Episodes

  • The Burren and the Future of Farming, with Brendan Dunford
    May 13 2026

    Brendan Dunford grew up on a farm in County Waterford, but it was the landscape of the Burren that shaped his life’s work. Over the past two decades, he has worked closely with farmers and local communities to show how farming and biodiversity can work together, not against each other.

    In this episode of Food Matters, Brendan talks to Mick Kelly of GIY about the pioneering BurrenLIFE project, why listening to farmers matters, and the challenges facing both food production and nature today. Along the way, he reflects on landscape, trust, local knowledge, and why farming can be as much about care and creativity as it is about production.

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    1 hr and 8 mins
  • The fragility of food production and the economics behind Ireland’s food security risk
    Apr 14 2026

    Jim Power is one of Ireland's best-known economists. Having grown up on a farm in County Waterford, he has always had a particular passion for the economics of food production and farming. Jim recently crunched 20 years of consumer data that tell an alarming story about the viability of our food production sector, and in this episode, he joins Mick Kelly of GIY to reveal the real-world impact of aggressive retail pricing, rising input costs combined with falling incomes, and policy blind spots.

    In a rapidly changing and dangerous world where we rely on imports of cheap food, they also discuss how Ireland can become more food-secure and avoid sleepwalking towards a crisis of shortages.

    Check out Jim’s data HERE

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    54 mins
  • S3 Ep35: Deep Medicine - Rethinking Food, Health and the Modern Food System with Dr. Rupa Marya
    Mar 16 2026

    What if the modern food system is one of the biggest drivers of disease in our society? Dr. Rupa Marya is an author and physician and a passionate advocate for deep medicine - a way of understanding health that connects our bodies to the land, our food systems and our communities.

    In conversation with Mick Kelly of GIY, Rupa talks about the dysfunctional nature of our global food system and the devastating impact that it is having on our bodies and our health. Born in California to Indian immigrant parents, Rupa now lives in Ireland, having moved here to develop a program for Trinity College, Dublin and St. James' Hospital called Farming Is Medicine - a local model of a food system based in the principles and practices of care,

    They also discuss the devastating impact of colonialism on our global food system, why the food you eat may be starving your valuable microbiome as well as poisoning the land, Ireland’s lack of food security, and why, despite all of the challenges, Rupa has so much hope for the future.

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    59 mins
  • S3 Ep34: Bringing Chef Skills Home: Eimear Brazil's Journey from Canada to The Kitchen Shift
    Feb 11 2026

    Having spent over 15 years cooking in professional kitchens across Ireland and Canada, Eimear Brazil hung up her chef's apron to dedicate herself to inspiring a generation of home cooks. After training at Waterford IT and working in prestigious restaurants including Waterford Castle, Emer moved to Canada where she rose to become head chef and later food and beverage manager at a private ski club.

    But a friend's encouragement to start posting cooking tips online, and a return to her hometown of Waterford, changed everything. In just four months, Eimear’s social media following exploded from 11,000 to nearly 250,000, making The Kitchen Shift one of Ireland's most influential food pages

    In this episode of Food Matters, Eimear joins Mick Kelly to share her story: from growing up wanting to be a chef since age 11, to the highs and lows of the hospitality industry, managing a team of 33 staff while battling chronic illness, and the surprising discovery that her real calling might be teaching home cooks how to bring professional techniques into their own kitchens.

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    1 hr and 9 mins
  • S3 Ep33: Baking real bread and building communities, with Sarah Richards of Seagull Bakery
    Jan 15 2026

    Sarah Richards always thought she would make her living as an artist. To support her painting, she began baking real sourdough bread, selling loaves from the boot of her car around Tramore, Co. Waterford. What started as a side project quickly took on a life of its own.

    Today, Seagull Bakery is an established part of Waterford’s food scene, with three bakeries, a growing team, and a strong reputation for proper sourdough made with care, time, and heritage grains.

    In this episode of Food Matters, Sarah talks to Mick Kelly of GIY about the accidental journey from art to baking, what truly defines sourdough (and how to spot “sour-faux”), the pressures facing small independent bakeries, and why questioning food traditions - even Irish soda bread - matters more than ever. At its heart, this is a story about curiosity, good food, and building something real.

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    1 hr and 2 mins
  • S3 Ep32: Growing at Grantstown, with David Currid
    Dec 4 2025

    David Currid grows almost 50,000 tomato plants every year at Grantstown Nurseries — the family business his parents started after moving from Dundalk to Waterford in the late 1970s. What began as a single glasshouse is now a major supplier to Ireland’s leading retailers.

    But it’s a tough time to be a commercial grower. With only a handful of Irish tomato producers left, rising costs, cheap imports and tight margins make every season a battle for survival.

    In this episode of Food Matters, David talks to Mick Kelly of GIY about the realities of running a small food business today, why building trust with retailers matters, where Irish food systems are heading, and the simple love of growing that keeps him going. And yes — they tackle the age-old question: fruit or vegetable?

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • S3 Ep31: Buy Irish honey, save Ireland’s bees, with Aoife Nic Giolla Coda
    Oct 29 2025

    Aoife Nic Giolla Coda’s love of beekeeping was passed down from her father, Micheál, who founded Galtee Honey Farm in 1970. When her father neared retirement, Aoife returned home to take over Galtee Honey Farm, determined to continue her family’s work protecting Ireland’s native black bee.

    Today, Aoife carries on that family legacy, managing more than 170 colonies of Native Irish Black Honey Bees spread across the Galtee Vee Valley - where the counties of Tipperary, Limerick, and Cork meet.

    In this episode of Food Matters, Aoife joins Mick Kelly of GIY to talk about the bond between bees and the environment, the hidden dangers of imported bees, and how simple choices like buying Irish honey can help sustain biodiversity, pollinators, and rural communities.

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    1 hr and 8 mins
  • S3 Ep30: Saving Seeds, Securing the Future, with Madeline McKeever
    Sep 10 2025

    Madeline McKeever is on a mission to protect biodiversity and secure our food future—one seed at a time. A former dairy farmer in West Cork, Madeline started Brown Envelope Seeds after realising just how vulnerable Ireland is to global seed supply chains and shocks.

    Today, she’s a leading voice for seed saving in Ireland promoting local seeds that grow well in Irish conditions. Her work helps growers of all kinds—from back gardens to small farms—understand how saving seeds is not only possible but also vital.

    In this episode of Food Matters, Madeline talks to Mick Kelly of GIY about the beginnings of her seed company, how to start saving your own seeds, and why greater seed diversity could be key to a more secure, flavourful, and sustainable food system.

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    56 mins