Food Matters Live Podcast

Food Matters Live
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Apr 8, 2021 • 54min

128: Anthony Warner: "We need fundamental change to feed the world"

Anthony Warner is known as the Angry Chef who looks to ‘expose lies, pretensions and stupidity in the world of food.’ He has a new book out ‘Ending Hunger: The Quest to Feed the World without destroying it’. In the book he argues that we need significant fundamental change if we have any hope of being able to feed the world in 2050. ‘Without substantial reduction in the number of animal products that we consume, within the next few decades, agriculture will raise global temperatures by two degrees, destroy all of the world’s forests and drive a million species to extinction… we desperately need to change consumption, shrinking down the powerful meat and cattle industries, something that they will fight every step of the way… this is probably the most difficult battle we face.’ Stefan Gates joins Anthony for a fascinating, and often frightening, look at the challenges the food industry faces, and what changes in public policy and approaches could make a huge impact on our future on the planet.About Anthony Warner Anthony Warner is a professional chef and writer. His first book, The Angry Chef – Bad Science and the Truth About Healthy Eating, was the Guardian Best Food Book of the Year and winner in the Health and Lifestyle category at the inaugural Hearst Big Book Awards. He graduated in Biochemistry from Manchester University before embarking on a career in professional kitchens. He spent many years working in hotels, restaurants and event catering in the North West and London before taking a job as a development chef in the food manufacturing industry where he worked for over a decade developing recipes for some of the country’s best-known brands and products. Frustrated by pseudoscience and misinformation in the food industry, in 2016 he started a blog, which led to the bestselling book, The Angry Chef and a career in journalism. Two more books and countless arguments have followed.
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Apr 6, 2021 • 41min

127: Will technology make truly personalised nutrition a reality?

Personalised nutrition is the future. With science showing that even twins who share similar DNA have individualised health responses to food and drink, it's clear that we need a more personal approach to our health and nutrition needs. How can we determine what is right for us, what we need to support our health, and what tools can assist us?Joining us in this latest episode in our series on personalised nutrition are Nard Clabbers, Chief Science Officer, Happ, and Philipp Schulte, CEO & Co-Founder, Baze Labs who will guide us through the technical advances that will illuminate the personal nutrition that we need, and what the future will look like for this exciting sector of healthy food and drink.About our panelNard Clabbers, Chief Science Officer, HappAfter his study of Human Nutrition at Wageningen University in the Netherlands, Nard Clabbers worked for the food industry for more than a decade as the liaison between marketing and science. In 2011 he joined Dutch research organisation TNO to lead the nutrition and health topic. Also at TNO, he then set up the world’s largest public-private research consortium on personalised nutrition and health. His current position is Chief Science Officer for the start-up company Happ.Philipp Schulte, CEO & Co-Founder, Baze LabsPhilipp has spent the past 15 years working across the Life Sciences where he got a first-row view on the changing paradigms and new technologies that will turn the 21st century into the age of biology and undreamt of potentials. His own contribution to this vision is Baze which has the ambition to power micronutrient status optimisation as the foundation for health and wellness in the 21st century.
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Apr 1, 2021 • 35min

126: 50 million Americans will experience food insecurity and hunger, what can be done to help?

As the US reels from the damage caused by COVID-19, one of the long-term impacts will be on food poverty and food security in the US. A staggering 50 million Americans will experience food insecurity, including 17 million children, a level of hunger not seen in the US since the Great Depression.At Food Matters Live in March, a panel discussed the challenges the country faces as it tries to tackle inequality, and lack of access to healthy food, that sit in the way of building an inclusive food system. Taking part are Michael T. Roberts, Executive Director, Resnick Center for Food Law and Policy, UCLA, Danielle Nierenberg, President & Founder, Food Tank, Dr. Sally Rockey, Executive Director, Foundation for Food & Agriculture, Anne Byrne, Phd Student, Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management, Cornell University, Caitlin Welsh, Director, Global Food Security Program, Center for Strategic and International Studies, and Dr. Travis A. Smith, Associate Professor, Department of Agriculture and Applied Economics, University of Georgia.Join this special episode of Table Talk, hosted by Stefan Gates, that looks at the highlights from this fascinating live panel discussion.
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Mar 30, 2021 • 51min

125: How can we tackle the growing child obesity crisis?

