNourishing Traditions by Sally Fallon and Mary EnigAncestral CookiesWholegrain Einkorn Chocolate Chip CookiesJumbo Chewy Sourdough Oatmeal Cookies from our cookbookMeals at the Ancestral HearthComfort Foods episodeAnnual Christmas Hamper for supportersRushbearer's GingerbreadThe Prelude, by WordsworthTapioca PuddingCreme Brulee/CustardSpelt Sourdough Carrot CakeBean to Bar Chocolate (subscriber's to Alison's newsletter get 15% off! www.ancestralkitchen.com to subscribe)The Secret Life of Chocolate episodeGAPS Apple Crisp (gf, df) I said in the episode there was no recipe but I typed one up!Rachael's Bone Broth Hot Chocolate and linked in Plan to EatBest Cheesecake EverRicotta with Honey or BerriesCreamy Maple Eggnog (Andrea's long-lost prodigal recipe)Creamy Raw EggnogSweet Cheese Topping from Nourishing Traditions, page 541
  • As you know, if you’ve been cooking ancestrally for any length of time, the ancestral mindset does not stay in the kitchen! Some of us come to this as part of a health journey, already thinking about our life as a whole…others of us start with food and find the wisdom of our ancestors seeping into the rest of our lives. There are things we just can’t not see any more, things we feel are wrong; things we know are right.

    We have, together, been living this lifestyle for over 25 years. And we were both on health journeys long before then. Our lives, not just our kitchens, have transformed.

    In this episode you’ll hear 26 nuggets of wisdom. They are things we’ve learned, often the hard way, and things we have to remind ourselves of again and again as we step forward. Join us, and our community of listeners, as we share some truth.

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    One Earth Health make the grass-fed organ supplements we use and trust. Get 15% off your first order here and 5% off all subsequent orders here.

    For US listeners, we recommend Grand Teton Ancient Grains. They sell regenerative, organic flours and berries that can satisfy all your baking needs. Stock up and get free shipping at AncientGrains.com

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    The Fermentation Summit 2025 is a free, online gathering of top fermentation experts sharing their wisdom, recipes, and techniques—from sauerkraut and kimchi to miso, kefir, kombucha, and beyond. Whether you’re a curious beginner or a seasoned fermenter, this 3-day virtual summit offers practical, science-backed guidance and hands-on inspiration to help you master the microbial magic at home.

    Name: Fermentation Summit 2025

    Dates: October 21-23, 2025

    Location: Online (Free Virtual Event)

    Host: Holly Howe of MakeSauerkraut

    https://ancestralkitchenpodcast.com/hollysummit

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    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

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    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

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    Resources:

    50 Things an Ancestral Lifestyle has Taught Me

    The Myth of Olive Oil Use in Italy

    Episode 66 - 50 Ways to Save Money on an Ancestral Diet – Part 1

    Episode 67 - 50 Ways to Save Money on an Ancestral Diet – Part 2

    50 Ways to Save Money on an Ancestral Diet PDF Download

    Episode 50 – 20 Small Steps to an Ancestral Kitchen

    Download the 20 Small Steps ebooklet for free by joining our newsletter!

    Episode 29 - True Historical Italian Food with Karima Moyer Nocchi, Author of Chewing the Fat

    Do you have memories, documents, recipes or stories of those who cooked ancestrally? Visit our website here for how to share

    The podcast has a website here!

    Stay in touch with Alison via her newsletter at Ancestral Kitchen

    The podcast is on You Tube here

    The podcast is mixed and the music created by Alison's husband, Rob. Find him here: Robert Michael Kay

  • Leftovers again? Oh good, I can’t wait! I love it when half the work is already done. In this episode we talked about leftovers as well as scraps and items that are often discarded in home kitchens. Let’s maximize those precious food dollars and make the meal stretch as far as possible! We went a little bit crazy sharing about all the ways we love using the trash items in our kitchen - including some of the actual trash. We asked our supporters in Discord for their ideas on using commonly wasted food items and oh boy they delivered! I could barely cram it all into this episode. Supporters of the podcast, check the downloads section of the podcast website. I dumped all my notes into a PDF and shared it there so you can hang it up inside your kitchen cupboard as reminders of how to frugally, efficiently and deliciously wring every penny out of that purchase! This episode got me hoping for some dry bread, a gallon of scrap whey, and a jar of bland egg whites! What could be more delicious!?

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    One Earth Health make the grass-fed organ supplements we use and trust. Get 15% off your first order here and 5% off all subsequent orders here.

