AnthroDish
AnthroDish

AnthroDish

Sarah Duignan

Overview
Episodes

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AnthroDish explores the intersections between our foods, cultures, and identities. Host Dr. Sarah Duignan sits down one-on-one with people in academia, hospitality, farming and agriculture, and more to learn about their food knowledge and experiences. If you're interested in the unique lives of everyday people who have been shaped by their relationship with food, this show is for you!

Recent Episodes

163: How Community Supported Fisheries Promote Sustainable Seafood with Sonia Strobel
DEC 9, 2025
163: How Community Supported Fisheries Promote Sustainable Seafood with Sonia Strobel
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32 MIN
162: Behind the Rise of Non-Alcoholic Drinks with Ren Navarro
DEC 2, 2025
162: Behind the Rise of Non-Alcoholic Drinks with Ren Navarro
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42 MIN
160: Exploring Nigerian Culinary Histories through Recipes with Ozoz Sokoh
NOV 18, 2025
160: Exploring Nigerian Culinary Histories through Recipes with Ozoz Sokoh

In Nigeria, the word chop is used for food and feasting, and to say "come chop" is an invitation into sharing and community. This is precisely how Ozoz Sokoh's debut cookbook, Chop Chop: Cooking the Food of Nigeria begins. It is warm, inviting, and open to all those who are interested in learning about Nigerian cuisine, and the role of home cooks in creating the most beloved classic Nigerian dishes.

Ozoz herself is a food explorer, educator, and traveler by plate. She is a professor of Food and Tourism Studies at Centennial College, and makes her home with her three teenage children in Mississauga, part of the Treaty Lands and Territory of the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation in Ontario, Canada. Her work documents and celebrates Nigerian and West African cuisine, and she is particularly fascinated by all the ways we're similar. Be it through dishes, drinks, material culture or more, Ozoz explores these across geographies, cultures, and histories, in spite of our apparent differences.

In today's conversation, we explore a wide range of the history and future of Nigerian cuisine, including the stories of how ingredients came to be in Nigerian dishes, the homegrown love of protein (and why it's not the relationship to protein you'd expect in a Western lens), and how Ozoz approaches exploring the histories of recipes and cuisine across Nigeria.

Resources:

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42 MIN