Family Tree Food Stories

The Blue Willow China Love Story That Sold 50 Million Plates Was Fake: The Marketing Lie Is Still Working 250 Years Later

35 min · 14 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio The Blue Willow China Love Story That Sold 50 Million Plates Was Fake: The Marketing Lie Is Still Working 250 Years Later

Descripción

THE TRUE HISTORY OF BLUE WILLOW, NORITAKE, AND SPODE CHINA: WHAT YOUR FAMILY'S HEIRLOOM DISHES ARE REALLY WORTH IN 2026 The most recognized china pattern in Western history is built on a fabricated love story, and neuroscientists say your brain is wired to fall for it every time. In Episode 86 of Family Tree Food and Stories [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/], Nancy May and Sylvia Lovely trace the invented legend behind Blue Willow china, the pioneer women who abandoned their Noritake and Spode in the Wyoming dust at a place called Camp Sacrifice, and the brain science that explains why grandma's dishes are physically impossible to throw away. If you have ever held a piece of old china and felt the person who owned it standing next to you, you’re about to lean why. What if the most beloved china pattern in Western history was built on a complete lie? Blue Willow china has been printed on more than 50 million plates across six continents for 250 years. Most people who own it believe they are eating inside an ancient Chinese love story: a forbidden romance, a willow tree, two doves, a bridge escape. The story is painted right there on the dish. Except that the story was invented. By a marketing team. In England. In 1779. In Episode of Family Tree, [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/] https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/Food and Stories [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/], Nancy May and Sylvia Lovely sit down at their podcast studio table, and ask the question most families never think to ask: what are these things actually worth, and to whom? There’s a lot in those dishes that most of us even realize. Did you know that there’s real Brain Science Behind Why You Cannot Let Go of Grandma's China? Interestingly enough, grief counselors recommend keeping a physical object belonging to someone you have lost. The reason is neurological, not sentimental. Neuroscientists call the phenomenon an episodic memory cue: a sensory trigger that activates the hippocampus as if the person were actually in the room with you. So, a plate is not just a plate. It is a potential spiritual portal to a real person you love. That is sentimental or nostalgia. That is neuroscience. From Goodwill Shelves to Wyoming Dust: The Sacrifices Nobody Talks About Nearly complete sets of Noritake china are sitting on Goodwill shelves right now for five dollars. Noritake was founded in Nagoya, Japan in 1876. Certain patterns were designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. U.S. servicemen carried sets home from military bases around the world to give to their families. And today those sets sit under fluorescent lights next to paperback novels and mismatched coffee mugs, six plates for five dollars. What could you find on a dusty trail in Wyoming? Two hundred years before Goodwill existed, pioneer women crossing the American West faced an older version of the same question. At a stretch of trail outside Laramie, Wyoming, known as Camp Sacrifice, wagon trains grew too heavy for the animals to continue. Our Great-grandmothers had to choose between the livestock that would keep them alive and the china, silver, and pianos that kept them human. Most of the china did not make it to the other side. Those dishes that survived didn’t make it by accident. Someone decided they were worth carrying. Key Takeaways: * The Blue Willow china love story is completely fabricated, and it still works as well in 2006 as it did when first told in 1779 * Black grandmothers in America built china collections as proof of dignity, not decoration. At a time when society did not expect Black families to own beautiful things, generations of Black women assembled heirloom china piece by piece, from churches, from family, from careful saving over decades * The next generation is not indifferent to your heirloom china. They just have not been told the story yet. Research consistently shows that younger generations are more drawn to objects with provenance and personal history than any generation before them, precisely because they grew up in a digital world where almost nothing is tangible. * The reason your family's china feels sacred at Thanksgiving and invisible the rest of the year is a neurological phenomenon, not a coincidence. Ritual use of objects strengthens episodic memory encoding. When grandma's dishes come out once a year at the same holiday, in the same room, with the same people, the hippocampus builds a layered memory file around that object that deepens every single time the ritual repeats * Frank Lloyd Wright designed Noritake china patterns