Good Food

Good Food
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Mar 26, 2026 • 9min

Anna Ansari's Tachin

Cook-a-long with Samuel Goldsmith, in this bonus recipe episode. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Mar 24, 2026 • 42min

Anna Ansari on the Silk Roads and the origins of everyday foods

Silk Roads, Saffron Rice, and the Stories Our Food Carries Did you know every apple in the world can be traced back to Kazakhstan? In this episode, Samuel Goldsmith sits down with Anna Ansari — Iranian American cook, former trade lawyer, and author of Silk Roads: A Flavor Odyssey with Recipes from Baku to Beijing — to explore how food has connected cultures across Central Asia for centuries. Anna shares how a plate of Uyghur food in 1990s Beijing tasted unexpectedly like home, why Uzbek plov is far more than the sum of its five humble ingredients, and how cooking Iranian stews became a way to root her blended British-American-Iranian family in tradition. Along the way, they talk nasi goreng technique, the myth of culinary authenticity, and why a Tootsie Roll is her ultimate guilty pleasure. In this episode: How the ancient Silk Roads shaped the food we eat today The surprising Central Asian origins of apples, melons, and rice Why authenticity in food is more fluid than we think Anna's death-row dish: tahchin (Iranian saffron rice cake) Cooking as connection — to heritage, family, and home Quick-fire confessions: gnocchi disasters, pulled pork parties, and bumpy cake About the guest: Anna Ansari is the author of Silk Roads: A Flavor Odyssey with Recipes from Baku to Beijing. A former customs and trade lawyer with a background in Chinese studies, she writes about the intersections of food, history, and identity. Subscribe to The Good Food Podcast and download the Good Food app for more recipes and inspiration. Visit goodfood.com for the full archive. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Mar 19, 2026 • 6min

Rhiannon Lambert's Crumble

Cook-a-long with Samuel Goldsmith, in this bonus recipe episode. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Mar 17, 2026 • 43min

Rhiannon Lambert on the fibre crisis, ultra processed foods and supplements

Why Only 4% of Us Get Enough Fiber and Why It Matters Way More Than You Think Registered nutritionist and bestselling author Rhiannon Lambert joins host of the Good Food podcast, Samuel Goldsmith, to tackle one of the most overlooked nutrients in our diets: fibre. In this episode, Rhiannon explains why the UK is facing a fibre crisis, how ultra-processed foods reshaped the way we eat, and what the latest science says about gut health, longevity, and disease prevention. She also shares her simple 30/30/30 formula for getting more fibre without overhauling your life, plus the truth about supplements, sugar swaps, and nutrition myths that won't go away. In this episode, you'll learn: • Why fibre is about far more than digestion. From heart health to cancer prevention to living longer • How the rise of convenience food left us eating less fibre than during WWII rationing • The NOVA scale: what "ultra-processed" actually means (and why baked beans aren't the enemy) • Rhiannon's 30/30/30 formula for hitting your fibre target one meal at a time • Which supplements are genuinely worth taking and which ones are overhyped • Why less than 2% of nutrition advice on TikTok is accurate About the guest: Rhiannon Lambert is a Harley Street registered nutritionist, founder of Rhitrition, and author of The Fiber Formula and The Unprocessed Plate. She's known for cutting through wellness noise with clear, evidence-based advice. 📖 The Fiber Formula is out now. Subscribers to the Good Food app via the App Store get the show ad-free, plus regular bonus content. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Mar 12, 2026 • 6min

Matt Adlard's Lemon Tart

Cook-a-long with Samuel Goldsmith, in this bonus recipe episode Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Mar 10, 2026 • 46min

