#fisherman-storytellers

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Dining
fromTasting Table
1 week ago

The Ultimate Guide To Eating Oysters: From Shucking To Grilling - Tasting Table

Oysters require proper storage and handling to ensure freshness and safety when preparing them at home.
#seafood
fromLos Angeles Times
1 week ago
SF food

The seafood industry bets Americans will eat more fish if it looks more like meat

The seafood industry is transforming fish products to resemble popular meat dishes to appeal to American consumers.
fromTasting Table
2 weeks ago
SF food

Why You Might Want To Rethink Buying Seafood At The Counter - Tasting Table

Buying frozen seafood can be more economical and safer than fresh, as much fresh seafood is previously frozen and thawed before display.
SF food
fromLos Angeles Times
1 week ago

The seafood industry bets Americans will eat more fish if it looks more like meat

The seafood industry is transforming fish products to resemble popular meat dishes to appeal to American consumers.
SF food
fromTasting Table
2 weeks ago

Why You Might Want To Rethink Buying Seafood At The Counter - Tasting Table

Buying frozen seafood can be more economical and safer than fresh, as much fresh seafood is previously frozen and thawed before display.
Cooking
fromTasting Table
2 weeks ago

This Meaty Seafood Makes An Unexpectedly Good Stand-In For Pork - Tasting Table

Swordfish serves as an excellent substitute for pork in recipes due to its meaty texture, high fat content, and ability to absorb marinades and glazes while developing similar browning and crusts.
Food & drink
fromTasting Table
2 weeks ago

The Popular Seafood Appetizer That Restaurant Workers Say They Don't Order - Tasting Table

Health authorities recommend eating only cooked oysters due to risks from Vibrio bacteria, Salmonella, and norovirus that cannot be detected by appearance, smell, or taste.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
3 weeks ago

How the Emerald Isle shaped the Steel City - Pittsburgh's rich Irish history

Pittsburgh's Irish population, now 11-16% of residents, grew through 18th-century immigration and massive 19th-century famine migration, fundamentally shaping the city's institutions and culture.
London food
fromIndependent
3 weeks ago

From Wicklow to the Arctic Circle: Meet the Irish carpenter keeping 500-year craft alive in Finland

John Gibbons, a Wicklow carpenter, abandoned his construction career in 2006 after a spontaneous decision while sitting in his car before work.
SF food
fromTasting Table
3 weeks ago

The Type Of Fish That Restaurant Workers Rarely Order, According To Reddit - Tasting Table

Swordfish contains high levels of parasites like nematodes and worms that become visible during preparation, making it a dish restaurant professionals avoid.
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

The Irish Do It Best

The Irish government will give 2,000 artists unrestricted weekly stipends in a program officials described as a "recognition, at government level, of the important role of the arts in Irish society." After a successful three-year pilot, the Irish government made its basic income program for artists permanent. Similar pilots have been launched here in the United States, but they're supported primarily by the nonprofit sector.
Arts
Arts
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Experience: I'm the last traditional clog maker in England

A solitary English clog maker handcrafts wooden-and-leather clogs from self-collected sycamore, finding therapeutic purpose and a peaceful, enduring rural craft late in life.
Design
fromArchDaily
2 months ago

Between Sea and City: Contemporary Fish Market Architecture

Fish markets shape coastal urban identity by mediating city-sea relations, embodying maritime culture, and evolving into hybrid public spaces tied to waterfront regeneration.
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 month ago

Ancient seafarers helped shape Arctic ecosystems

In the pristine High Arctic sits the Kitsissut island cluster, also known as the Carey Islands, nestled between northwest Greenland and northeast Canada. The surrounding seas are perilous, and traveling there is difficult even with modern boats. But new archaeological evidence suggests ancient humans managed to sail to the islands, too. Early settlers lived on the islands between 4,500 and 2,700 years ago.
Science
fromBuzzFeed
1 month ago

15 Adults Reveal The Bizarre Family Traditions That Left Other People Completely Stunned

Letting our dogs lick the dishes before we put them in the dishwasher!
Relationships
Business
fromFast Company
2 months ago

Navigating the ghosts of cultures past

Organizational culture constantly changes; leaders must discern which legacy cultural elements to retain and which to remove while balancing enduring beliefs with adaptive practices.
Agriculture
fromTravel + Leisure
2 months ago

On Scotland's Wild and Windswept Shetland Islands, Centuries of Crafting Traditions Endure-How to Visit

Shetland unites strategic maritime position, layered human habitation, transnational cultural history, diverse livelihoods, and modern industry (wind and oil) alongside enduring crofting traditions.
fromemptywheel
2 months ago

