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Cooking Issues with Dave Arnold
No Tangent Tuesday: Infinite Rage
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Jordana Rothman joins the gang for a No Tangent Tuesday full of tangents.
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Ed Coleman on Crullers, Community, and Café Tropical
01:00:39|Dave and the crew welcome Ed Cornell, renowned pastry chef and co-owner of Café Tropical in Silver Lake, Los Angeles. Ed, formerly of DC-based Milk Cult, discusses his transition to LA, the evolution of Café Tropical as both a bakery and community hub, and his innovations in yeasted doughs and soft serve. The conversation ranges from donut techniques and soft-serve mechanics to mutual disdain for bad blueberry muffins and the surprising connection between carp bait and boba-making. The team also dives into Ed’s community outreach via Feed the Streets LA, his thoughts on donut fryers, and how he replicates French crullers at scale without compromising texture. Classic Cooking Issues tangents include pre-Raphaelite surgery photos, cake cone discourse, and donut reheating strategy.Highlights:Ed Cornell explains how Café Tropical balances artisanal baking, ice cream production, and acting as a local community center with 12-step meetings and food relief programs.In-depth breakdown of donut production techniques, including choux-based crullers, soft-serve stabilization, and the challenges of maintaining quality in frozen fried pastries.Instant Ramen, Infinite Peter
01:00:09|Peter Kim returns to Cooking Issues to discuss his new book Instant Ramen Kitchen and immersive food venture Infinite Table. In an episode that zigzags from molè rituals in Oaxaca to the atrocities of airplane omelets, Peter joins Dave and the crew for a marathon of food philosophy, gadget nostalgia, and weaponized pronunciation.• Mole and Memory – Peter recounts filming with Karina Santiago in Oaxaca, capturing her mole negro process in 360° video, and recreating the experience for guests at Infinite Table with emotional results and no psilocybin.• Ramen Realism – From detailed tasting notes on Top Ramen vs. Sapporo Ichiban to riff recipes like carbonara-ish cheese bombs and bacon chashu pinwheels, Peter makes the case for instant noodles as both everyday staple and creative canvas.Olive Oil Nick Returns
01:02:17|Olive oil expert Nick Coleman returns to Cooking Issues! From evaluating the aromas of peak-harvest oils to theorizing the merits of freezing olive oil into fudge-like cubes, the conversation drifts through dumpling hierarchies, Nashville honky-tonk bars, dry rice panic, and defunct clear ice makers. Whether you’re here for the food science or the food fights, this one’s a full pour.• Olive Oil Logic – Nick shares Grove and Vine’s latest harvest, explains tomato leaf aromatics and early picking strategies, and discusses olive oil handling, storage, and the myth of “finishing only” oils.• Dumpling Debate – The team compares soup dumplings, steamed buns, pan-fried styles, and roast pig plates across NYC’s Chinatowns while unpacking chili oil obsessions and spice tolerance philosophy.Stacked, Sizzled, and Served with Sam Yoo
01:03:43|Chef Sam Yoo joins the crew for a freewheeling conversation that veers from pancake engineering and Korean fried chicken techniques to the realities of running restaurants post-pandemic. The founder of Golden Diner and Golden HOF breaks down the logistics of high-volume brunch, dry-aged steak precision, and operating a new concept in the same space as his parents’ former restaurant. The team also covers everything from vacuum-fried steaks to risotto starch hacks and late-summer berry dreams.• Diner to Dynasty – Sam walks through launching Golden Diner and converting his parents’ former Midtown restaurant into Golden HOF, a Korean pub and steakhouse hybrid with upstairs-downstairs service models and dual menus designed for post-pandemic dining patterns.• Pancakes and Porterhouse – Sam unpacks the precise workflow behind Golden Diner’s viral honey maple butter pancakes, explains the reasoning behind Korean fried chicken’s glassy crust, and shares how his team cooks a porterhouse steak with separate zone timing to nail both the strip and filet.Grease, PR, and Deep-Fried Dreams with Rebecca Palkovics
01:00:50|Former Booker and Dax collaborator Rebecca Palkovics returns to the studio for a loose and wide-ranging discussion that covers restaurant PR, vintage ice cream freezers, Sly Stone’s legacy, and fried tortilla technique. With no guest chef in the hot seat, the team slips into classic Cooking Issues chaos, fielding live calls, reminiscing about busted van tours, and detailing the sensory nightmare of hot dog water.• Fryer Survival 101 – Dave and caller Jacob from Des Moines dissect the maintenance, filtering, and storage of commercial deep fryer oil, especially in shared kitchen settings. Plus, a bonus rant on tortilla chip texture and a defense of gas fryers.• From PR Myths to Zoo Tears – Rebecca gives a candid breakdown of when restaurant PR makes sense, why good messaging starts internally, and how misaligned expectations tank ROI. Also covered: orangutan sadness, Flappy’s nachos, and the horror of cryo-fried fish.Southern Roots, City Streets with Chef Suzanne Cupps