in 1922, and most people who own a piece of that collaboration have no idea they are eating off an architectural masterpiece. The Imperial Hotel commission in Tokyo produced one of the most collectible Noritake patterns: a design by Frank Lloyd Wright himself, made in 1922 specifically for the hotel's dining service. Wright was famously near bankruptcy at the time, and the commission kept him solvent Nancy and Sylvia Are 100 Percent Real (And Why That Matters in 2026) AI-generated podcasts are flooding the platforms right now: synthetic voices, manufactured stories, fabricated histories. Nancy and Sylvia want you to know that Family Tree Food and Stories is none of that. Every story in this episode happened. Every person is real. Every dish has a name behind it. In a world where AI can fake a grandmother's voice and invent a family story in seconds, the most radical thing a podcast can do is tell the truth about a real table. That is what this show does. And why every episode matters. Share Your Story With Us: What is the piece of china in your cabinet that holds someone you love? What got left behind on a trail, carried across an ocean, rescued from a Goodwill shelf, or pulled out of a closet every Thanksgiving? We want to hear it. Every meal has a story, and every story belongs at the table. Send your story to us at Podcast.FamilyTreeFoodStories.com [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/] If someone in your life still has grandma's dishes and has never been asked why they kept them, send them this episode. You may be the one who saves the story. Pull up a chair at podcast.familytreefoodstories.com [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/] and bring your story with you. Leave a review on Apple Podcasts. It takes 20 seconds, and it puts this show in front of one more person who has a grandmother's dish and no one left to tell them what it means. Share this episode with someone who still has the china. You might be the only one who thinks to ask them about it. Additional Links ❤️ * SURVEY: Please Help Us Learn How To Do More For You [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/survey/pull-up-a-chair-listener-survey/] * Book: My Family Tree, Food & Stories Journal [https://www.amazon.com/Family-Tree-Food-Stories-Memorable/dp/1734841613/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2ETT1Z6Q5J84F&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.9aDj51eTPwkVydIsxOUcm0psz2pwwjU2tA9464i0LYelVWMWkmc9-ft1v7W5bmJM1R9TCjrBIraYcmsIZ8wog4X4ogtbNhkG3EBH1R8jPV1zolTi0TmPdaAy0F7Jsp6SvGSwsUzfPqfaj0BfDOr2fZtOmQ4i1na0rqL3HXfBGiuIhKthz4OOetpp0nORqAyyNTZ_RR6xVoXiMRHTaYKNLZtcygneMGYBWpX9B0np3YU.S3u-1CFzDJusx_U7X3_txBApkxautt9G1C3qrLcNeTw&dib_tag=se&keywords=my+family+tree+food+%26+stories&qid=1730918662&sprefix=my+family+tree+food%2Caps%2C135&sr=8-1] Awarded #1 New Release on Amazon * Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/familytreefoodstories/] Story updates 📸 * Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/FamilyTreeFoodStories/] Family Tree Food Stories GROUP👍 * TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@nancymay877]: Family Tree Food Stories * 👇Share Your Story With Nancy & Sylvia! [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/voicemail/]: Leave us a voicemail * You can send us a DM on Facebook. [https://www.facebook.com/FamilyTreeFoodStories] About Your Award-Winning Hosts: Nancy May [https://www.linkedin.com/in/nancyamay/] and Sylvia Lovely [https://www.linkedin.com/in/sylvialovely/] are the powerhouse team behind Family Tree, Food & Stories [https://familytree,food&stories/], a member of The Food Stories Media Network, which celebrates the rich traditions and connections everyone has around food, friends, and family meals. Nancy, an award-winning business leader, author, and podcaster, and Sylvia, a visionary author, lawyer, and former CEO, combine their expertise to bring captivating stories rooted in history, heritage, and food. Together, they weave stories that blend history, tradition, and the love of food, where generations connect and share intriguing mealtime stories and kitchen foibles. If you missed the first time around... now's your time to listen to Family Tree Food & Stories [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/] and get inspired to make better use of what’s already in your kitchen. Then visit our page to share how you're using your leftovers this year. Waste less. Cook smarter. Tell the story behind your fridge. "Every Meal Has a Story, and Every Story is a Feast." (tm) is a trademark of Family Tree Food & Stories podcast (c) copyright 2026, all US and International Rights Reserved. @familytreefoodstories #wellnessmeat #herloomdishes #goodwillfinds #foodpodast #franklloydwright #familyhistorypodcast #storytellingpodcast #heritagepodcast #foodhistory #real podcast #notAI #truestories #neuroscience @foodandmemory #genZwants #vintage #thriftstore #heirloomrevival #griefandobjects #hippocampusmemory #brainsciencepodcast.

