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Ina Garten on her memoir, and a life of reinvention
Even making a cocktail with Ina Garten takes precision, but boy, is it worth it. “The key to this is that it’s fresh juice,” she said. “So many times you go to a bar or restaurant and they make whiskey sours with, like, bottled lemon juice. That’s just the worst!
RECIPE: Ina Garten’s Fresh Whiskey Sours
The kitchen in her studio in East Hampton, New York, is familiar to millions of viewers of her Emmy Award-winning cooking shows on the Food Network. But she doesn’t like to call herself a chef. “Well, I’m not,” she said. “I’m not a trained chef.”
In fact, as she writes in her new memoir, “Be Ready When the Luck Happens” (to be published October 1), back in the 1970s she and her husband Jeffrey were both working in economic policy jobs at the White House. But her “after hours therapy,” as she puts it, was hosting dinner parties for friends. “I just thought, this is backwards,” she said. “I love what I do after hours, and what I do during the day wasn’t so exciting to me.”
Just after her 30th birthday, she was reading The New York Times, when she spotted a little ad for a specialty food store called Barefoot Contessa. “And I went home that night and I said to Jeffrey, ‘I need to do something creative.’ And that was the beginning of it.”
They bought the shop for $20,000, taking a second mortgage on their D.C. home. Jeffrey would commute on weekends, while Ina ran the store.
It was especially surprising because, growing up, Ina was not allowed to go off the beaten track in any way. “It’s not just that I wasn’t allowed to go off the beaten track,” she said. “I wasn’t allowed to make a decision on my own.”
She was born Ina Rosenberg in 1948, and grew up in Stamford, Connecticut, where her father was a doctor and her mom stayed at home.
It was a very comfortable life, but there was a family secret: Her father was prone to temper tantrums and would physically beat her, even dragging her around by her hair. “I think I wanted to fight back, but I was afraid he would kill me,” Garten said.
Asked if her mother tried to protect her, Garten replied, “Maybe she was just as afraid as I was.”
But her life would change when she was just 16. While visiting her brother at Dartmouth College, another student named Jeffrey Garten spotted Ina through the library window. Asked what he found so attractive about her, Jeffrey replied, “Everything, absolutely everything. The way she was standing, she was laughing. And she was just beautiful.”
He wrangled an introduction, and they were married in 1968.
While Jeffrey is sometimes a congenial presence on Ina’s shows, he is also a noted economist, whom Ina credits with giving her confidence after her miserable childhood. But not about one key thing: she says she was scared that she wouldn’t be a good parent. “Absolutely, one hundred percent,” she said. “Jeffrey would’ve been a fabulous parent, just fabulous.”
But asked what he thought about their not having children, Jeffrey said, “I didn’t think so much about it. I was very busy just moving on, so it didn’t bother me.”
Ina threw herself into running the Barefoot Contessa with well-heeled Hamptons clients, including a woman who came in every week to buy 10 pounds of grilled lemon chicken. “And finally after weeks and weeks of this, I had to say, ‘What are you doing with ten pounds of grilled lemon chicken?'” Garten recalled. “She said, ‘My cat likes it.'”
But after a while, as Ina reveals for the first time, she began to question the traditional mid-century roles in her marriage, and asked Jeffrey for a separation: “I love to cook dinner, but what I don’t like is for somebody to expect me to cook dinner,” she said. “I think there’s a big difference.”
“So, what I say is, don’t cook dinner,” said Jeffrey.
“And then I cook it!” Ina laughed.
They clearly worked out their problems. Ina moved her store to East Hampton, but sold it in 1995. She was restless and wanted to try something new. So, she turned her talents to writing cookbooks. Her first, “The Barefoot Contessa Cookbook,” published 25 years ago, was a smash hit. “I somehow connected with home cooks in a way that I couldn’t have imagined,” she said.
Now she’s written 12 more. “I think it’s kind of like exercise,” Garten said. “The more you do it, the better you get at it.”
And with another cookbook on the way, and a popular TV show, “Be My Guest,” Ina Garten says she’s doing what she loves.
And what’s more, before he died, she got an apology from her father: “He said, ‘I don’t know what I was thinking.’ That was it. And I realized he tortured himself as much as he tortured me. And it was over. It was so simple and it was so effective, and it meant everything. And then we went on to have a good relationship.”
RECIPE: Ina Garten’s Fresh Whiskey Sours
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Story produced by Julie Kracov. Editor: Chad Cardin.
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Popular gluten free tortilla strips recalled over possible contamination with wheat
A food company known for popular grocery store condiments has recalled a package of tortilla strips that may be contaminated with wheat, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said Friday. The product is meant to be gluten-free.
Sugar Foods, a manufacturing and distribution corporation focused mainly on various toppings, artificial sweeteners and snacks, issued the recall for the “Santa Fe Style” version of tortilla strips sold by the brand Fresh Gourmet.
“People who have a wheat allergy or severe sensitivity to wheat run the risk of serious or life-threatening allergic reaction if they consume the product,” said Sugar Foods in an announcement posted by the FDA.
Packages of these tortilla strips with an expiration date as late as June 20, 2025, could contain undeclared wheat, meaning the allergen is not listed as an ingredient on the label. The Fresh Gourmet product is marketed as gluten-free.
Sugar Foods said a customer informed the company on Nov. 19 that packages of the tortilla strips actually contained crispy onions, another Fresh Gourmet product normally sold in a similar container. The brand’s crispy onion product does contain wheat, and that allergen is noted on the label.
No illnesses tied to the packaging mistake have been reported, according to the announcement from Sugar Foods. However, the company is still recalling the tortilla strips as a precaution. The contamination issue may have affected products distributed between Sept. 30 and Nov. 11 in 22 states: Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, North Carolina, New Jersey, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah, Virginia and Washington.
Sugar Foods has advised anyone with questions about the recall to contact the company’s consumer care department by email or phone.
CBS News reached out to Sugar Foods for more information but did not receive an immediate reply.
This is the latest in a series of food product recalls affected because of contamination issues, although the others involved harmful bacteria. Some recent, high-profile incidents include an E. coli outbreak from organic carrots that killed at least one person in California, and a listeria outbreak that left an infant dead in California and nine people hospitalized across four different states, according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention. The E. coli outbreak is linked to multiple different food brands while the listeria outbreak stemmed from a line of ready-to-eat meat and poultry products sold by Yu-Shang Foods.
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