by kitchensisters | May 10, 2016 | Fugitive Waves, Hidden Kitchens
Subscribe to the podcast: iTunes | Stitcher | RSS C.B. “Stubb” Stubblefield, namesake of the legendary club in Austin, Texas, had a mission — to feed the world, especially the people who sang in it. When he started out in Lubbock, he generously fed and supported both...
by kitchensisters | Apr 26, 2016 | Fugitive Waves, Hidden Kitchens
Subscribe to the podcast: iTunes | Stitcher | RSS Kitchens and mothers. The food they cooked or didn’t. The stories they told or couldn’t. In honor of mothers from around the world, The Kitchen Sisters linger in the kitchen — the room in the house that...
by kitchensisters | Apr 12, 2016 | Fugitive Waves, Hidden Kitchens
Subscribe to the podcast: iTunes | Stitcher | RSS Hidden Kitchens turns its focus on the president’s kitchen and some of the first cooks to feed the Founding Fathers — Hercules and James Hemings — the enslaved chefs of George Washington and Thomas Jefferson....
by kitchensisters | Mar 22, 2016 | Fugitive Waves
Subscribe to the podcast: iTunes | Stitcher | RSS Carmen Miranda—Brazil’s Ambassador of Samba, the highest paid woman entertainer in the world in the 1940s. When she died, hundreds of thousands of Brazilians lined the streets of Rio to pay homage to her. Over 50 years...
by kitchensisters | Mar 8, 2016 | Fugitive Waves, Hidden World of Girls
Subscribe to the podcast: iTunes | Stitcher | RSS Travellers. The people of walking. Sometimes called the gypsies of Ireland. They speak of non-Travellers as “the settled people.” Mistrusted for the most part and not well-understood. Nomads, moving in caravans, living...
by kitchensisters | Feb 23, 2016 | Fugitive Waves, Hidden Kitchens
In the 1950s, a group of Montgomery, Alabama women baked goods to help fund the Montgomery bus boycott. Known as the Club from Nowhere the group was led by Georgia Gilmore, one of the unsung heroes of the civil rights era. This story comes from Can Do: Portraits of...