Skip to content
Fork

Fork

Discovery
22 jun 2020 28 min
Abrir en Clue

Sobre este episodio

<p>The fork is essential. Even camping without one is a false economy, in Katy’s experience. Even a spork - with a spoon at one end and a fork at the other, with a knife formed along one prong - just won’t do. You need both - a fork to steady the meat and a knife to cut it with.</p><p>So how did the fork come to be so indispensable?</p><p>We didn’t always love the fork. Public historian, Greg Jenner, reveals how it was abandoned for the chopstick in Ancient China, and greeted with scorn in Western Europe when a Byzantine princess ate with a golden double-pronged one.</p><p>It was only after the traveller, Thomas Coryat, in 1608, celebrated its use by pasta-loving Italians that the English started to take note. By the mid-19th century, there was a fork for every culinary challenge – from the pickle and the berry, to ice-cream and the terrapin. The utensil transformed the dining experience, bringing the pocket knife onto the table in a blunt, round-tipped form, and ushering in British table manners.</p><p>So is there a perfect version of the fork? With the help of tomato, milkshake and mango, Katy discovers that the material a fork is made from can drastically alter a food’s taste.</p><p>Featuring material scientist, Zoe Laughlin, and food writer and historian, Bee Wilson.</p><p>Picture: a fork, Credit: BBC</p>

Escucha este episodio en inglés para aprender inglés

Los episodios de podcast son una de las formas más densas de absorber inglés al ritmo nativo. Fork de Discovery te da diálogo natural, habla sin guion y vocabulario que de verdad aparece en conversaciones reales.

En la app Clue, cada palabra de la transcripción es tocable. Toca una palabra desconocida, ve la traducción a tu idioma al instante y sigue escuchando sin romper el ritmo.

Episodios para aprender inglés

Más podcasts en inglés