Flash Forward is a show about possible (and not so possible) future scenarios. What would the warranty on a sex robot look like? How would diplomacy work if we couldn’t lie? Could there ever be a fecal transplant black market? (Complicated, it wouldn’t, and yes, respectively, in case you’re curious.) Hosted and produced by award winning science journalist Rose Eveleth, each episode combines audio drama and journalism to go deep on potential tomorrows, and uncovers what those futures might re ...
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3) Plant Genetics
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Manage episode 345281531 series 3409081
Conteúdo fornecido por James Harper. Todo o conteúdo do podcast, incluindo episódios, gráficos e descrições de podcast, é carregado e fornecido diretamente por James Harper ou por seu parceiro de plataforma de podcast. Se você acredita que alguém está usando seu trabalho protegido por direitos autorais sem sua permissão, siga o processo descrito aqui https://pt.player.fm/legal.
How can you make better coffee at home? Well, an easy way is to buy higher quality beans.
But, I’m concerned this is going to get harder and harder for you in the future.
Climate change is making coffee taste worse while also pushing farmers into financial hardship.
In this episode we explore how genetic development can produce a coffee tree that might save the day. Is there a wild coffee tree happily growing in the forests somewhere that could be our silver bullet? What about if we mix existing documented species together?
But, the big problem is that genetic research is slow, and farmers can’t wait around. So, in the second half, we learn how coffee farmers in Kenya are trying to fix the problem right now.
And I’m actually tentatively hopeful the beans you brew in the morning are not going to get worse. But, it all depends on you, me and the coffee industry making a couple of changes right now.
—---
Please spread the word about The Science of Coffee!
Follow me on Instagram and tag me in an Instagram story
Write a review on Apple Podcasts
Leave a 5 star rating on Spotify
Learn more about how Trabocca, this episode’s sponsor, works with coffee farmers
Support the work of World Coffee Research
Become a member of Kew Gardens
Find some of Alvans Mutero’s and Thiriku’s coffee to taste for yourself
Learn more about cloning coffee plants on my other podcast, Adventures in Coffee
Want to listen to more documentary podcasts about coffee? Check out Filter Stories
Connect with my very knowledgeable guests:
Sarada Krishnan - LinkedIn and Research Gate
Aaron Davis - Kew Gardens
Hanna Neuschwander - LinkedIn
Bernard Gichimu - LinkedIn
Learn more about the coffee varieties discussed on this episode:
SL 28
SL 34
Ruiru 11
Batian
The Science of Coffee is made possible by these leading coffee organisations:
BWT Water and More
Marco Beverage Systems
Trabocca
Eversys
Oatly
Fiorenzato
Subscribe to A History of Coffee podcast
…
continue reading
But, I’m concerned this is going to get harder and harder for you in the future.
Climate change is making coffee taste worse while also pushing farmers into financial hardship.
In this episode we explore how genetic development can produce a coffee tree that might save the day. Is there a wild coffee tree happily growing in the forests somewhere that could be our silver bullet? What about if we mix existing documented species together?
But, the big problem is that genetic research is slow, and farmers can’t wait around. So, in the second half, we learn how coffee farmers in Kenya are trying to fix the problem right now.
And I’m actually tentatively hopeful the beans you brew in the morning are not going to get worse. But, it all depends on you, me and the coffee industry making a couple of changes right now.
—---
Please spread the word about The Science of Coffee!
Follow me on Instagram and tag me in an Instagram story
Write a review on Apple Podcasts
Leave a 5 star rating on Spotify
Learn more about how Trabocca, this episode’s sponsor, works with coffee farmers
Support the work of World Coffee Research
Become a member of Kew Gardens
Find some of Alvans Mutero’s and Thiriku’s coffee to taste for yourself
Learn more about cloning coffee plants on my other podcast, Adventures in Coffee
Want to listen to more documentary podcasts about coffee? Check out Filter Stories
Connect with my very knowledgeable guests:
Sarada Krishnan - LinkedIn and Research Gate
Aaron Davis - Kew Gardens
Hanna Neuschwander - LinkedIn
Bernard Gichimu - LinkedIn
Learn more about the coffee varieties discussed on this episode:
SL 28
SL 34
Ruiru 11
Batian
The Science of Coffee is made possible by these leading coffee organisations:
BWT Water and More
Marco Beverage Systems
Trabocca
Eversys
Oatly
Fiorenzato
Subscribe to A History of Coffee podcast
18 episódios
MP3•Home de episódios
Manage episode 345281531 series 3409081
Conteúdo fornecido por James Harper. Todo o conteúdo do podcast, incluindo episódios, gráficos e descrições de podcast, é carregado e fornecido diretamente por James Harper ou por seu parceiro de plataforma de podcast. Se você acredita que alguém está usando seu trabalho protegido por direitos autorais sem sua permissão, siga o processo descrito aqui https://pt.player.fm/legal.