The UK has one of the highest rates of childhood obesity in Europe, and COVID has impacted the efforts to reduce this number as lockdowns take their toll on activity levels and eating habits. With healthy food costing more per calorie than unhealthy food, how can this growing child obesity crisis be addressed by government, industry and the public? What needs to happen to hit the targets that have been set for 2030? Joining host Stefan Gates are an expert panel to examine the child obesity crisis including Christina Marriott, CEO, Royal Society of Public Health and Chris Thomas, Senior Research Fellow, IPPR. They’ll examine where we are right now and offer ways that we can improve our understanding of health and nutrition to tackle the issues we face.About our panelChristina Marriott, CEO, Royal Society of Public Health Christina has been Chief Executive of RSPH since May 2020. Previously, the Chief Executive of Revolving Doors Agency. She has experience in both national and regional roles in the NHS having led a place-based health equity programme before becoming National Lead for Health Inequalities in the then newly-formed NHS England. She has served on a significant number of Boards including the Ministerial Advisory Board on Female Offenders and the Reducing Reoffending Third Sector Ministerial Advisory Group (RR3). She currently sits on the DHSC Improving Population Health Advisory Group, is a commissioner on the Bright Blue Future Tax Commission and a Board member at Hestia. She chaired the Bradley Report Group and the Health Inequalities Reference Group. She was a Visiting Fellow at the University of Southampton and a finalist in the Third Sector Awards Chief Executive of the Year 2019. In her early career, she established and led a marketing consultancy for 13 years, before being tempted into academia working on health inequalities at the University of Central Lancashire. Seconded to health inspectorates, she was National Lead of the census of mental health inpatients that underpinned DH’s Delivering Race Equality in Mental Health programme.Chris Thomas, Senior Research Fellow, IPPR Chris is a senior research fellow at the Institute for Public Policy Research and leads the institute’s health and care research programmes. Prior to joining IPPR, Chris led Macmillan Cancer Support’s inequality policy team, and public health research at Cancer Research UK. He has published extensively on nutrition, in policy reports and academic journals – and in 2017 designed one of the country’s largest youth nutrition surveys. Chris is also an editor of the journal Progressive Review, a member of an international World Economic Forum partnership looking at healthcare resilience and a regular contributor to broadcast and print media.
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Mar 25, 2021 • 23min

124: Derek Sarno: bringing plant-based food to the masses

Derek Sarno, co-founder of Wicked Healthy, LLC, and Executive Chef & Director of Plant-Based Innovation for Tesco PLC, has taken a fascinating journey on his path to revolutionising plant-based food across the world. From personal tragedy, to discovering compassionate eating in a Buddhist monastery, to bringing plant-based food to the masses his story provides a unique window into what drives his passion for change. Host Stefan Gates joins Derek to hear his story, and to discover what's next at Wicked Healthy and Tesco for plant-based food and drink. About Derek Sarno Derek Sarno is the co-founder of Wicked Healthy, LLC, and also serves as Executive Chef & Director of Plant-Based Innovation for Tesco PLC, where he is leading the company’s efforts to bring delicious, unpretentious vegan foods to market. Prior to co-founding Wicked Healthy and partnering with Tesco, Derek served as the Senior Global Executive Chef for Whole Foods Market, where he oversaw global research and development for the company’s prepared foods department, worked with suppliers and leadership to develop and promote plant-based foods across the organisation, and served as Culinary Director for the WFM Academy for Conscious Leadership. Derek is a serial entrepreneur, founding several award-winning restaurants and food service companies in the United States, including the One Hundred Club, Mahalo’s Catering, and Mizuna’s. Derek also served as the resident Chef & Gardener at Padma Samye Ling, a Tibetan Buddhist monastery and retreat center in upstate New York. During his years at the monastery, Derek grew and cooked the meals for the Sangha, and learned how to sit quietly. This time helped him become less of a jerk. Derek is the co-author of the Whole Foods Market Diet cookbook (Fall 2018), and the Wicked Healthy Cookbook (Spring 2018). He is the proud father of Jake (a human boy), and proud foster-dad to Mildred (a ninja squirrel in Portland, OR) and Buddy (a red fox that hangs out behind his house in London.)
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Mar 23, 2021 • 25min

123: How E-sports athletes are using nutrition to give themselves a competitive edge

