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Huitlacoche: Corn Smut or Sacred Gift?
Episode 137

Huitlacoche: Corn Smut or Sacred Gift?

The History of Fresh Produce · The Produce Industry Network

April 7, 202638m 22s

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Show Notes

What is huitlacoche, the fungus that Indigenous farmers in Mexico gave thanks for at harvest - and that American agronomists spent a century trying to burn, quarantine, and breed out of existence? Why did two civilizations look at the same diseased corn cob and see, one, a seasonal gift, and the other, an agricultural catastrophe? And how does this strange, blackened organism open a window onto the great collision between Indigenous knowledge and colonial science; from the burning of Aztec codices to the tasting menus of New York?

Join John and Patrick as they tell the extraordinary story of corn smut - the Mexican truffle, the genetics laboratory darling, the fungus that fed empires and terrified farmers - in an age when the line between disease and delicacy has never been more hotly contested...

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In Sponsorship with Cornell University: Dyson Cornell SC Johnson College of Business

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