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episode America Was Built on Beer, Bread, and Stolen Coffee: Food of the American Revolution (Part #2) artwork

America Was Built on Beer, Bread, and Stolen Coffee: Food of the American Revolution (Part #2)

HOW DID ORDINARY FAMILIES FEED A REVOLUTION WHEN TEA WAS SUSPICIOUS, WATER WAS RISKY, AND COFFEE WAS WORTH STEALING? From liberty tea and eight-pound bread to women-led food riots, this is the everyday kitchen rebellion that fed America’s fight for independence. In this episode of Family Tree Food & Stories [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/], [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/] Nancy May and Sylvia France continue their America 250 Revolutionary food series by stepping into the everyday kitchens that helped feed our new nation. After the Boston Tea Party, British tea became more than a drink. It became a political statement. So colonial families brewed “liberty tea” from mint, raspberry leaf, sassafras, goldenrod, and other homegrown herbs. That's only the beginning, though. From New England’s eight-pound rye-and-corn bread to Southern cornmeal mush, Brunswick stew, Hoppin’ John, cider, small beer, oysters, eels, and even pigeon pie, this episode shares what common, or average Americans actually ate during the American Revolution. Nancy and Sylvia also dig into the home-front food rebellion, which most of us have rarely been taught. Women were real activists of the time. They led food riots, hoarded coffee, pushed salt shortages, used preservation tricks, and did the hard math to make sure their families didn't go hungry. They were the bargain hunters of the time. In this episode, Nancy and Sylvia also share the names of the nearly forgotten American cooks and chefs, as well as those who made sure everyone could have the recipe in the first American kitchen cookbook. This is part #2 of the Family Tree Food & Stories [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/]series about the food history of Revolutionary America from the people who lived it daily: the families who stretched scraps, boiled herbs, preserved meat, shared cups, fed voters, and built a national cuisine one plate at time. SOME KEY TAKEAWAYS * The Boston Tea Party changed breakfast. After British tea became politically dangerous, many Americans turned to homegrown “liberty tea” that they made themselves. * There was no single “colonial meal.” New England, the Mid-Atlantic, and the South ate very differently because geography, soil, crops, trade, and culture shaped the table. * Beer was not just for fun. Small beer and cider were often safer, and even children drank weak beer. * Women held the home front together. Like they have for centuries during hard times. * American cuisine was built from necessity, Indigenous crops, immigrant influence, and forgotten cooks. Corn, squash, beans, regional breads, stews, preserved foods, and Amelia Simmons’ American Cookery helped shape the earliest American food identity. WHAT TO DO NEXT? Listen to “America Was Built on Beer, Bread, and Stolen Coffee” at Podcast.FamilyTreeFoodStories.com [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/], then join us in the Family Tree Food Stories Facebook group [https://www.facebook.com/groups/familytreefoodstories] and share the food story your family still carries. Because every meal has a story, and every story is a feast. Even those we make every day. ADDITIONAL LINKS SHARED:❤️ * Yaupon Tea, [https://www.riseyaupon.com/] family-owned. When British tea just won't do. * Book: My Family Tree, Food & Stories Journal [https://www.amazon.com/Family-Tree-Food-Stories-Memorable/dp/1734841613/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2ETT1Z6Q5J84F&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.9aDj51eTPwkVydIsxOUcm0psz2pwwjU2tA9464i0LYelVWMWkmc9-ft1v7W5bmJM1R9TCjrBIraYcmsIZ8wog4X4ogtbNhkG3EBH1R8jPV1zolTi0TmPdaAy0F7Jsp6SvGSwsUzfPqfaj0BfDOr2fZtOmQ4i1na0rqL3HXfBGiuIhKthz4OOetpp0nORqAyyNTZ_RR6xVoXiMRHTaYKNLZtcygneMGYBWpX9B0np3YU.S3u-1CFzDJusx_U7X3_txBApkxautt9G1C3qrLcNeTw&dib_tag=se&keywords=my+family+tree+food+%26+stories&qid=1730918662&sprefix=my+family+tree+food%2Caps%2C135&sr=8-1] Awarded #1 New Release on Amazon * Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/familytreefoodstories/] Story updates 📸 * Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/FamilyTreeFoodStories/] Family Tree Food Stories GROUP👍 * TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@nancymay877]: Family Tree Food Stories * 👇Share Your Story With Nancy & Sylvia! [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/voicemail/]: Leave us a voicemail * You can send us a DM on Facebook. [https://www.facebook.com/FamilyTreeFoodStories] ABOUT YOUR AWARD-WINNING HOSTS: Nancy May [https://www.linkedin.com/in/nancyamay/] and Sylvia Franc [https://www.linkedin.com/in/sylviafrance/]e are the powerhouse team behind Family Tree, Food & Stories [https://familytree,food&stories/], a member of The Food Stories Media Network, which celebrates the rich traditions and connections everyone has around food, friends, and family meals. Nancy, an award-winning business leader, author, and podcaster, and Sylvia, a visionary author, foodie, and business leader, combine their expertise to bring captivating stories rooted in history, heritage, and food. Together, they weave stories that blend history, tradition, and the love of food, where generations connect and share intriguing mealtime stories and kitchen foibles. If you missed the first time around... now's your time to listen to Family Tree Food & Stories [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/] and get inspired to make better use of what’s already in your kitchen. Then visit our page to share how you're using your leftovers this year. Waste less. Cook smarter. Tell the story behind your fridge. "Every Meal Has a Story, and Every Story is a Feast." (tm) is a trademark of Family Tree Food & Stories podcast (c) copyright 2026, all US and International Rights Reserved. @familytreefoodstories, @familyfoodstories, @riseyaupon, #FamilyTreeFoodAndStories #FoodPodcast #FoodHistory #AmericanRevolution #America250 #revolutionaryWar #yaupontea, #libertytea, #colonialfood, #HistoryPodcast #FoodHistory #FamilyHistory #GenealogyPodcast #podcastEpisode, #foodie #foodPodcast #familyfun #homeschooling #stolencoffee #kitchenrebellion, #womeninhistory, #americancookery #foodriots, #historyyoudidntlearn #happybirthdayAmerica