The growth in popularity and scope of E-sports in the past ten years has created a new type of performance athlete. With tournaments such as the League of Legends World Championship, which was watched by 99.6 million people in 2018 alone, gaining huge audiences and offering substantial prize money the stereotypical image of a video gamer has been replaced by serious E-sports athletes who have nutritional needs just like in traditional sports.Joining us today, in partnership with Gelita, is an expert panel who will give us a look inside the world of E-sports to find out how this growing group of athletes can be supported through nutrition. Host Stefan Gates meets Oliver Weingarten, Founder & CEO, LDN Utd, Franziska Dolle, Gelita and Daniel Herman, Founder, Bio-Synergy to discover how nutrition can maintain the peak-performance an e-sport professional needs to compete at the highest level, and avoid injury and fatigue.About our panelOliver Weingarten, Founder/CEO, LDN UTDOliver trained as a lawyer and spent 7 years as General Counsel specialising in commercial and intellectual property matters at the Premier League, where he was also Secretariat of the Sports Rights Owners Coalition. In 2011 Oliver joined the Formula One Teams’ Association where he had responsibility for working with the Teams to shape the regulatory, commercial and governance direction of the sport. Upon dissolution of FOTA, Oliver formed OW Advisory Limited in 2014 providing clients with a boutique offering related to sports rights, lobbying and fan engagement, and organised Fans’ Forums with F1, Formula E and PDC Darts. In October 2014 Oliver also took on the part-time role as General Secretary of the inaugural Formula E Teams’ Association.From July 2015 to July ‘18, Oliver worked for Virtually Live as a Sports Rights and Partnerships Advisor and thereafter as Director, Content Development building relationships and contracting with sports rights owners, technology companies, managing activations, creating esports offerings, as well as curating content for broadcasters, and formulating strategy around platform, user acquisition and monetisation for mobile gaming.Oliver is now Founder/CEO of LDN UTD, an esports org that unites with social responsibility, using its platform to address social issues, whilst providing opportunity and accessibility for grassroots gamers to take the path to pro. With a track record of delivering physical and online events to build community, whether on knife crime in Lewisham Shopping Centre, loneliness/mental health, nutrition or anti-racism. The most project fused education and esports in partnership with the Mayor of London.  Franziska Dolle, GelitaFranziska Dolle (MSc) is a nutritional scientist and an expert for collagen peptides, who is always focused on and passionate about empowering people to improve their nutritional and active lifestyle.Her goal is to implement population-wide health promotion concepts and effective measures for disease prevention. In pursuit of this goal, she examined the importance of protein intake to prevent sarcopenia – the muscle loss in the elderly.For the last five years Franziska has co-created and implemented innovative lifestyle nutrition products with Bioactive Collagen Peptides®. In “The White Tissue” guide from GELITA she presents the new role of proteins in Sports Nutrition. At GELITA AG Germany Franziska Dolle is Product & Account Manager Health & Nutrition. In this role she is in charge of New Business Development and Global Product Management for the brands BODYBALANCE®, FORTIBONE® and CURADERM®. As Account Manager she is responsible for sales of GELITA’s collagen peptides in Northern Europe and Germany.Daniel Herman, Founder, Bio-SynergyBefore I founded Bio-Synergy, it was my dream to become a contender on Gladiators. To give myself the best chance of winning, I amped up my gym training and started taking supplements. Much to my disappointment, I found the products did not meet their promises and tasted worse than cough medicine. So in 1997, I put my Gladiators dream to one side (although years later we supplied the show) and launched Bio-Synergy. It was my passion for fitness and nutrition that drove me to create our first protein shake, as well as my dislike of drinking raw eggs (thanks, Rocky!). That shake and Creatine Plus was where it all started. From then on, my goal was to create the first clean, effective and high quality range of sports nutrition products to support the goals of all athletes, from elites to weekend warriors. I’m also proud to say we’ve been at the forefront of innovation ever since, launching the first all-in-one shake in 1999, the first ready-to-drink protein powder in 2000 and, unlike many of our competitors, we’ve never lowered the protein content of our powders.   More than two decades later, over four million passionate sports and fitness enthusiasts have chosen Bio-Synergy to help them achieve their goals. 
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Mar 18, 2021 • 40min

