Spilled Milk
What do you listen to when you cook? We're tuned in to Spilled Milk podcasts -- food and hijinks from Molly Wizenberg and Matthew Amster-Burton.
ByFood52
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There are thousands of cooking blogs -- each week, we bring you highlights from the best. This week, we're lapping up the hijinks of a food podcast that's truly entertaining.

If you grew up riding around town in an ancient Volvo wagon every Saturday morning, subjected to an hour of "Click 'n Clack: The Tappet Brothers", we're talking to you. Introducing the Click 'n Clack of food, Spilled Milk: an aural variety show for all things food, where they "cook something delicious, eat it all, and you can't have any." (Don't worry, they're actually nice and interesting.) From the provenance of Slim Jims to how to poach an egg, this podcast is food talk for those of you who devour food media. Listen up!
Hosted by Seattlites and prominent food writers Molly Wizenberg and Matthew Amster-Burton, the show airs in digestible episodes, usually accompanied by a post that provides the Cliff's Notes to the podcast (a written recipe, gadget guide, ingredient sourcing, etc.) With a book each under their belts and years of writing for publications like Gourmet (Matthew) and blogging for Orangette (Molly), the duo are also naturals behind the mic. They have the rapport of your favorite NPR hosts and the casual chattiness of Julia Child. A brief transcript to whet your palate (on egg poachery):
Molly: "The truth is that I have gone through hell and back learning to poach an egg."
Matt: "You weren't born poaching."
Molly: "I have walked a mile in your shoes."
Matt: "I was wondering what happened to my shoes."


Featured Video
- Meet Molly and Matthew.
You get the gist, but may still be thinking: why would I listen to folks talk food when all I want to do is eat/see/cook it?
One answer lies in their pitch: "Here at Spilled Milk headquarters, we combine food and comedy in a bowl and stir it up until it explodes. Join your jovial (possibly too jovial) hosts ... for recipes, cooking tips, winning lotto numbers, and catfights."
With a dash of wisdom and a healthy dose of snark, Spilled Milk brings you back to the days when radio reigned supreme, and regardless of where you were and what you were doing -- eating, cooking, thinking -- you could sit back, relax and sop up content like a sponge. So, here's to cooking with the radio on.
One final aside: Is it "spilled" or "spilt" milk?
Want more food blogs? See last week's Reciprocity post: The Wednesday Chef.