    For US listeners, we recommend Grand Teton Ancient Grains. They sell regenerative, organic flours and berries that can satisfy all your baking needs. Stock up and get free shipping at AncientGrains.com

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    The Fermentation Summit 2025 is a free, online gathering of top fermentation experts sharing their wisdom, recipes, and techniques—from sauerkraut and kimchi to miso, kefir, kombucha, and beyond. Whether you're a curious beginner or a seasoned fermenter, this 3-day virtual summit offers practical, science-backed guidance and hands-on inspiration to help you master the microbial magic at home.

    Name: Fermentation Summit 2025

    Dates: October 21-23, 2025

    Location: Online (Free Virtual Event)

    Host: Holly Howe of MakeSauerkraut

    http://ancestralkitchenpodcast.com/hollysummit

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    What we cover:

    The Fermentation Summit 2025Using the Bokashi for "useless" scraps and making compost teaHow to use a wide range of kitchen scraps that we sometimes end up with an abundance of! Scraps include but are not limited to ...Leftover and stale breadEgg whitesTibicos and Milk Kefir grainsLeftover porridgeEggshellsExtra milled flourFruit scraps from fermentingBerry seedsWhey - LOADS and loads of ideas for WHEY! How to ever have enough whey to use all these ideas!?And SO much more! There will be nothing left for the chickens by the time you finish this episode!

    Supporters - find the podcast notes as a download at www.ancestralkitchenpodcast.com/downloads

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    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Resources:

    Alison's kvass

    Bread Lasagna

    The Nourishing Traditions Read-Along

    Browse Our Bookshop

    Nourishing Traditions for Children

    A Cabin Full of Food

    An Everlasting Meal

    Do you have memories, documents, recipes or stories of those who cooked ancestrally? Visit our website here for how to share

    The podcast has a website here!

    Stay in touch with Alison via her newsletter at Ancestral Kitchen

    The podcast is on You Tube here

    The podcast is mixed and the music created by Alison's husband, Rob. Find him here: Robert Michael Kay

  • When life is overwhelming or busy, or I don’t know what to cook - What are a few simple meals I can have in my back pocket? As a person new to ancestral cooking, how do I know if my easy meal is ancestral or not? Can I still use my old cookbooks? In this episode, we will share four favorite easy, go-to meals that our families love. You will see how each of these meals evolve with the seasons for us, and we will share some of our best tips for making your favorite dishes ancestral. As a thank you for bringing these episodes to the public, we also have a special document for our paid podcast supporters at the 2nd tier on up with these four recipes written down. You’ll find this document by logging in to www.ancestralkitchenpodcast.com and going to the downloads section. If you want to support the podcast and grab this download as well as many others, visit our website or check the show notes. And now, on with the show.

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    One Earth Health make the grass-fed organ supplements we use and trust. Get 15% off your first order here and 5% off all subsequent orders here.

    For US listeners, we recommend Grand Teton Ancient Grains. They sell regenerative, organic flours and berries that can satisfy all your baking needs. Stock up and get free shipping at AncientGrains.com

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Sign up to the pod's newsletter here.

    Get a free 30-page guide to Baking with Ancient Grains

    Read our Guide to Milling Your Own Flour

    Get all three of the podcast cookbooks

    Wear our beautiful, sustainable merchandise

    Alison's course, Rye Sourdough Bread: Mastering The Basics

    Alison's Sowans oat fermentation course

    Visit our (non-Amazon!) bookshop: US here and UK here.

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Come join the podcast community! You can select from a variety of levels with benefits including monthly live calls, a private podcast feed stuffed with bonus content, and a Discord discussion group Find out more here!

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    If you love the show, leave us a 5* reviews on Apple Podcasts:

    Open the Apple Podcast app and find Ancestral Kitchen Podcast in your libraryScroll down to 'ratings and reviews', click on 'write a review', give us 5*s and then tell us why you love listening

    * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

    Resources:

    Podcast supporter bonus: Four Easy Meals at www.ancestralkitchenpodcast.com

    Episode 91 – 7 Meals in 1 Day!

    Episode 56 – Preparing Nutrient-Dense Meals from Scratch Every Day

    Our cookbook, Meals at the Ancestral Hearth, and Alison’s Spelt Cookbook, in our shop

    Episode 83 – Meal Planning and Ancestral Food Rhythms with Rebecca Zipp

    Episode 6 – Six Books We Love!

    Episode 84: How to Get More (& Tastier!) Liver into Your Diet

    Episode 100: What Is Ancestral Eating

    Episode 50 – 20 Small Steps to an Ancestral Kitchen

    Download 20 Small Steps by clicking on the link at the top of any page on ancestralkitchenpodcast.com

    Monastery soup book in bookstore

    Do you have memories, documents, recipes or stories of those who cooked ancestrally? Visit our website here for how to share

    The podcast has a website here!

    Stay in touch with Alison via her newsletter at Ancestral Kitchen

    The podcast is on You Tube here

    The podcast is mixed and the music created by Alison's husband, Rob. Find him here: Robert Michael Kay