How Do You Want Your Family to Remember You? - emptywheel

The Stasi, the secret police, were legendary for their data files. Their work was based on instilling fear, and they induced stunningly amazing numbers of East Germans into informing on their neighbors. Something along the lines of 1 in 6 East Germans were informants, whether out of fear or out of approval of what the East German government was doing.
US politics
Philosophy
fromPortland Mercury
2 months ago

Pagh'tem'far, b'tanay

Take responsibility now by humbling yourself and making amends; otherwise life will force harsher, less merciful consequences and rewrite your narrative.
Education
fromBuzzFeed
2 months ago

My Childhood Was Stolen By A Decade-Long Sailing Trip My Father Forced On Me

A child's decade at sea resembled privilege but amounted to severe danger, isolation, deprivation, and loss of agency.
Renovation
fromArchDaily
1 month ago

Rooms as Heritage: How Interior Typologies Carry Cultural Memory

Cultural memory often survives in domestic interiors and everyday practices rather than visible architectural facades.
Fashion & style
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 months ago

From fishermen's garb to status symbol: the evolution of the sweater

Wool sweaters have regained prominence as dignified, practical garments while fleeting trends like ugly Christmas sweaters and tracksuits reflect shifting cultural and market influences.
fromTasting Table
2 months ago

Which Types Of Fish Have Edible Bones? - Tasting Table

Commonly canned fish, like salmon, sardines, anchovies, and mackerel all contain little bones that are safe, even enjoyable, to eat. During the canning process, the fish is pressure-cooked at high temperatures, which softens the bones to the point that they become tender and brittle. In canned salmon, the pale vertebrae often flake apart easily and are rich in calcium. Sardine and anchovy bones are even smaller and usually go unnoticed, disintegrating with mastication.
Cooking
Design
fromDesign Milk
2 months ago

The Lost Cloth Project: Ancestral Patterns Recast in Wood

Handmade wood-inlaid furniture translates Kuba raffia textile patterns into reconstituted 'lost' woods, aligning materiality, craft, and cultural heritage through ALPI and Stephen Burks collaboration.
Science
fromwww.nature.com
2 months ago

Author Correction: Hunter-gatherer sea voyages extended to remotest Mediterranean islands

Corrections to regional radiocarbon uncertainties do not meaningfully change conclusions about timing of the Mesolithic–Neolithic transition or maritime voyages in the central Mediterranean.
fromAeon
2 months ago

How islanders of Oceania built fearsome armour without metal | Aeon Videos

Visually striking and intricately crafted, the traditional armour and weaponry of the Kiribati islands in the Pacific Ocean were built from coconut fibre, human hair, sharks' teeth and porcupine fish. Yet, fearsome and lethal as these objects were, the people of this remote archipelago weren't especially warlike, as British colonists had long assumed, but were instead part of a ritualised style of combat intended to keep violence between clashing groups to a minimum.
Philosophy
fromOregon ArtsWatch * Arts & Culture News
2 months ago

'An Sceal': Looking toward spring with song and story * Oregon ArtsWatch

The mixture of old world and new inside a pub that also features a dark, polished wood bar, feels just right for Corrib Theatre's variety show An Scéal (The Story), which combines traditional storytelling and music with modern movement to celebrate the Celtic feast day Imbolc and the return of the sun as well as the Irish National holiday St. Bridgid's Day, both of which are on February 1.
Arts
Cooking
fromTasting Table
2 months ago

Punch Up Your Seafood With A Zesting Of This Underutilized Citrus Peel - Tasting Table

Grapefruit zest enhances seafood by adding bright citrus flavor; use small amounts, zest carefully, and check for grapefruit–medication interactions.
fromwww.kaltblut-magazine.com
2 months ago

The Rural Cut

The Rural Cut places vintage fashion in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley, among vineyards, open fields, and the animals that inhabit the land. As a Beirut-based stylist, I worked with a fully Lebanese team to create a shoot that feels authentic, where each garment and every frame reflects the textures, history, and rhythm of the rural landscape. Photography by Angele Basile / Instagram: @angelebasile Styling by Rinad Saad / Instagram: @rinaaaaddd
Fashion & style
fromCraftBeer.com
2 months ago

Ink & Drink: Uncovering the Historical Bonds of Tattoos and Fermentation Across Cultures

Tattoos and fermentation rarely appear in the same conversation, yet across the world, they share a quiet kinship. Both are practices of transformation, crafts that reshape raw material over time through care and relationships to the land, the spiritual, and the community. Tattooing inscribes identity and ancestry onto skin, while fermentation preserves, nourishes, and binds communities through shared taste and ritual. Both create change, brewing something more than themselves through embodied knowledge passed between generations.
Arts
Arts
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

The Secrets of Indigenous Art

Modern European and American modernists drew heavily from Indigenous arts, while museums long framed Indigenous adoption of Western forms as a loss of authenticity.
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