Episodes
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The U.S. of Agriculture
S1 E13 - 24m 40s
From the Founding Farmers to the modern Farm Bill, what has 200 years of progress brought to the table? More food at lower prices for sure, but also food fights over the environment, hunger, nutrition, and waste. In this closing episode of Food Forward, politicians, policy watchdogs and food experts take us on a personal tour through the history of food and agriculture in America.
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Wild Food, I Think I Love You
S1 E12 - 24m 40s
Once upon a time, wild food was all there was. If you didn’t pick it, catch it, or kill it, you didn’t eat. That’s all changed, of course, but what have we lost in our move from the wilderness that once supported us? And what could we gain by rediscovering foraging as a source of food?
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Food on the Brain
S1 E11 - 24m 41s
Explore the disconnect between the belly and the brain and America’s national eating disorder. A journey to Cornell’s Food and Brand Lab unveils the psychology of consumer habits and introduces viewers to simple tips and tricks for a healthier diet. We also take a journey up to the Hudson River Valley on a transformative journey of one Navy veteran who is reinventing himself through culinary arts.
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Make Food, Not Waste
S1 E10 - 24m 40s
Americans throw away 34 million tons of food each year. That’s like tossing a quarter of the groceries we buy directly into the trash. But where some see garbage, others find green gold. Explore the secret life of food scraps, landfills and the people who love them. San Francisco is leading the charge in composting municipal food waste.
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Quest for Water
S1 E9 - 24m 40s
How can agriculture use less water and still grow enough food for everyone? Are we finally emerging from the water wars of the west that pitted Native American tribes and environmentalists against farmers and ranchers? Dive into solutions that some water users are discovering to protect this most precious resource in the face of drought, politics and environmental conflicts.
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Food (Justice) for All
S1 E8 - 24m 40s
All across the country, the ways and means of America's small farmers are evolving. Young Hispanic farm laborers in California’s Salinas Valley are moving up the economic ladder, training to become tomorrow’s organic farm owners. In Houston, Congolese refugees are creating communities around vacant urban lots.
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The Future of Food
S1 E7 - 24m 41s
A new breed of passionate farmers, chefs and scientists are revamping the American food system. Combining people’s passions and technological ingenuity, visit tech-savvy growers flying crop-monitoring drones in California’s central valley. We step into CU Boulder’s lab to map the human microbiome with visionary food journalist, Michael Pollan.
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School Lunch Revival
S1 E6 - 24m 40s
All public school kids have access to free or reduced-price lunch. But affordability doesn’t necessarily mean it’s good for them. Detroit’s renegade lunch lady is not only serving kids healthy food, she’s got them growing it, too. Houston schools are joining a national movement with “seed to plate” classroom cooking and ia new generation of service members is connecting farmers and schools.
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Modern Milk
S1 E5 - 24m 40s
American dairy is undergoing a renaissance. A cottage industry of dairy farmers, cheesemakers and creameries are creating delicious alternatives to industrial milk. Meet west-coast raw milk revolutionaries, Vermont cheese entrepreneurs making serious cheddar, and ice cream innovators in San Francisco and New York City.
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SOS: Save Our Soil
S1 E4 - 26m 46s
The top six inches of soil are the most precious, yet least understood ecosystem on earth—yet we continue to treat soil like dirt. Get down and dirty with large-scale Midwestern composters, California carbon farmers reversing climate change and a West Virginia poultry farmer creating ‘biochar’ from chicken poop. Explore new frontiers beneath our feet that just might save our soil.
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Seeds of Change
S1 E3 - 24m 40s
Seeds represent hope, a new beginning. Amid battles over GMO crops and monocultures that dominate American farmlands, meet seed savers pursuing grassroots alternatives. From the dry deserts of Arizona to corn and soybean growers in Iowa and Illinois, genetic diversity does matter and the roots of change are taking hold.
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The Meat of the Matter
S1 E2 - 24m 44s
Cheap meat is actually quite costly, taking its toll on America’s health and the environment. The good news is it’s now possible to have your steak and eat it, too. Meet a new breed of ranchers who are leading the red meat revolution by returning to traditional styles of raising cattle. Iowan bison ranchers, Georgian cattlemen and Californian cowgirls all have one thing in common— grass.
Extras + Features
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Food Rebel: Vandra Thorburn
S1 - 1m 53s
Vandra can do more than compost, she can pickle your food scraps and feed the microbes too.
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Food Rebel: Robert Reed
S1 - 1m 56s
Robert Reed and Recology are steering San Francisco toward a Zero Waste future.
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Food Rebel: Tim Thornhill
S1 - 1m 39s
Tim Thornhill is making wine into water at his revolutionary vineyard, Parducci Winery.
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Food Rebel: Monica Martinez
S1 - 1m 30s
Monica is introducing an uncommon yet ancient protein to the American diet: edible insects.
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Food Rebel: Mateo Kehler
S1 - 1m 46s
Mateo is making cheese the old school way with new school flavor.
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Food Rebels: Sarah Tanner and Recipe for Success
S1 - 1m 46s
Recipe for Success lays down nutrition facts in the classroom so kids can cook at home.
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Food Rebel: Betti Wiggins
S1 - 2m 20s
Betti feeds 50,000 children in the Detroit Public Schools while supporting local farms.
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Food Rebel: Mark McAfee
S1 - 1m 40s
Mark McAfee's passion for dairy has made him the largest producer of raw milk in America.
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Food Rebels: Caroline Stover and FoodCorps
S1 - 2m 1s
FoodCorps stirs up change in the cafeteria by introducing local food to students.
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Food Rebel: Josh Frye
S1 - 2m
Josh Frye is restoring depleted soils with the unlikeliest of sources: chicken poop.
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Food Rebel: Justine Hernandez
S1 - 1m 47s
Justine inspires growth in the desert of Tucson, Arizona at the PIma County Seed Library.
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Food Rebel: John Wick
S1 - 1m 48s
John Wick helps reverse climate change from the ground up by putting carbon back in soil.
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