Episodes

  • Georgetown and Community with Carrie Omegna
    Aug 14 2024

    Carrie Omegna co-owns Fonda la Catrina and El Sirenito–a vibrant restaurant and bar that serves as a colorful oasis amid the engines and industry of Georgetown: a Seattle neighborhood of approximately 1,800 residents and 28,000 workers. Carrie talks to us about what good, clean, and fair food means to her as an independent restaurateur, and how employee happiness is the key not only to a healthy restaurant but also a strong community.

    Georgetown has remained fiercely independent over the years--with only one chain store (a Starbucks) amid several local restaurants and bars. We talked to Carrie about what it will need to thrive in independence going forward (like, it currently has neither a grocery store nor farmers market), and we venture into what’s possible in this most unique of Seattle neighborhoods.


    We also talked about what makes a healthy restaurant and how a healthy restaurant is an important cornerstone of a healthy neighborhood. It comes down to these values:

    Advocacy: Often the cultural significance of Mexican food is completely overlooked in restaurants: many think there’s only one kind of Mexican food out there. Catrina works with staff to be vocal about the cultural significance of the Mexican cuisine they serve. Staff is educated and empowered to talk about the good, clean, fair food it serves by listing farmers and purveyors on the menu, speaking to customers about the quality and provenance of dishes, and by presenting fresh ingredients consistently and carefully.

    Retention: Employees are more satisfied to work at Catrina, and Catrina has an unprecedented number of long term employees. Paying well above minimum wage and offering the same benefits to all staff members. “It's all about keeping staff around: listening to them, supporting them, valuing their input and recognizing their contribution,” Carrie says.

    Regular customers: It’s easy to see how invested employees are in the restaurant’s success, conveying a sense of ownership that underlies the restaurant’s vibrant scene. Catrina staff understand and communicate the cultural significance of the Mexican cuisine they serve. They educate customers. And customers, in turn, are proud to know the menu and the employees.

    Community: Regular customers, especially when they’re proud of a place, start to build a community, where customers themselves become vocal advocates who come together around the restaurant and feel invested in its whole.

    Action: This sense of community leads to opportunities for action. for speaking out about what good, clean, fair food means for the community, speaking out about what the community needs from government and civic entities to make this possible and to help it grow to other parts of the community.

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    48 mins
  • Beacon Food Forest with Elise Evans
    May 12 2024

    Have you been to Beacon Food Forest? It’s magic! Especially at this time of year. What used to be a 7-acre hillside of intractable grass is now a verdant, climate change-mitigating ecosystem with a diverse pollinator habitat, rich, healthy soil, and more than 1000 different edible plants. It's a demonstration site and a learning community that reimagines what urban green spaces can offer. It’s public food on public land.


    On this episode of the Umami Podcast, we talk to Elise Evans, Core Volunteer and former Board President of Beacon Food Forest. We’ll dig into how this grassroots organization has empowered a community of volunteers to create a unique, thriving, sustainable solution to food insecurity, land access, and food and ecology education.


    Beacon Food Forest offers a blueprint for any community looking to create opportunities for its citizens to participate in creating local food ecosystems. Elise talks to us about how it got started, how it has evolved over the 15 years since the project began, and how community keeps it thriving.

    The produce that grows on Beacon Food Forest land is available to anyone to harvest. Show up to volunteer on any third Saturday work party and you’ll learn about soil, indigenous plants, and garden care (you might even get a free lunch!). Or take a class to learn about everything from cultivating mushrooms, to attracting pollinators, to growing natural remedies.

    Intrigued? Listen to this episode of the Umami Podcast to learn more about Beacon Food Forest and the ways you can get involved in this community.



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    38 mins
  • Pasta and The Market with Michela Tartaglia
    Apr 26 2024

    This episode is an argument for the importance of the Pike Place Market. Michela Tartaglia is chef-owner of Pasta Casalinga, a shining example of the creative expression the market fosters. The Pasta Casalinga lunch counter serves handmade pasta with seasonal flavors from the farmers, fishers and foragers of the Pacific Northwest. On this episode, we go deep with Michela on the tradition and technique of pasta, on being a restaurateur in the Pike Place Market, and on finding a culinary voice.

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    Michela estimates 40 to 45% of her clientele is regular / local, which surprised and delighted us to hear. After all, the Pike Place Market reports a staggering 15 million visitors every year, and I’ve heard more than one friend say they avoid it because of tourists.

    That is why we made this episode. The Pike Place Market is a democratic platform for local business, for community, and for our city’s food personality. Every city needs a food center.
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    If you haven’t been to Pike Place Market in a while, now’s a great time to reconnect with this vital part of our local food history. The more local patronage, the more vibrant and sustainable that food center can be for our city and for the hundreds of restaurateurs, farmers, and purveyors who base their independent businesses here. Michela talks to us about what it takes to build a business with Pike Place Market PDA, how to build and frequently change a menu, how to have seasonal flare and be frugal at the same time, how to market, and how to collaborate with your team.
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    Next time you're at the market, watch the Casalinga team in action. Choose a dish of from-the-farm, from-the-sea, or from-the-garden seasonal preparations and pair it with one of Michela's delicate Italian wine selections.
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    Michela published Pasta For All Seasons about a year ago in 2023. You can buy it at Book Larder online or in Fremont, where tomorrow, April 27, Michela will be signing books for Independent Bookstore Day.

