The SaltThe Salt is a blog from the NPR Science Desk about what we eat and why we eat it. We serve up food stories with a side of skepticism that may provoke you or just make you smile.
Cecilia Chiang poses in her kitchen in 2014. She told NPR that when she first arrived in the U.S., she was shocked by the food most Americans considered to be Chinese.
Eric Risberg/AP
hide caption
People load their vehicles with boxes of food at a Los Angeles Regional Food Bank earlier this month in Los Angeles. Food banks across the United States are seeing numbers and people they have never seen before amid unprecedented unemployment from the COVID-19 outbreak.
Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images
hide caption
Together Inc. food bank workers distribute food at a drive-through location in Omaha, Neb., last week. Disruptions in the agricultural supply chain caused by the coronavirus pandemic are making it difficult for food banks.
Nati Harnik/AP
hide caption
Farmworkers pick organic strawberries at Stehly Farms Organics in Valley Center, Calif., on March 25.
Ariana Drehsler/AFP via Getty Images
hide caption
Critics had called on the Department of Agriculture to suspend implementation of the new food stamp restrictions, especially in light of the economic crisis spurred by the coronavirus pandemic.
Portland Press Herald via Getty Images
hide caption
Chopped and frozen samples of damaged soybean plants are kept in storage at the Office of the Indiana State Chemist. Many contain residues of the herbicide dicamba.
Dan Charles/NPR
hide caption
This chicken from Memphis Meats was produced with cells taken from an animal and grown into meat in a "cultivator." The process is analogous to how yeast is grown in breweries to produce beer.
Allison Aubrey/NPR
hide caption
A farmer operates a combine to harvest soybeans in Wyanet, Ill. Farmers got more than $22 billion in government payments in 2019. It's the highest level of farm subsidies in 14 years.
Daniel Acker/Bloomberg via Getty Images
hide caption
Genie Milgrom, pictured in 2013, stands in the entryway of her Miami home wrapped in a long family tree, filled with the names of 22 generations of grandmothers. Raised Catholic, Milgrom traced her family's hidden Jewish roots with the help of a trove of ancient family recipes written down by the women of her family over generations.
Emily Michot/Miami Herald/Tribune News Service via Getty Images
hide caption
toggle caption
Emily Michot/Miami Herald/Tribune News Service via Getty Images
A new study suggests that one service already in place in many food deserts could help make it easier to access fresh, healthy food: online grocery delivery. The finding lends support to expanding a pilot program that lets people use food stamp benefits to pay for those groceries.
svetikd/Getty Images
hide caption
Chef Tunde Wey uses food as a tool for social justice. His company, BabyZoos, aims to use profits from the sale of applesauce to hospitals to fund ventures that create more economic opportunities for African Americans in an effort to close racial wealth — and health — gaps.
L. Kasimu Harris for NPR
hide caption
A shopper holds fresh produce at Northgate Gonzalez Market before a news conference there, where the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health announced new data on food insecurity in the county, in September 2017. Food insecurity affected 1 in 3 low-income households in the county, the data showed.
Danny Moloshok/Los Angeles County Department of Public Health/AP
hide caption
toggle caption
Danny Moloshok/Los Angeles County Department of Public Health/AP
America's supply of sugar is shrinking because of a poor sugar beet harvest in the northern Midwest. As a result, the U.S. will import more sugar this year than it has in almost 40 years.
Amarin Jitnathum/EyeEm/Getty Images
hide caption
The 20-foot-tall bronze sculpture of a boat loaded with refugees and migrants is the work of Canadian sculptor Timothy Schmalz. Its bread-and-fruit motif encapsulates how food is interlocked with the history of human migration.
Grzegorz Galazka/Mondadori Portfolio via Getty Images
hide caption
toggle caption
Grzegorz Galazka/Mondadori Portfolio via Getty Images
A sweet view along one of the many canals of Venice, which in this case are filled with blue jellybeans.
Pradipta Banerjee/Courtesy of David M. Schwarz Architects
hide caption
toggle caption
Pradipta Banerjee/Courtesy of David M. Schwarz Architects
A new study finds that time-restricted eating helped overweight people who were at high risk of developing Type 2 diabetes lose about 3% of their body weight, reduce belly fat and feel more energetic.
erhui1979/Getty Images
hide caption