122: How to support health and wellbeing in the workplace

The COVID pandemic and subsequent lockdowns have created a unique 'perfect storm' for the work place and health and wellbeing. With uncertainty affecting many, and remote working leaving many employees feeling more isolated, how can businesses support mental health and improve the wellbeing of their staff? What lessons can we learn from this time that can be applied for the future?Joining host Stefan Gates is an expert panel including Amanda Scott, Director of Talent, Learning and D&I, Compass Group, Sally Wilson, BSc, PhD, FRSA, Senior Research Fellow, Institute for Employment Studies and Maggi Rose, Head of Programme Evolution, Mental Health at Work. They'll share their own experience, and offer up some practical ways we can all keep our workplace mental health in focus.About our panelAmanda Scott, Director of Talent, Learning and D&I, Compass GroupAmanda is an experienced HR professional with extensive generalist, talent and D&I experience across a range of industry sectors including energy, financial services and hospitality. She has a proven track record in designing and leading delivery of the HR agenda for top FTSE companies.She started her career in the NHS before moving into financial services and then oil and gas.Amanda spent over 15 years with BP in a number of HR roles including leading the Global Graduate Programme. Joined Compass in 2018 to lead the Talent, Learning and D&I agenda for the UK & Ireland. She's passionate about inclusion and creating an environment where people from all backgrounds can join and progress their career.Sally Wilson, BSc, PhD, FRSA, Senior Research Fellow, Institute for Employment StudiesSally is based at the Institute for Employment Studies (IES) in Brighton and has twenty years of research experience in occupational health, safety and wellbeing. She has worked with Mind, Macmillan, Epilepsy Action and the Government Inclusive Economy Partnership to inform health-related guidance and training for employers and is currently undertaking a project for the Rail Safety and Standards Board focussing on health behaviours. She has also competed work on food safety cultures for the UK Food Standards Agency. In a European context she has completed research for EU-OSHA (the European Agency for Occupational Safety and Health) as well as the Executive Agency for Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (EASME) in Brussels. Sally’s background is in behavioural and health sciences having completed a PhD in neuropsychology at the MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit in Cambridge. Prior to joining IES, Sally was employed by the Health and Safety Executive and the University of Sheffield.Maggi Rose, Head of Programme Evolution, Mental Health at WorkMaggi Rose is the Head of Programme Evolution for Mental Health at Work’s learning and development programmes. She has an extensive clinical and academic background in the field of mental health and brings hands-on experience of the specific drivers and challenges to improving mental health awareness in the workplace across a wide range of organisations, industries and sectors. Maggi’s personal mission is to bring positive change to all workplaces by helping de-mystify mental health, bringing clarity and confidence in the language used and making a difference to individuals and their wider community through reducing stigma. Known for her unique facilitation style, Maggi maintains a fine balance between challenging and supporting delegates to bring about an enjoyable, engaging training experience that brings immediate and tangible benefits. Always going the extra mile to ensure the training is fit for purpose, Maggi is grounded, practical and realistic about organisational and culture change. A key part of MHAW since inception, Maggi has been instrumental in developing and moulding specific relevant and highly relevant workshops.
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Mar 16, 2021 • 41min

121: How can we control our appetite?

Why do certain foods stimulate our appetite even though we aren't hungry? How do certain foods or meals satiate our appetite more than others? How can we be more attuned to satiety to eat healthier? Do certain foods help control our appetite better than others? In this second episode of the Table Talk Podcast focused on satiety, the feeling of being full, and the science behind foods that create this feeling we're once again joined by Alexandra Johnstone, Scientist, The Rowett Institute, and this time by Kathryn O’Sullivan, Nutrition Scientist and Registered Dietitian, HRS Communications to unpack the science of satiety and to see if there are foods that can help control our appetite. About our panel Kathryn O’Sullivan, Nutrition Scientist and Registered Dietitian, HRS Communications Kathryn is a Nutrition Scientist and Registered Dietitian, specialising in public health communications. She holds a BSc in Human Nutrition and a Ph.D in clinical medicine from Trinity College Dublin, and has over 25 years of experience working in the food industry and academia. With 10 years international experience working for the Kellogg Company throughout Europe and the Middle East markets, Kathryn now works as an independent nutrition consultant providing expertise in nutrition science, marketing, communications and regulatory affairs to international food companies. She occasionally lectures at universities and health conferences, and has published extensively in peer reviewed journals, healthcare and consumer press. Kathryn has a special interest in EFSA Nutrition and Health claims. In her spare time, she works as a ceramicist. Alexandra Johnstone, Scientist, The Rowett Institute Alex leads a research team to assess eating as a form of behaviour at The Rowett Institute, part of the school of medical sciences, dentistry and nutrition. She obtained her PhD in 2001 and has extensively published scientific papers on the role of appetite across the life course. Appetite is a major influence to what and when we eat and she has conducted diet trials in studies with children through to the elderly, to particularly assess the role of dietary protein on motivation to eat. Her science knowledge has been developed straight to the supermarket shelf with the development of the ‘Balanced for You’ range of food for Marks and Spencer plc, in 2010, an established food range. She is a key collaborator with EU colleagues and leads internationally competitive work through EU and UK Research Council grant awards. As a UK registered Nutritionist, she enjoys working with local, national and international food industry sector colleagues, to develop evidence to support the relationship between diet and health.
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Mar 11, 2021 • 45min

120: Why do we make poor food choices?