    Photo credit: Charity Burggraaf

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    1 hr and 8 mins
  • Foraging with Langdon Cook
    Apr 4 2024

    Author Langdon Cook has been leading foraging expeditions for more than 30 years in the Pacific Northwest. We learn about foraging mountains to sound, in the wild and in our own backyard on this episode of the Umami Podcast: everything from clams, to nettles, to morels and chanterelles.

    Foraging is a great way to be introduced to nature and to feel more connection to it, and from that to have a stake in it, to become a steward of the land and the water. It's in our DNA! We're all the descendants of successful foragers from the deep, deep past. --Langdon Cook

    The Umami Podcast is about examining our food selves—how what we consume is an essential expression of who we are--personally, culturally, and civically. But the subject of food is daunting: Iit’s different for every person, many of us never had the privilege of feeling nourished by or connected to it, and some of us are downright alienated by it.

    Part of getting to know our food selves is to examine what grows around us. There is empowerment in learning about how nature continues to nourishes us; how we benefit most by working in concert with its rhythms.

    As such, Langdon has written, taught, and led expeditions focused on learning about the wild foods around us in the Pacific Northwest. On this episode we touch on more than 20 foods in the wild, like salmon, mushrooms, seaweeds, clams, and nuts, to those in our backyards, like berries, nuts, and weeds. As Langdon put it:

    For people who have a desire to connect with the outdoors, there’s no better way to do that than through the food that grows at your feet. It's an important lesson to teach ourselves and our children.--Langdon Cook


    More information on Langdon's events and classes: https://langdoncook.com/events/

    Langdon's books: Fat of the Land, Upstream, The Mushroom Hunters

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    44 mins
  • Regenerative Farming with Eiko Vojkovich
    Mar 2 2024

    This week’s conversation is with Eiko Vojkovich of Skagit River Ranch. Theirs is a small but mighty family ranch she and her daughter, Nicole, run together. They sell grass-fed and -finished cattle, pastured hogs, pasture-raised poultry and eggs at Seattle Neighborhood Farmers Markets and some co-ops around the Puget Sound.

    When I came to Seattle in the late 90’s, I was ecstatic to learn about the existence of farmers markets, something that didn't exist in the suburban area of my upbringing (but more and more are popping up everywhere!). I met Eiko at her stall at the University Farmers Market around the turn of the century, where she introduced me to the taste of grass-fed cows and acorn-fed pigs. I fell in love and wanted to know more, so I took a trip to their ranch where they taught me about rotational grazing, regenerative agriculture, and happy animals.

    The majority of the meat we consume in America is produced by large-scale farms and sold at multinational chain supermarkets, where it is virtually impossible to tell how people, places, and animals in their care are treated. Factory farms, concentrated animal feeding operations and massive processing plants compromise human and animal welfare as they leave huge carbon footprints.


    But small-scale farms like Skagit River Ranch do still exist in every state in the country, and it makes sense to find them: they are more likely to employ regenerative and sustainable practices, they're often family run, and they sell their products directly or via area farmers markets.

    You can't get this stuff in a supermarket!

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    38 mins
  • Natural Wine with Marc Papineau
    Feb 9 2024

    Marc Papineau has been filling our wine glasses all over Seattle for decades. Marc is the proprietor of Cantina Sauvage — a wine shop that recently opened in Melrose Market in Seattle alongside Cafe Suliman, where he curates a selection of independent wines he identifies as “unfuctwith”, meaning wines that have been only minimally altered by human intervention.

    Wine is in the throes of a renaissance these days, in part fueled by the natural wine craze: those “pet nat”, “skin contact”, “orange” bottles with colorful labels and a frequent sidestepping of the appellation system. Some are delicious. Some are...challenging. But however you feel about them, they deserve a closer look. They're a stark contrast with big-name, mass-produced wines that are manipulated to the point of homogeneity.

    Stick with this episode: at first it may sound like its more of a conversation for wine nerds, not for the casual wine drinker.


    That is until about minute 2:24, where Chris asks, “um, which one of them is dry?” and we all crack up because his question cuts through our heavy conversation like an acidic wine through fatty cheese. It's a funny question because “dry” is one of those words people often use when pressured to describe what they’re looking for in a wine. It's a question that, to a wine purveyor, can signal a lack of knowledge about or interest in wine.


    Which patrons sound most knowledgeable to servers and winesellers? People who just ask questions. People who are willing to place trust in their purveyor to guide them on a discourse about the right wine for that moment in time.


