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Workshop: Nourishing Modern Hungers

The Ethnographic Diet: Transform your life while eating foods you love
Saturday, 7/13/2024
3:00 - 4:00
Richmond Meeting Room
Richmond/Senator Milton Marks
Address

351 9th Avenue
San Francisco, CA 94118
United States

Contact Telephone

Meet San Francisco’s very own Food Ethnographer and explore the worlds we are making and making ourselves ready for through food culture. Talking about food is a safe way to open up portals into the complexity and hot messes of our deepest needs, most desperate desires and wildest dreams. Cooking for yourself and others is a sign of wellbeing and a tool to feel better when you don’t. Everything connects through food. 

 

What tastes remind you of home? Share your food philosophy. Explore your journey with food. How does food deepen connections? Let's debunk separation myths and foster a vibrant food culture in San Francisco.

 

This will be a fun guided group discussion with flavor tasting. 

 

June Jo Lee is a food ethnographer, bridging ‘what we eat’ with ‘who we are becoming’ for senior leadership at Google and other businesses. She delivers strategic insights (improvements, innovations, transformation) for businesses to maintain relevance and even bend culture. 

 

Lee serves as a food ethnographer, forging connections between "what we eat" and "who we are becoming" for top executives at Google and various other enterprises. Through her work, she offers strategic insights aimed at enhancing, innovating and transforming businesses to remain pertinent and even bend culture.

 

She founded Food Ethnographer LLC to address modern disconnections. Her work includes food-centered qualitative research informing business strategies, an educational platform called Readers to Eaters promoting food culture for children, and Wunderland Lab exploring the edges of food culture and taste-making.

 

She studied medical and food anthropology from Harvard, has worked as an ethnographer for major consumer packaged brands like Nestle and General Mills, retailers ranging from Walmart to Whole Foods and various food services including university and corporate sectors. Lee held the position of VP of Strategic Insights at The Hartman Group, leading qualitative consumer research for food brands. For the past 9 years, she has been the Resident Food Ethnographer for Google's Workplace Services. Additionally, she is a speaker at national conferences in the food and education industries and co-authored picture book biographies such as Sandor Katz and The Tiny Wild (2022) and the award-winning Chef Roy Choi and the Street Food Remix (2017).

 

Lee grew up transnationally between Seoul, Palo Alto and Austin, Texas, eating her mom’s alien kimchi. San Francisco is home. 

 

Space limited. Reservations required: email@sfpl.org or call (415) 355-5600.

 

Connect: Food Ethnographer - Website | Food Ethnographer - Instagram

 


Build connections with others in our local programs.

Discover new flavors, build cooking skills and try something tasty. For food programs, please be aware of food allergies.

Summer Stride is the Library's annual summer learning, reading and exploration program for all ages and abilities. Read and learn with the Library all summer long.


This program is sponsored by Friends of the San Francisco Public Library.


Attending Programs

All programs are drop-in (no registration necessary) unless otherwise noted. All SFPL locations are wheelchair accessible. For accommodations (such as ASL), call (415) 557-4557 or contact accessibility@sfpl.org. Requesting at least 3 business days in advance will help ensure availability.

This program will be conducted in English unless otherwise noted.

Notice: This event may be filmed or photographed. By participating in this event, you consent to have your likeness used for the Library’s archival purposes and promotional materials. If you do not want to be photographed, please inform a staff person or the photographer. A sticker will be provided to help identify you so that we can avoid capturing your image.


Public Notice and Disclaimer

This program uses a third-party website link. By clicking on the third-party website link, you will leave SFPL's website and enter a website not operated by SFPL. This service may collect personally identifying information about you, such as name, username, email address, and password. This service will treat the information it collects about you pursuant to its own privacy policy. We encourage you to review the privacy policies of each third-party website or service that you visit or use, including those third parties with whom you interact through our Library services. For more information about these third-party links, please see the section of SFPL’s Privacy Policy describing Links to Other Sites.

The views and opinions expressed in programs presented by groups unaffiliated with SFPL do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of SFPL or the City.