Topic: Cookbook

21 chapters across the catalog

CIS Lunar
Episode 1856 2:30:45 - 2:35:54

1856: CIS Lunar

John's Tip of the Day, Moroccan Olive Oil

The "Tip of the Day" focuses on the health benefits of Moroccan olive oil, specifically the "Atlas" brand, which is high in heart-healthy polyphenols. The host reveals they are in the final stages of completing the "Dvorak Family Cookbook," which will incorporate a previously planned book on vinegar. The cookbook aims to promote the idea that "the family that cooks together stays together."

Eat The Dog Food
Episode 1776 3:31:34 - 3:39:08

1776: Eat The Dog Food

Basmati Rice Cooking Tip and Show Close

John C. Dvorak provides the "tip of the day," emphasizing that Pakistani Basmati rice is superior to Indian varieties. He offers specific cooking instructions, advising listeners to rinse the rice thoroughly and boil it in a large volume of water rather than using the absorption method. The show closes with a reminder of the "value-for-value" model and a preview of the next episode.

Lock the Clock
Episode 1641 2:19:59 - 2:23:37

1641: Lock the Clock

Too Many Eggs Cookbook and No Agenda ABCs

The "Too Many Eggs" cookbook and the "No Agenda ABCs" book are discussed as family-produced projects. The ABC book, originally written ten years ago, is being updated to include a "vaccine" entry and will be released as a coloring book. A price point of $33.33 for the main book has been a point of humorous contention within the production family.

Scop Christmas
Episode 1515 27:01 - 33:34

1515: Scop Christmas

Too Many Eggs, Mimi Dvorak Book Launch

Mimi Dvorak launches a 750-page cookbook titled "Too Many Eggs," featuring 800 recipes born from the family's surplus of backyard chickens. The book is being distributed via a "value for value" model, offering a free PDF while encouraging donations or physical book purchases. The hosts discuss the niche market for egg-related content and the rise of synthetic, laboratory-grown meats.

Al Gore Rhythms
Episode 1549 13:39 - 19:11

1549: Al Gore Rhythms

Nashville School Shooting, Manifesto and Law Enforcement Leaks

Nashville Police Chief John Drake confirmed the existence of journals and operational manuals belonging to the Nashville school shooter, which reportedly detailed plans to target Christian children. Information leaked from law enforcement sources suggests the shooter was anti-Christian and that the journals functioned as a "how-to" guide for violence. The media is accused of suppressing the anti-religious motivations of the attacker.

Texas Balls
Episode 1451 2:14:59 - 2:19:01

1451: Texas Balls

Foster Care Cookbook, 1933 Good Housekeeping Recipes

A producer couple, Sam and Courtney, created a cookbook titled "The Best Ingredient" to fund their foster daughter's therapeutic boarding school tuition. This leads to a discussion about vintage cookbooks, specifically a 1933 first edition of the Good Housekeeping Cookbook. The hosts discuss "raisin sauce," a Depression-era condiment often served over meat.

G.E.R.M.
Episode 1447 1:24:38 - 1:28:43

1447: G.E.R.M.

Too Many Eggs Cookbook and Social Media Migration

John Dvorak announces a new cookbook project titled "Too Many Eggs," authored by his wife Mimi, which features thousands of egg recipes. The hosts also discuss the recent influx of users to the Mastodon-based "No Agenda Social" instance following Elon Musk's bid for Twitter. They contrast the open nature of the Fediverse with the "echo chamber" environment of platforms like Truth Social.

Electrical College
Episode 1300 2:44:42 - 2:46:16

1300: Electrical College

TV Show Bones, Forensic Science Absurdity

A classic clip from the TV show "Bones" is played to illustrate the absurdity of forensic science tropes in popular media. In the clip, a character claims to identify a specific 1993 institutional cookbook by running a typeface through a Library of Congress database. The hosts mock this as a "cheap writer's trick" that misleads the public about technical capabilities.

Funny Blow
Episode 751 2:33:54 - 2:38:06

751: Funny Blow

UK Terror Arrests and the Criminalization of Online Research

A 16-year-old girl in Manchester is arrested for possessing the "Anarchist Cookbook" and communicating with a plot participant in Australia. The hosts argue that the UK is becoming more dystopian than Orwell's "1984," as simple online research into controversial topics is increasingly treated as a criminal offense.