    This episode is just that, really: a conversation with a guy who knows wine. Chris and I ask things we always wanted to know but were afraid to ask, for fear of sounding clueless. I’ve been in that position, Chris has been in that position, and a casual survey among friends indicates that many of us have been in that position.

    We’ll talk about what makes a good wine good and what makes a tank wine industrial. We’ll talk about how to identify the differences among all the degrees between those two ends of a spectrum. (Hint: if you’re buying it at the supermarket, it is probably industrial).


    “If you care, then you’re probably not in a grocery store buying wine. You should go to a place where they know their wine.” --Marc Papineau


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    1 hr and 6 mins
  • Indigenous Food with Valerie Segrest
    Oct 4 2023

    The foods that sustain us are becoming less nutritious (via National Geographic), reduced to commodities and cheaply mass-produced to feed a growing global population of nearly 8 billion. Along the way, we’ve lost touch with the planet’s provisions. Yet real food — both nourishing and delicious — is often as close as our own neighborhoods, and our guest Valerie Segrest knows how to find it.

    Valerie Segrest is an author, Native nutrition educator, and member of the Muckleshoot tribe. Her work focuses on foods that are endemic to North America. In the book Valerie co-authored with Indigenous Food Lab, Indigenous Home Cooking: Menus Inspired by the Ancestors, you’ll find wisdom about wild plants and familiar, accessible ingredients like bison, salmon, berries, squash, sweet potatoes, and more.

    This episode will make you hungry for knowledge about the world around you. Valerie talks about the elusive and charismatic morel mushroom, the ubiquitous and recognizable dandelion, and the softer side of stinging nettles. She praises the nationwide movement of tribes restoring ecosystems in the form of fisheries management and other projects. You’ll learn about “weeds” that are both food and medicine, telling time according to nature’s rhythms, the many names for the moon, how there are never just four seasons, and sweet birthday gifts that make Valerie want to eat mountains.

    Valerie also underscores the importance of food sovereignty. This is crucial for Native communities, who are disproportionately affected by food insecurity and related health conditions, according to Feeding America. Valerie’s efforts contribute to the reclamation of traditional foodways and the re-emergence of an Indigenous cuisine, in which local, seasonal, and sustainable ingredients are front and center. In a time when so much of our food comes from somewhere far away, honoring Indigenous foods is an action that all of us can take to recognize that we are still a part of nature — and always will be.

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    55 mins
  • Growing Wine with Jarad Hadi
    Oct 2 2023

    At the intersection of wine and art, you’ll find Jarad Hadi: vigneron, winemaker, and owner of Grape Ink in Oregon’s Willamette Valley. Grape Ink’s wines celebrate the creativity, diligence, and connection to nature that farmers and winemakers share. Their wine labels in themselves express this relationship; each one is a unique artwork by Italian artist Giulia Schiavon — paintings printed on the bottles. Grape Ink’s wine emphasizes small-scale production and personality, growing at altitudes as high as 1500 feet in the Valley’s northernmost climes, with rich mineral soil over volcanic deposits.

    Jarad earned his master’s degree in viticulture and winemaking at the source: The University of Bordeaux and studied under French masters. He also learned hands-on in the Bordeaux region, Parisian vineyards, and South America. While farming and making wine for Grape Ink, he’s also working on high elevation vineyards in California and elsewhere in Oregon.

    During our time with Jarad, we learn about farming in Oregon’s fickle snow zone, where weather is often cloudy and cold and one must “follow the sun and watch out for the rain.” Jarad understands the ecosystem of his land, including how wild animals like birds and elk interact with his crop and the “acceptable casualties” caused by predation and disease. He farms with serenity, even when conditions are difficult — which they often are, in the hills above 800 feet.

    Pinot noir wine grapes.

    Jarad describes the musical interplay of soil, temperature, the day/night cycle, the wind, and the countless other natural elements that sculpt the expression and composition of his plants. Forces as great as the pull of the moon and atmospheric pressure and organisms as miniscule as the nematode in the soil all affect the grape vines. Among the defining factors of viticulture and winemaking, Jarad says, are the where and when — representing a significant investment of time in a specific geographical area and undertaking a long, slow process of which the actual production of the wine — from picking to processing — is the shortest period.

    Jarad’s other passions include art and poetry, and he draws a parallel between pianists and winemakers. You’ll also hear about winemaking wizardry, Jarad’s sundial watch, companion plants for grapevines, why viticulturists play awful radio stations, and the difficult task pairing wine with radishes and artichokes.

    Jarad shares a love for wines that elude standardized terms and definitions, contributing to a paradigm shift from prioritizing how wine is expected to taste to experiencing the artfulness threaded throughout the process. Jarad encourages a younger generation of the “wine-curious” in their capacity to support small growers and businesses, instead of large companies who churn out bottles by the millions. After listening to Jarad, you’ll be inspired to enjoy the fruits of the labor of artists like him.

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    1 hr and 9 mins