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Today we’re talking to food culture writer and plant-based human Alicia Kennedy about gender politics, restaurant culture, and inequality in the food industry.

In our opinion, examining the things Alicia writes about doesn’t happen often enough. And it’s critical to creating a more just and sustainable food system. For example, there are so many ways in which food is gendered: food prep and feeding a family is historically women’s work (and therefore undervalued in our society), yet fine dining and celebrity chef culture is overwhelmingly male. Alicia talks about what all of us can do to change these old tropes.

But this episode covers more than gender in cuisine; we also talk about the dichotomy between the class that writes about food, and that which grows and serves it. We talk about Big Food and why some corporations want to maintain the status quo, and how our society views our entire culture surrounding meat consumption. In the show, Alicia highlights why all this needs to change—stat!

Hungry for more? Let’s dish it out!

About Alicia Kennedy:

Alicia Kennedy is a writer from Long Island based in San Juan, Puerto Rico. She writes a weekly newsletter on food culture, media, and politics, and has a book forthcoming from Beacon Press called Meatless. Her newsletter, From the Desk of Alicia Kennedy can be found here.

On this episode we chat about:

Connect with Alicia Kennedy:

Website: www.aliciakennedy.news

Instagram: @aliciadkennedy

Twitter: @aliciakennedy

Alicia Kennedy’s Recommendations:

The Sexual Politics of Meat by Carol Adams

When French Women Cook by Madeleine Kamman

Diet for a Small Planet: 50th anniversary editionby Frances Moore Lappé

James Hansen’s piece on gender and cuisine in Taste Magazine