
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Imagine having to cook Thanksgiving dinner over an open fire! This week on A Taste of the Past, Linda Pelaccio is joined in the studio by historical interpreter Carolina Capehart. Carolina is a hearth-cooking expert, and prefers to cook all types of food over an open flame. Tune into this episode to learn what tools were used in the 1800s to boil vegetables, roast meat, and bake breads. Hear why Carolina is so dedicated to historical accuracy. Carolina explains how the colonialists pioneered local and seasonal eating- out of necessity! Learn about the founding ideals of the United States as an agrarian society. How does the language of the 1800s confuse the recreation of historic recipes? Collect some firewood and slaughter a hog; it’s time for this week’s episode of A Taste of the Past! This program has been brought to you by White Oak Pastures. Music by Pamela Royal.
“These days, everyone says that you need to eat seasonally and locally. Back in the 1800s, they did that, but mainly because they had to!” [20:20]
“90% of people back then were farmers. That was Jefferson’s ideal- an agricultural society.” [23:10]
— Carolina Capehart on A Taste of the Past
4
399399 ratings
Imagine having to cook Thanksgiving dinner over an open fire! This week on A Taste of the Past, Linda Pelaccio is joined in the studio by historical interpreter Carolina Capehart. Carolina is a hearth-cooking expert, and prefers to cook all types of food over an open flame. Tune into this episode to learn what tools were used in the 1800s to boil vegetables, roast meat, and bake breads. Hear why Carolina is so dedicated to historical accuracy. Carolina explains how the colonialists pioneered local and seasonal eating- out of necessity! Learn about the founding ideals of the United States as an agrarian society. How does the language of the 1800s confuse the recreation of historic recipes? Collect some firewood and slaughter a hog; it’s time for this week’s episode of A Taste of the Past! This program has been brought to you by White Oak Pastures. Music by Pamela Royal.
“These days, everyone says that you need to eat seasonally and locally. Back in the 1800s, they did that, but mainly because they had to!” [20:20]
“90% of people back then were farmers. That was Jefferson’s ideal- an agricultural society.” [23:10]
— Carolina Capehart on A Taste of the Past
1,088 Listeners
3,035 Listeners
67 Listeners
1,435 Listeners
3,888 Listeners
407 Listeners
192 Listeners
568 Listeners
3,604 Listeners
541 Listeners
2,547 Listeners
69 Listeners
371 Listeners
122 Listeners
2,955 Listeners
1,501 Listeners
87 Listeners
94 Listeners
75 Listeners
279 Listeners
1,875 Listeners
967 Listeners
473 Listeners