The psychology of why we eat the food that we do, even if it isn't good for us, provides a unique insight into human behaviour. Is it our personality, our upbringing, or the stimulus that we are exposed to that control our choices and have us reaching for the unhealthy options?In the first in a series delving into the psychology of food choices and eating behaviours we join Professor Jacqueline Blissett, Chair in Childhood Eating Behaviour, Co-Director of Aston Institute of Health and Neurodevelopment, Aston University Early Career Researcher Facilitator and Patrick Fagan, Associate Lecturer in Consumer Behaviour, Goldsmith and Lecturer in Consumer Psychology, University of the Arts London to explore why we make the choices we do, and how we can make better choices in the future.About our panelProfessor Jacqueline Blissett, Chair in Childhood Eating Behaviour, Co-Director of Aston Institute of Health and Neurodevelopment, Aston University Early Career Researcher FacilitatorI have been working in the field of children’s eating behaviour for over twenty years. In that time much of my research has focussed on the biological, affective and cognitive factors of parents and their children which influence parent-child interaction, particularly in the context of feeding and eating problems. I have a particular interest in children’s fussy eating including poor fruit and vegetable acceptance, emotional eating, and obesity.My broad research interests are:  Early origins of children’s emotional eating  Breastfeeding, complementary feeding practices, childhood feeding practices Development of flavour preferences Individual differences in sensory processing, particularly of taste Children’s fruit and vegetable consumption  Feeding problems and eating behaviour in children with disorders such as autism  Maternal mental health and parent child interaction Infant gut microbiome: relationships with early diet and infant development Fetal facial expression in response to flavour stimuli in utero Cultural differences in feeding and eating behaviour Patrick Fagan, Associate Lecturer in Consumer Behaviour, Goldsmith and Lecturer in Consumer Psychology, University of the Arts LondonPatrick is a behavioural scientist who specialises in ‘turning minds into money’ - that is, practically applying psychological science for commercial outcomes. On the academic side, Patrick is a part-time lecturer at two universities, has authored papers on topics from facial expressions to Facebook psychology, and published a book on comms psychology with Pearson. On the commercial side, he has been consulting and running research for blue-chip clients for over a decade, and was previously Lead Psychologist at Cambridge Analytica. He is now Chief Scientific Officer at behavioural science outfit Capuchin
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Mar 9, 2021 • 35min

119: Learning lessons from COVID-19 - how nutrition can support immune health

The shock of the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed huge inequalities in health outcomes across society. What role has nutrition played in exacerbating the pandemic? How has our nutrition affected susceptibility to COVID-19 and what lessons do we need to learn to protect society in the future? Joining host Stefan Gates to discuss this fascinating subject is Philip Calder, Professor of Nutritional Immunology, School of Human Development and Health, Faculty of Medicine, University of Southampton, who has recently led a review in the role of nutrition in immunity and host susceptibility to Covid-19. We'll take a look at how the food we eat, our gut microbiome, and the nutrients we consume can impact our health, and what recommendations have arisen from this fascinating research. About Philip Calder Philip Calder is Professor of Nutritional Immunology and Head of School of Human Development and Health at the University of Southampton in the UK. He is currently President of ILSI Europe. Professor Calder is an internationally recognised researcher on the metabolism and functionality of fatty acids with an emphasis on the roles of omega-3 fatty acids in immunity, inflammation and cardiometabolic disease. He has also conducted recognised research on amino acids, antioxidants, prebiotics, probiotics and natural products. His research addresses both life course and translational considerations and includes research in cell and animal models and in healthy humans and patients. Professor Calder has published over 600 scientific articles (excluding abstracts) and according to Web of Science his work has been cited over 33,000 times.  He has a Web of Science h-index of 100, a Google Scholar h-index of 130 (i10 index 489) and has been included in every listing of Highly Cited Researchers. He has received many awards and prizes for his work including ESPEN’s Cuthbertson Lecture (2008), the Ralph Holman Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Oil Chemists’ Society (2015), the prestigious Danone International Prize for Nutrition (2016) and the DSM Lifetime Achievement Prize in Human Nutrition (2017). Professor Calder was President of the International Society for the Study of Fatty Acids and Lipids (2009-2012), Chair of the Scientific Committee of the European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism (ESPEN) (2012-2016) and President of the Nutrition Society (2016-2019). He is currently President of the Federation of European Nutrition Societies. He was Editor-in-Chief of the British Journal of Nutrition (2006 to 2013) and is currently Associate Editor of Clinical Science and Journal of Nutrition.  He previously served on many Editorial Boards of journals in the nutrition, lipidology and biochemistry fields. Professor Calder has a long association with ILSI Europe having served on its Scientific Advisory Committee, as Scientific Co-Chair of one of its Task Forces, and as a member (including Chairing) several Expert Groups.

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