S2E6 | Both Men and Women Have Hands!

Welcome to episode 6 of season 2, where the dishes discuss “A Domestic Science: Elevating the Art of Home Cooking”. Melissa dives into the history of “Dry January”, and the dishes discuss gender and race roles in home and professional cookery. All of the dishes are getting over colds this episode and it shows.

The featured drink this episode is a Jalapeno-Pineapple Soda Mocktail. Find the recipe on our Instagram.   

This episode’s recipe is Rhubarb Toast. Find the recipe in “The Woman Suffrage Cook Book”.

Show Music by Andrew Huang.

Don’t forget to rate and subscribe!

iTunes/Apple

Google

Spotify

Blog: www.patreon.com/DrunkDishPod

Merch Store: https://drunk-dish.creator-spring.com/

Twitch: Twitch.tv/DrunkDish 

Twitter: @drunkdishpod

Instagram: @drunkdish

Facebook: Drunk Dish Podcast

Email: drunkdishpod@gmail.com

Sources 

Where did Dry January come from? 

Can “Dry January” help quench Finland’s thirst for alcohol? 

The History Of Dry January Is Older Than You Think 

What’s to Hate About Dry January? 

The History Behind Dry January and It’s Popularity 

“Raitis Januar” (1942) Was an Effective Propaganda Attack 

Dry January Wikipedia  

Embracing the Science of Home Cooking – WSJ 

The History Of Culinary Arts In The United States (culinarycareernow.com) 

Société Culinaire Philanthropique (societeculinaire.com) 

American Culinary Federation (acfchefs.org) 

Industrial Revolution: Definition, Inventions & Dates – HISTORY – HISTORY 

How Suffragists Used Cookbooks As A Recipe For Subversion : The Salt : NPR 

Page not found – UM Clements Library (umich.edu) 

quarto28-new-acquisitions.pdf (umich.edu) 

Leave a comment