Matt Adlard on the science of baking and having a Michelin starred Dad

Baker and patisserie expert Matt Adlard joins The Good Food Podcast to talk about his new book, The Science of Baking, and what really goes on behind those picture-perfect desserts. Matt shares how a DM from his editor led to writing a book that demystifies the "why" behind baking — from why you use a bain-marie for cheesecake to why your soufflé needs to be served immediately. He opens up about being entirely self-taught, learning from scientific journals and fellow bakers on social media, and building a "recipe locker" of perfected fundamentals he mixes and matches to create new desserts. In this episode, you'll hear about: How Matt went from studying international business to becoming one of the most-followed bakers online Growing up with a Michelin-star chef father — and why he still didn't learn to bake at home The toast test for finding hotspots in your oven Why ingredient substitutions (yes, even swapping cream cheese brands) can ruin your bake Pro tips for the perfect lemon tart, including his dad's original recipe The croissant disaster during a 30°C photo shoot His most memorable baking fails — including a three-tier birthday cake that collapsed at his mum's 60th Why "chasing perfection" is his philosophy, and why he wants you to see the mess behind the magic Plus: quickfire questions, a guilty pleasure involving squirty cream, and what good food really means to Matt. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Mar 5, 2026 • 6min

Coconut Chicken Curry

Cook-a-long with Samuel Goldsmith, in this bonus recipe episode. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Mar 3, 2026 • 42min

Maunika Gowardhan on spices, regional Indian cookery and Holi

Join host Samuel Goldsmith for an in-depth conversation with acclaimed food writer and Indian cooking expert Maunika Gowardhan. In this episode, Maunika shares her passion for regional Indian cuisine, demystifying the diverse culinary traditions that span India's states. Discover the fascinating origins of Indian spices, from pepper's ancient use before chillies arrived to the Portuguese influences in Goan cooking. Maunika reveals how geography, climate, and history shaped dishes across regions, from Mumbai's Sunday fish curry tradition to Bihar's smoky lamb dishes and Bengal's Portuguese-inspired prawn pie. In this episode: • The true meaning of "curry" and its regional variations • Essential spices every home cook should own (and how to store them properly) • The evolution of Indian food in the UK and London's thriving regional restaurant scene • Behind-the-scenes stories from 20 years researching recipes in Indian homes • Celebrating Holi with traditional drinks like thandai and beloved street snacks • Why Maunika's grandmother's 22-ingredient crab curry remains her ultimate comfort food Perfect for food enthusiasts curious about authentic Indian cooking, this conversation goes beyond takeaway staples to explore the untapped depth of regional Indian cuisine, from coastal seafood curries to northern slow-cooked lamb dishes. Maunika is an Indian chef and bestselling author known for her fresh, accessible approach to authentic Indian cooking. Born and raised in Mumbai, she shares vibrant recipes rooted in heritage and family tradition. A popular contributor to olive magazine and BBC One’s Morning Live, she also writes for Vogue India. Curry is Maunika’s fourth cookbook, following Tandoori Home Cooking, the Times-bestselling Thali and her debut, Indian Kitchen, loved by cooks worldwide. Subscribers to the Good Food app via the App Store get the show ad-free, plus regular bonus content. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Feb 26, 2026 • 7min

Chicken, leek & ham pie

Cook-a-long with Samuel Goldsmith, in this bonus recipe episode. Find the recipe at goodfood.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Feb 24, 2026 • 50min

Tom Gilbey on simplifying wine, the best chicken pie, and working with family

Ever wondered why wine lists feel so intimidating? Or whether that £7 bottle is actually any good? Tom Gilbey—blind tasting expert, social media sensation, and author of the new book Thirsty—joins us to demystify the world of wine with warmth, wit, and zero pretension. In this episode, Tom shares how a freezing ice bath video accidentally launched his viral wine education journey, why his family's wine dynasty dates back to the Crimean War (complete with some questionable marketing tactics), and the surprising story of Iron Maiden's drummer's very expensive taste in Bordeaux. You'll discover: The truth about wine pricing and when you're really just paying for the name Why South Africa and Portugal are the wine regions to watch right now How to actually taste wine in a restaurant without feeling awkward What "corked" wine really means (and why wet cardboard is involved) Tom's comfort food obsession: chicken, ham, and tarragon pie with a buttery Chardonnay Why natural wine divides opinion—and why that's actually fine The rise of English wine that rivals £80 white Burgundy Tom also reveals his biggest barbecue disaster, his sweet tooth weakness that keeps him running marathons, and why fermented grape juice should simply be there to make us laugh. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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