How can you make better coffee at home? Well, an easy way is to buy higher quality beans.
But, I’m concerned this is going to get harder and harder for you in the future.
Climate change is making coffee taste worse while also pushing farmers into financial hardship.
In this episode we explore how genetic development can produce a coffee tree that might save the day. Is there a wild coffee tree happily growing in the forests somewhere that could be our silver bullet? What about if we mix existing documented species together?
But, the big problem is that genetic research is slow, and farmers can’t wait around. So, in the second half, we learn how coffee farmers in Kenya are trying to fix the problem right now.
And I’m actually tentatively hopeful the beans you brew in the morning are not going to get worse. But, it all depends on you, me and the coffee industry making a couple of changes right now.
—---
Please spread the word about The Science of Coffee!
Follow me on Instagram and tag me in an Instagram story
Write a review on Apple Podcasts
Leave a 5 star rating on Spotify
Learn more about how Trabocca, this episode’s sponsor, works with coffee farmers
Support the work of World Coffee Research
Become a member of Kew Gardens
Find some of Alvans Mutero’s and Thiriku’s coffee to taste for yourself
Learn more about cloning coffee plants on my other podcast, Adventures in Coffee
Want to listen to more documentary podcasts about coffee? Check out Filter Stories
Connect with my very knowledgeable guests:
Sarada Krishnan - LinkedIn and Research Gate
Aaron Davis - Kew Gardens
Hanna Neuschwander - LinkedIn
Bernard Gichimu - LinkedIn
Learn more about the coffee varieties discussed on this episode:
SL 28
SL 34
Ruiru 11
Batian
The Science of Coffee is made possible by these leading coffee organisations:
BWT Water and More
Marco Beverage Systems
Trabocca
Eversys
Oatly
Fiorenzato
Subscribe to A History of Coffee podcast
…
continue reading
But, I’m concerned this is going to get harder and harder for you in the future.
Climate change is making coffee taste worse while also pushing farmers into financial hardship.
In this episode we explore how genetic development can produce a coffee tree that might save the day. Is there a wild coffee tree happily growing in the forests somewhere that could be our silver bullet? What about if we mix existing documented species together?
But, the big problem is that genetic research is slow, and farmers can’t wait around. So, in the second half, we learn how coffee farmers in Kenya are trying to fix the problem right now.
And I’m actually tentatively hopeful the beans you brew in the morning are not going to get worse. But, it all depends on you, me and the coffee industry making a couple of changes right now.
—---
Please spread the word about The Science of Coffee!
Follow me on Instagram and tag me in an Instagram story
Write a review on Apple Podcasts
Leave a 5 star rating on Spotify
Learn more about how Trabocca, this episode’s sponsor, works with coffee farmers
Support the work of World Coffee Research
Become a member of Kew Gardens
Find some of Alvans Mutero’s and Thiriku’s coffee to taste for yourself
Learn more about cloning coffee plants on my other podcast, Adventures in Coffee
Want to listen to more documentary podcasts about coffee? Check out Filter Stories
Connect with my very knowledgeable guests:
Sarada Krishnan - LinkedIn and Research Gate
Aaron Davis - Kew Gardens
Hanna Neuschwander - LinkedIn
Bernard Gichimu - LinkedIn
Learn more about the coffee varieties discussed on this episode:
SL 28
SL 34
Ruiru 11
Batian
The Science of Coffee is made possible by these leading coffee organisations:
BWT Water and More
Marco Beverage Systems
Trabocca
Eversys
Oatly
Fiorenzato
Subscribe to A History of Coffee podcast
18 episódios
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