9 de jul de 202630 min
episode What did Revolutionary War soldiers eat? Colonals, Loyalists, and Allies on Both Sides? artwork

What did Revolutionary War soldiers eat? Colonals, Loyalists, and Allies on Both Sides?

WHAT DID REVOLUTIONARY WAR SOLDIERS EAT? BROKEN SUPPLY CHAINS, BUGGY FIRE CAKE, BOILED SHOE LEATHER, AND THE ALLIES WHO ATE FAR BETTER. EPISODE 93. On paper, Congress promised each man a pound of meat, a pound of bread, peas, beans, milk, and beer or cider every day. In practice, a broken supply chain meant that Continental soldiers often went without, surviving on bug-infested “fire cake,” and at Valley Forge, they were even known to boil shoe leather to make soup! Meanwhile, the French, Spanish, Hessian, and even British forces ate very differently, and quite deliciously too. Join Nancy May and Sylvia France here in the Family Tree Food & Stories podcast, [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/] as they kick off a four-part celebration of America's 250th birthday. Just to start, you'll learn what soldiers on every side of the Revolutionary War actually ate, including a real diary entry from a real Continental soldier who called a handful of pumpkin seeds fished out of a horse trough “the most delicious feast” he’d had in months. Congress’s official daily ration sounds generous on paper, but a broken supply chain, impassable roads, corrupt contractors, and the “Forage War,” where armies raided each other for hay, cattle, and grain. The results? What they really ate was bug-infested and disgusting. Some soldiers recorded boiling shoe leather and tree bark just to survive. Can you imagine? The real killer, though, wasn’t the British enemy; it was malnutrition and disease as a result of very few veggies in their diet. There were some pretty heroic Natives who came to the rescue when they could and taught our guys how to make spruce beer, which is very high in vitamin C. Nancy tasted it too. Really. The French might have been our first colonial food critics, too. While in the south, Spain’s Bernardo de Gálvez drove 2,000 Texas longhorn cattle to feed his troops and won the Siege of Pensacola; Nancy and Sylvia call them the first REAL Florida cowboys! They're likely right too. Women played an important food story role too. Want to know more, tune in to hear the story of Nancy Hart who used a turkey to capture a group of enemy soldiers, right in her kitchen! KEY TAKEAWAYS AND LESSONS LEARNED 1. The British didn’t starve the Continental Army; a broken supply chain did. Congress promised generous daily rations; soldiers got only a fraction of them due to bad roads, corrupt contractors, and the “Forage War,” in which armies raided each other’s food supplies outright. 2. Hungry soldiers ate the weirdest things to survive. “Fire cake,” which is simply flour and water cooked on a hot rock. The flour was often loaded with bugs, too, and baked right into the bread. A Continental Army staple; at Valley Forge and Morristown, NJ, men were said to have boiled shoe leather and tree bark just to keep from starving. 3. Scurvy, not the enemy, was the deadliest food-related problem of the war. A diet of salt meat and flour with almost no vegetables caused the most common illness of the entire war. Vinegar, sauerkraut, and spruce beer (learned from Native Americans) helped, decades before vitamin C was identified in 1932. 4. America’s allies ate far better than our guys, and it mattered strategically. French bread ovens in Chatham, New Jersey, helped disguise the march to Yorktown; Spain’s Bernardo de Gálvez fed his troops with 2,000 Texas longhorn cattle and won the Siege of Pensacola, tying down British forces on the Gulf Coast. 