The Hungry Historians

Public Markets in New Orleans with Ashley Rose Young

47 min · 9. juli 2026
episode Public Markets in New Orleans with Ashley Rose Young cover

Description

For a long time New Orleans sold food to the public through public markets, much like those found in Paris at the time. This was in contrast to how food was largely sold elsewhere in the United States. In this week's The Hungry Historians, we explore the New Orleans public markets, considering their strengths and weaknesses, and whether they might represent an alternative way for food purchasing in the future.  We are very pleased to have with us for this discussion Ashley Rose Young. She published on this subject in 2025 with her Oxford University Press book Nourishing Networks: The Public Culture of Food in New Orleans [https://academic.oup.com/book/60916]. You can find more about Ashley on her website [https://ashleyroseyoung.com].  This episode is sponsored by ⁠⁠Bloomsbury Food Library⁠⁠ [https://www.bloomsburyfoodlibrary.com/home],  an essential resource for students, researchers, and scholars studying food, offering the widest-ranging existing collection of food studies content. https://www.bloomsburyfoodlibrary.com/home

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23 episodes

episode Public Markets in New Orleans with Ashley Rose Young artwork

Public Markets in New Orleans with Ashley Rose Young

For a long time New Orleans sold food to the public through public markets, much like those found in Paris at the time. This was in contrast to how food was largely sold elsewhere in the United States. In this week's The Hungry Historians, we explore the New Orleans public markets, considering their strengths and weaknesses, and whether they might represent an alternative way for food purchasing in the future.  We are very pleased to have with us for this discussion Ashley Rose Young. She published on this subject in 2025 with her Oxford University Press book Nourishing Networks: The Public Culture of Food in New Orleans [https://academic.oup.com/book/60916]. You can find more about Ashley on her website [https://ashleyroseyoung.com].  This episode is sponsored by ⁠⁠Bloomsbury Food Library⁠⁠ [https://www.bloomsburyfoodlibrary.com/home],  an essential resource for students, researchers, and scholars studying food, offering the widest-ranging existing collection of food studies content. https://www.bloomsburyfoodlibrary.com/home

9. juli 202647 min
episode Indigenous Restaurants in Canada with L Sasha Gora artwork

Indigenous Restaurants in Canada with L Sasha Gora

The rise of indigenous restaurants in Canada since the 1970s has helped to surface the foodways of indigenous peoples but has also helped to highlight the colonial repression of these older foods and cultures. In this week’s The Hungry Historians, we discuss the contrast of settler colonialism and indigenous resistance through the role played by restaurants. L. Sasha Gora wrote on this subject in her 2025 book, Culinary Claims: Indigenous Restaurant Politics in Canada, which was published by University of Toronto Press [https://utppublishing.com/doi/book/10.3138/9781487544751]. Our conversation with Sasha ranges from the politics of colonialism as played out through food to the purpose and symbolism of indigenous restaurants, including just what we really mean by the term indigenous restaurant.   This episode is sponsored by ⁠⁠Bloomsbury Food Library⁠⁠ [https://www.bloomsburyfoodlibrary.com/home],  an essential resource for students, researchers, and scholars studying food, offering the widest-ranging existing collection of food studies content. https://www.bloomsburyfoodlibrary.com/home

25. juni 202642 min
episode Sauces with Andrew Donnelly, Beth M. Forrest, and Deirdre Murphy artwork

Sauces with Andrew Donnelly, Beth M. Forrest, and Deirdre Murphy

Sauces are often important parts of a meal, but a part that we don’t think too much about when studying the history of food. In this week’s episode Kelly A. Spring discusses how sauces define our meals and influence the way we think about ourselves and the food that we eat. This discussion is with Andrew Donnelly, Beth M. Forrest and Deirdre Murphy, authors of an edited collection called From Garum to Mole: Sauces and Identity in the Western World [https://global.oup.com/academic/product/from-garum-to-mole-9780190622091?cc=gb&lang=en&], which was released by the Oxford University Press in 2026. This episode is sponsored by ⁠⁠Bloomsbury Food Library⁠⁠ [https://www.bloomsburyfoodlibrary.com/home],  an essential resource for students, researchers, and scholars studying food, offering the widest-ranging existing collection of food studies content. https://www.bloomsburyfoodlibrary.com/home

11. juni 202645 min
episode Food as a clue - Alias Agnes - The Guilded Age Spy with Elizabeth DeWolfe artwork

Food as a clue - Alias Agnes - The Guilded Age Spy with Elizabeth DeWolfe

When Elizabeth A. DeWolfe delved into her sources about the notorious case of Madeleine Pollard verses her former lover, Congressman William C.P. Breckinridge, she discovered that food was used as a clue and a method of connection for Jane Tucker (using the alias Agnes Parker), the woman Breckinridge employed to spy on Madeleine. In this week’s episode of The Hungry Historians, Matt Phillpott and Kelly Spring talk with Elizabeth DeWolfe about her research and how food became an essential ingredient in the tale of an eighteenth century American scandal. Elizabeth DeWolfe published this research in 2025  as Alias Agnes: The Notorious Tale of A Gilded Age Spy [https://www.kentuckypress.com/9781985902244/alias-agnes/], through the University Press of Kentuck. You can learn more about Elizabeth at her website https://www.elizabethdewolfe.com [https://www.elizabethdewolfe.com/]. This episode is sponsored by ⁠⁠Bloomsbury Food Library⁠⁠ [https://www.bloomsburyfoodlibrary.com/home],  an essential resource for students, researchers, and scholars studying food, offering the widest-ranging existing collection of food studies content. https://www.bloomsburyfoodlibrary.com/home

28. maj 202653 min
episode Tomatoes in Egypt with Anny Gaul artwork

Tomatoes in Egypt with Anny Gaul

Tomatoes arrived in Egypt in the 16th century but quickly became ubiquitous with Egyptian foodways. In this episode we talk with Anny Gaul, an assistant professor of Arabic Studies at the University of Maryland. Anny published in 2025, Nile Nightshade: An Egyptian culinary history of the tomato [https://www.ucpress.edu/books/nile-nightshade/paper], through the University of California Press. She also runs the popular food blog Cooking with Gaul [https://cookingwithgaul.com]. You can learn more about Anny Gaul on her website [https://cookingwithgaul.com]and buy her book on the University of California Press [https://www.ucpress.edu/books/nile-nightshade/paper] website and other bookstores. This episode is sponsored by ⁠⁠Bloomsbury Food Library⁠⁠ [https://www.bloomsburyfoodlibrary.com/home],  an essential resource for students, researchers, and scholars studying food, offering the widest-ranging existing collection of food studies content. https://www.bloomsburyfoodlibrary.com/home

14. maj 202649 min