01:00:58|Chef Suzanne Cupps of Lola’s NYC joins Dave and the crew for a wide-ranging conversation about her culinary evolution—from a math major with zero kitchen experience to leading her own restaurant in Manhattan. They dig into the reality of building a restaurant, fried chicken technique, and the rigors of fine-dining criticism, all while celebrating Lola’s recent inclusion in the New York Times Top 100.• From Aiken to Anisa – Suzanne shares her journey from boiled peanuts and George Foreman grills in South Carolina to formative years under Anita Lo and Michael Anthony. Her unexpected path to professional cooking included stints in hospitality HR and six years learning every station at Anisa.• Lola’s Layers: Cabbage, Cornbread, and Crispy Chicken – Cupps explains how Lola’s menu balances Asian and Southern influences with seasonal precision. Highlights include grilled Conehead cabbage, a blue cornmeal dessert with whipped buttermilk, and a signature Filipino-style double-fried chicken with fermented Fresno hot honey.Classics in the Field: Freezers, Fridges, and Forgotten Cookbooks
01:00:58|This week on Cooking Issues, Dave welcomes back Matt Sartwell from Kitchen Arts & Letters for a special “Classics in the Field” episode. They dig into historic cookbooks, from Mrs. Marshall’s 1890s ice cream innovations to early 20th-century Russian preservation techniques involving millet, pig bladders, and cellars. Dave recounts recent culinary misadventures—including purging a pantry, misidentifying whiskey as tequila, and investigating black garlic from the early pandemic era—while fielding listener questions about ancient wheat, Spinzall butter math, sturgeon spinal cords, and more. Plus: a deep dive into American barbecue lore, McGee’s nut superiority, and how Star Trek IV changed the whaling conversation forever.Deep Freeze and Dairy Experiments – Dave and Matt explore Fancy Ices by Mrs. Marshall, dissecting her unconventional custards, starch-thickened ice creams, and patented rapid-freezing contraptions from 1890s England.Pantry Purges and Questionable Bottles – The crew shares horror stories and small victories from cleaning out ancient ingredients, including black garlic, forgotten miso, and mystery whiskey in fancy tequila decanters.No Tangent Tuesday: Fine Dining Regrets, Milk Hacks, and the Ghost of WD~50
01:00:07|This week on Cooking Issues, the crew goes deep on unforgettable meals, kitchen gadgetry, and the enduring legacy of experimental cooking. Dave revisits the lessons of the "molecular gastronomy" era and breaks down his latest cream syrup experiments, while the team debates service etiquette, restaurant value, and the emotional weight of food memories. Plus: anesthetizing crabs, carbonating cocktails without a freezer, and why it might be time to resurrect original soy-based Worcestershire.• Highs and Lows of Dining Culture – Michelin stars, pajama dress codes, and the eternal question of whether anyone actually wants their dish described at the table.• Kitchen Workarounds and Technical Deep Dives – Clove oil protocols for humane shellfish prep, DIY cold plates for carbonation, and what Dave regrets calling “milk washing.”No Tangent Tuesday: The Landlord Depot of Trash Appliances
59:51|On this episode of Cooking Issues, Dave and the crew reconnect for a sprawling, high-energy session that ranges from centrifuge butter failures to 24-hour pumpernickel experiments, with diversions into the nightmare of strawberry seeds, giant pretzels, and the strangest tips ever left in bars and restaurants. Along the way: raspberry beret brainworms, peeling strawberry heresy, and why changing your water filter matters more than you think.• Centrifuge Butter Problems and Strawberry Seed Disgust – Quinn’s stalled butter dehydration project leads to a deep dive into centrifugal puréeing, why strawberry seeds ruin everything, and a passionate argument about why peeling strawberries is a crime against food.• Westphalian Pumpernickel and Giant Pretzels – Dave details his attempt at real Westphalian pumpernickel—pure rye, 24 hours of low-temperature steam baking, and 48 hours of aging—plus recommendations for Pennsylvania butter pretzels, massive local potato chips, and surviving blistered hands from slicing bricks of bread.• The Craziest Tips Ever Received – The crew shares the most bizarre tips they’ve encountered, from stacks of $2 bills to fortune cookie fortunes to a memorable crack rock offering—plus a rant about Bible-verse tippers and the fine line between generosity and insult.