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Shatter-Proof: How Glass Took Over the Kitchen—and Ended Child Labor
Podcast |
Gastropod
Media Type |
audio
Categories Via RSS |
Arts
Food
History
Science
Publication Date |
Aug 17, 2020
Episode Duration |
00:52:04
Cheers! The lively clink of glass on glass is a must for any festive gathering, whether you’re sipping champagne in a flute or lemonade in a tumbler. We rely on glass in the kitchen—for baking perfectly browned pies, preserving jams and pickles, and so much more. But glass wasn’t always so cheap and ubiquitous: to ancient Egyptians and Romans, this was precious stuff—it was high fashion to own a clear wine goblet in ancient Rome. Later, Venetians so prized their glass know-how that they imprisoned their glassmakers on an island. So how did glass go from fragile and precious tabletop ornament to an oven-ready kitchen workhorse? How did the inventions of a glassmaker in Toledo, Ohio, transform the peanut butter and ketchup industries, as well as put an end to child labor? And are we running out of sand to make glass? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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