Facebook Thuggin'
Episode 711 2:44:40 - 2:47:10

711: Facebook Thuggin'

FBI Entrapment Tactics, Anarchist Cookbook Anecdote

A 29-page FBI complaint reveals that an undercover agent provided a copy of the Anarchist Cookbook to two women who were later arrested for plotting an attack. The investigation relied on "code words" like "food" to describe explosives and viewed a joke about a pressure cooker as evidence of a terrorist conspiracy.

Joy Brigade
Episode 710 1:27:22 - 1:33:07

710: Joy Brigade

FBI Stings, Anarchist Cookbook, and Weapon of Mass Destruction Charges

The Queens terror case is characterized as a potential FBI entrapment or "honeypot" operation, noting that propane tanks are not typically used for pressure cooker bombs. The women face charges of conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction. The imam of their mosque defends their character, while the media's aggressive questioning of their families is highlighted.

Joy Brigade
Episode 710 1:33:07 - 1:38:44

710: Joy Brigade

Dianne Feinstein, First Amendment, and San Francisco Political History

Senator Dianne Feinstein's call to remove bomb-making guides from the internet is criticized as an affront to the First Amendment. An anecdote from San Francisco political history describes Feinstein's tenure on a hearing board alongside Barbara Boxer. The story illustrates Feinstein's perceived lack of common sense regarding a workplace safety issue in a file room.

Ghost of Austin
Episode 645 3:07:40 - 3:10:51

645: Ghost of Austin

Patti LaBelle's Seven-Cheese Macaroni and Cheese

Singer Patti LaBelle's recipe for macaroni and cheese, which includes seven types of cheese and lobster, is reviewed. The hosts find her inclusion of a story about her musical director's prostate cancer in a cooking segment to be bizarre. They criticize the "elitist" trend of adding expensive ingredients like truffles or lobster to a simple, cheap dish.

Episode 575 55:44 - 58:47

575: BIOS Brick

Metadata Library Analogy, Anarchist Cookbook

The NSA uses a library analogy to explain metadata, comparing it to knowing where "bad books" are located without reading them. Meanwhile, William Powell, author of "The Anarchist Cookbook," has called for his book to be removed from shelves following its association with a school shooting in Colorado.

Wiener-Gate
Episode 308 2:06:22 - 2:15:33

308: Wiener-Gate

E. Coli in Germany, Rat Meat Cookbooks, and Outro

The show concludes with a rapid-fire news update covering an E. Coli outbreak in Germany, Chinese workers building motorways in Poland, and the IMF threatening to withhold aid from Greece. A recommendation is made for the book "Unmentionable Cuisine," which includes recipes for rat and squirrel, as a potential resource for future economic hardships.

Knights of the No Agenda Armory
Episode 87 1:14:30 - 1:18:39

87: Knights of the No Agenda Armory

Slumgullion Recipe, Culinary Etymology

John Dvorak discusses the origins of "Slumgullion," a dish he found in a 1977 community cookbook from the Dallas Quilters Guild. He explores the etymology of the word, which refers to both a watery meat stew and the muddy deposits found in mining sluices. The hosts exchange humorous definitions of the term and its use as an idiomatic phrase for poor-quality food.

The Zen "Offer"
Episode 29 23:15 - 26:36

29: The Zen "Offer"

Architectural Books, European Snack Culture

The "Cool Restaurants" and "Cool Hotels" book series by Taschen (Taneu) provide architectural inspiration and dining recommendations for cities like Amsterdam and New York. Observations on European snack culture note the regional preference for eating french fries with mayonnaise in Holland and Belgium, or vinegar in the United Kingdom. These local habits are often viewed as unusual by American tourists accustomed to ketchup.

The Zen "Offer"
Episode 29 35:48 - 39:09

29: The Zen "Offer"

Ruth Wakefield, Toll House Cookbook Discovery

A 1940 edition of Ruth Wakefield's "Toll House Tried and True Recipes" was discovered at a library sale, containing an autographed note and a penny postcard. Wakefield is described as a culinary predecessor to Alice Waters, known for her influence on American home cooking. The book includes an unusual recipe for grapefruit stuffed with crab, a combination that remains controversial among modern food enthusiasts due to the bitter and savory flavor profile.