5. Women fed and sometimes saved the Revolution on regional battlefields. An Oneida woman, Polly Cooper, walked 250 miles to bring corn to the starving army at Valley Forge and refused payment; Georgia’s Nancy Hart was said to have disarmed loyalist soldiers over a turkey dinner, and a Georgia county still bears her name as a result of her heroic efforts, too. WHAT TO DO NEXT: Follow Family Tree Food and Stories [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/] at podcast.familytreefoodstories.com [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/] so you don’t miss the rest of the series, and send this episode to someone who’d love the story of a turkey dinner that disarmed three soldiers. Tell us on Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/groups/familytreefoodstories]between episodes what your own family ate, on either side of the Atlantic, and leave us a review, [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/reviews/] we read every one. ADDITIONAL LINKS SHARED:❤️ * Book: My Family Tree, Food & Stories Journal [https://www.amazon.com/Family-Tree-Food-Stories-Memorable/dp/1734841613/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2ETT1Z6Q5J84F&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.9aDj51eTPwkVydIsxOUcm0psz2pwwjU2tA9464i0LYelVWMWkmc9-ft1v7W5bmJM1R9TCjrBIraYcmsIZ8wog4X4ogtbNhkG3EBH1R8jPV1zolTi0TmPdaAy0F7Jsp6SvGSwsUzfPqfaj0BfDOr2fZtOmQ4i1na0rqL3HXfBGiuIhKthz4OOetpp0nORqAyyNTZ_RR6xVoXiMRHTaYKNLZtcygneMGYBWpX9B0np3YU.S3u-1CFzDJusx_U7X3_txBApkxautt9G1C3qrLcNeTw&dib_tag=se&keywords=my+family+tree+food+%26+stories&qid=1730918662&sprefix=my+family+tree+food%2Caps%2C135&sr=8-1] Awarded #1 New Release on Amazon * Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/familytreefoodstories/] Story updates 📸 * Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/FamilyTreeFoodStories/] Family Tree Food Stories GROUP👍 * TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@nancymay877]: Family Tree Food Stories * 👇Share Your Story With Nancy & Sylvia! [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/voicemail/]: Leave us a voicemail * You can send us a DM on Facebook. [https://www.facebook.com/FamilyTreeFoodStories] ABOUT YOUR AWARD-WINNING HOSTS: Nancy May [https://www.linkedin.com/in/nancyamay/] and Sylvia Franc [https://www.linkedin.com/in/sylviafrance/]e are the powerhouse team behind Family Tree, Food & Stories [https://familytree,food&stories/], a member of The Food Stories Media Network, which celebrates the rich traditions and connections everyone has around food, friends, and family meals. Nancy, an award-winning business leader, author, and podcaster, and Sylvia, a visionary author, foodie, and business leader, combine their expertise to bring captivating stories rooted in history, heritage, and food. Together, they weave stories that blend history, tradition, and the love of food, where generations connect and share intriguing mealtime stories and kitchen foibles. If you missed the first time around... now's your time to listen to Family Tree Food & Stories [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/] and get inspired to make better use of what’s already in your kitchen. Then visit our page to share how you're using your leftovers this year. Waste less. Cook smarter. Tell the story behind your fridge. "Every Meal Has a Story, and Every Story is a Feast." (tm) is a trademark of Family Tree Food & Stories podcast (c) copyright 2026, all US and International Rights Reserved. @familytreefoodstories, @familyfoodstories, #FamilyTreeFoodAndStories #FoodPodcast #FoodHistory #AmericanRevolution #America250 #revolutionaryWar #falleyforge #colonialameria #ushistory #HistoryPodcast #FoodHistory #FireCake #ContinentalArmy #FamilyTreeFoodAndStories #FamilyHistory #GenealogyPodcast #NancyHart #BernardoDeGalvez #newpodcastepisode

