EPISODE · Apr 29, 2026 · 28 MIN
History Shows How To Feed A Family and Stretch Your Kitchen
from Stretch Your Kitchen · host ErikaO
Stretching your kitchen isn’t a cute challenge, it’s a skill our grandparents and great grandparents used to survive. Today I’m taking you back to two hard chapters of American history, the Great Depression and the era of slavery, to show how people fed their families when money was tight or choice was stripped away. When we understand the past, “use what you have” stops sounding like a slogan and starts feeling like wisdom.We talk through depression era cooking, from pantry staples like beans, rice, potatoes, flour, and oats to the habits that kept people going: gardening, canning, bartering, saving bacon grease, turning scraps into broth, and transforming leftovers instead of tossing them. I also share one of the most surprising recipes I’ve ever come across, water pie, and why it’s less about dessert and more about care. Then we get practical with the soup pot that never ends, stretching proteins across multiple meals, and the mindset shift of cooking based on what needs to be used rather than what we’re in the mood for.We also touch the painful reality of slavery and the forced ingenuity that helped enslaved people survive on minimal rations, and how that resilience shaped foods many of us still love today. To close out the season, I leave you with a clear Triple T takeaway: six guidelines you can follow over the next four weeks to save money on groceries, reduce food waste, and keep meals simple without losing flavor.If this message helps you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review on Podchaser. You can also follow along on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and the Stretch Your Kitchen Facebook group while we take a short season break.
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History Shows How To Feed A Family and Stretch Your Kitchen
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