• 5 Tips For Maintaining Community During the Coronavirus Crisis

    5 Tips For Maintaining Community During the Coronavirus Crisis

    Having a strong community is one of the most important factors in our mental and emotional health. Loneliness or social isolation increases our risk of depression and anxiety, and it can even make us more vulnerable to physical ailments, increasing our risk of heart disease by 29%, and stroke by 32%. Usually, maintaining strong community bonds is as…

  • The Sake Master Reviving a Long-Forgotten Local Rice

    The Sake Master Reviving a Long-Forgotten Local Rice

    EVERY YEAR FOR DECADES, SCIENTISTS at the Hiroshima Prefectural Agriculture Gene Bank have planted a small patch of hattanso rice. Its stalks are spring-green and spindly, its grains stubby, with a white core of endosperm visible in light. Hiroshima’s rice fields are fecund with Hattanso’s descendants, which farmers sell to sake brewers in dozens of prefectures across Japan.…

  • On the Hunt for the Wild Relatives of America’s Favorite Produce

    On the Hunt for the Wild Relatives of America’s Favorite Produce

    WHEN COLIN KHOURY WAS SIX years old, he committed an act of civil disobedience. It was Southern California in the 1980s, and real estate companies were hungry to turn the remaining farms and wilderness bordering Los Angeles into shiny new developments. Barely out of kindergarten, Khoury was firmly against the developers. His love for landscape was…

  • How Ancient Tooth Plaque Solved the Mystery of the Banana’s Trans-Pacific Journey

    How Ancient Tooth Plaque Solved the Mystery of the Banana’s Trans-Pacific Journey

    A TYPICAL DAY FOR MONICA Tromp might include scraping tartar off 3,000-year-old human incisors. “It’s basically like being a dental hygienist for the dead,” says Tromp, an Affiliated Researcher at New Zealand’s University of Otago, about her work studying ancient Pacific Islanders’ diets. The hot, humid climate of places like Vanuatu, an archipelago 1,100 miles east…

  • Australian Wildfires Uncovered Hidden Sections of a Huge, Ancient Aquaculture System

    Australian Wildfires Uncovered Hidden Sections of a Huge, Ancient Aquaculture System

    IN VICTORIA, AUSTRALIA, AN ANCIENT labyrinth of waterways snakes across a once-volcanic landscape. This is the Budj Bim Cultural Landscape, a vast aquacultural system the Gunditjmara Aboriginal people, who still call this country home, began constructing 6,600 years ago. Parts of the system are still in use today. Ask locals about Budj Bim, and you’ll invariably…

  • How to Spend Valentine’s Day If You’re Single

    How to Spend Valentine’s Day If You’re Single

    Whenever I read a self-help article that advises women to “put yourself first,” or “cultivate self-love,” I want to throw my laptop out my fourth floor apartment window in despair. (I don’t actually do it, of course, because laptops are expensive.)  Often, these seemingly empowering pieces of advice come with subtle directives about what we…

  • The Culinary Legacy of Brooklyn’s First Free Black Community

    The Culinary Legacy of Brooklyn’s First Free Black Community

    SOMETIMES, WE CAN ONLY UNDERSTAND history from above. That, anyway, seemed to be the outlook of historian James Hurley and pilot Joseph Hays when, in 1968, they flew a plane over Brooklyn. They were looking for the remnants of a village founded 130 years earlier, the free Black community of Weeksville. Read more at Atlas Obscura. Featured…

  • The Chocolate-Brewing Witches of Colonial Latin America

    The Chocolate-Brewing Witches of Colonial Latin America

    IT HAPPENED, PERHAPS, ONE HOT, humid night, mist over the mountains that bordered the colonial city of Santiago de Guatemala. Melchora de los Reyes, a young, mixed-raced woman, had sex with her lover. When she met him, she was a virgin, a doncella, a status that made her eligible for marriage in the strict, Catholic society of…

  • Rape is an Economic Crime: The Case for Mental Health Restitution

    Rape is an Economic Crime: The Case for Mental Health Restitution

    On TV, the plot looks something like this: a woman is raped or abused. She is a sympathetic character, traumatized yet brave. She reports the crime to the police, who perform a detailed forensic investigation and arrest the perpetrator. A trial ensues, and the survivor steps forward to tell her story. She wins over the…

  • Eat Like a 1970s Radical With ‘The People’s Philadelphia Cookbook’

    Eat Like a 1970s Radical With ‘The People’s Philadelphia Cookbook’

    “A VERY GAY MEAT LOAF” requires several key ingredients. First, wrote Michael Goldberger, a gay activist and neuroscience researcher, combine ground beef, pork, and veal with spices. Then, add partially-cooked spinach and—if you have the money—mushrooms, taking care not to overmix. Hard-boiled eggs and sour cream top it off. Goldberger adapted the recipe from gay New York…