La technique du paillis est pratiquée depuis plusieurs siècles, bien avant l’arrivée des dérivés du pétrole. C’est pourquoi ni les matériaux synthétiques ni les matériaux minéraux ne sont des paillis! Clarifications sur un quiproquo historique.
- Emissions
- Radio légumes & compagnie
- Un bon paillis est uniquement organique
Publié le par Bertrand Dumont
2019 Bertrand_Dumont
Podcasts sur les mêmes thèmes
Spilled Milk
Every week on Spilled Milk, writers/comedians Molly Wizenberg and Matthew Amster-Burton start with a food-related topic, from apples to winter squash, and run with it as far as they can go—and, regrettably, sometimes further.
Voir la fiche
Start Cooking
Start Cooking videos
Are you a busy person who just never got around to learning the basics of cooking? We built startcooking.com just for you. You'll learn how to make quick and tasty meals, plus learn the basic cooking skills you'll need. Get ready to start cooking! Many more episodes are available through our Start Cooking video feed, go to startcooking.com for details.
Voir la fiche
The Sourdough Podcast
Stories to feed your sourdough passion.
Inspiring conversations from leaders and innovators throughout the sourdough community. Hear the stories behind the bakers, authors, growers, millers, artists, and other creative minds that you've always wondered about.
Voir la fiche
Fuhmentaboudit!
Ferment About It! (Fuhmentaboudit!), aims to demystify the art of home fermentation with a primary focus on home brewing beer. Chris and Mary take listeners on a journey through fermentation, sharing history, practical methods, recipes and anecdotes from personal experience as well as from those of guest fermenters both amateur and pro.
Voir la fiche
The Sporkful
We obsess about food to learn more about people. The Sporkful isn't for foodies, it's for eaters. Hosted by Dan Pashman, who's also the inventor of the new pasta shape cascatelli. James Beard and Webby Award winner for Best Food Podcast. A Stitcher Production.
Voir la fiche
What Doesn't Kill You
Food production is a curious business; it's nuanced, layered, complex, and political. In What Doesn’t Kill You, host Katy Keiffer endeavors to identify and explain some of the key issues in our food system through interviews with journalists, authors, scientists, activists, and industry experts. Water rights, meat and agricultural production, food waste, labor issues, and new technologies are just some of the topics explored so we can better understand how to feed the future.
Voir la fiche