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Eat Your Vegetables: A History and Tasting Experience

GENINT 731.553

Osher (50+). In this course, we learn about how the attitudes toward vegetables have changed throughout history, and we taste a few examples.

Duration
As few as 1 day
Units
0.0
Current Formats
In Person
Cost
Starting at $15.00

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About This Course

In Medieval Europe, vegetables were considered peasant food and raw greens were thought to cause flatulence or plague. When the Spanish returned from their conquests in the New World with tomatoes and potatoes, Europeans feared tomatoes were poisonous and deigned potatoes fit only for animals or the desperately poor. In modern times, Western World foodies have realized the importance of vegetables in a healthy diet. In this course, we discuss how attitudes about vegetables have changed over the centuries—and we taste a few examples. We start with potage, the thick, one-pot stew that Europeans ate in the Middle Ages. We also sample the original version of the most popular salad in restaurants today—the Caesar, which was invented in Tijuana, Mexico in 1924. The instructor also offers a taste of her (secret for now) salad from her youth that inspired her career as a food writer.  
 

Winter 2026 Schedule

Date
Details
Format
 
Wednesday 1:00PM - 3:00PM PT
Instructor:
REG#
406015
Fee:
$15.00
In Personformat icon
UCLA Extension Gayley Center in Westwood
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Notes
Open to the public. Plus members pay no fee for this course. Visitors not permitted. No refund allowed. 
Deadline
No refunds after No drop request allowed after enrollment
Schedule
Type
Date
Time
Location
Lecture
Wed Mar 18, 2026
1:00PM PT - 3:00PM PT
UCLA Extension Gayley Center in Westwood
UCLA Extension Gayley Center 119B