by kitchensisters | Dec 27, 2016 | Hidden Kitchens, Hidden World of Girls
A journey into the hidden world of Emily Dickinson — through her kitchen. Special thanks to: Emilie Hardman, Emily Walhout and Heather Cole from the Houghton Library, Harvard University; Brenda Hillman, poet and Professor of Creative Writing at St. Mary’s...
by kitchensisters | Dec 13, 2016 | Fugitive Waves, Hidden Kitchens
Subscribe to the podcast: iTunes | Stitcher | RSS A journey into the mysterious and controversial world of raw milk. Tucked away in the vanishing farm land on the outskirts of Indianapolis, the Apple Family and their neighbors created a kind of fellowship of milking....
by kitchensisters | Dec 7, 2016 | Events & Appearances, Fugitive Waves, Hidden Kitchens, Workshops
In 2017 we all move into unknown territory. It’s times like these that call for strong stories. Bruce Springsteen said it best, “People need stories in hard times. People go to storytellers when times are like that.” People go to storytellers when it’s hard to...
by kitchensisters | Nov 22, 2016 | Fugitive Waves, Hidden Kitchens
Subscribe to the podcast: iTunes | Stitcher | RSS During World War II, In desolate inland internment camps in the US, like Manzanar, Topaz, and Tule Lake, some 120,000 Japanese and Japanese Americans were incarcerated for the duration of the war— their traditional...
by kitchensisters | Nov 8, 2016 | Fugitive Waves, Hidden Kitchens
Subscribe to the podcast: iTunes | Stitcher | RSS A story from the plazas of Portugal, where small ornate kiosks that served traditional snacks and drinks once graced the city and brought people together. Neglected by time and pushed into abandonment by a dictator’s...
by kitchensisters | Oct 25, 2016 | Fugitive Waves, Hidden Kitchens
Subscribe to the podcast: iTunes | Stitcher | RSS [metaslider id=4830] “Nobody can soldier without coffee,” a Union calvary man wrote in 1865. Hidden Kitchens looks at three American wars through the lens of coffee: the Civil War, Vietnam and Afghanistan. And an...