2 de jul de 202637 min
episode A Goat Stomach, a Nobel Prize Winner, and How the Grateful Dead Saved a Yogurt. artwork

A Goat Stomach, a Nobel Prize Winner, and How the Grateful Dead Saved a Yogurt.

YOGURT SECRETS: 7,000 YEARS OF LIVE CULTURES, INSTANT POT HOMEMADE YOGURT, AND THE GRATEFUL DEAD’S BENEFIT THAT SAVED NANCY’S YOGURT This episode of Family Tree Food and Stories [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/] explores yogurt’s origins, surprising cultural history, and recipes. From its accidental invention 7,000 years ago when Central Asian herders carried milk in animal-stomach pouches while on horseback to global variations like dahi, labneh, skyr, and Bulgaria’s famous yogurt variety. Hosts Nancy May and Sylvia France share how to make yogurt simply in an Instant Pot, explain troubleshooting challenges, and make your own starter “culture.” You'll also learn about a famous Nobel laureate who, in the early 1900s, claimed it as a longevity remedy. Then, did you know the yogurt "bug" was identified and named Lactobacillus bulgaricus, after the country Bulgaria? Well, sort of. And that's what Nancy and Sylvia claim to be a "fork-lore" about how yogurt once cured a French king. If that's not enough, one of the coolest yogurt history stories centers on Oregon’s Springfield Creamery and Nancy’s Yogurt, including how the Grateful Dead helped save the company from closing. Oh, and the Huey Lewis hauling yogurt story too.... It's all true! If you want to know more about the truths and secrets about “Greek-style” and the business of marketing, among other cool yogurt culture (yes, pun intended), then tune into this next episode of Family Tree Food and Stories [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/], now. KEY TAKEAWAYS The "invention" of yogurt was an accident in a goat's stomach. It involved a goat stomach, a hot day on horseback, and a lot of bouncing around. No inventor, no lab, just an accident with lots of bacteria that turned into a delicious treat. A Nobel Prize winner accidentally created the entire probiotics industry. He won medicine's top honor, then got obsessed with why Bulgarian peasants lived long lives eating yogurt. From that question and his slightly oversold theory, the health and wellness aisle was born. The one you walked down to find a gut health probiotic in. The Grateful Dead once helped bail out and save a yogurt company. Saddled with a $14,000 bill for back taxes, the company founder's friends played a benefit show; tickets were literally printed on yogurt labels, and the company survives to this day. #Nancy'sYogurt! "Greek-style" on the label might be a lie that shocks you. Real Greek yogurt is just strained yogurt, nothing more. BUT "Greek-style" often fakes that thickness with cornstarch or gelatin instead. The fix: flip the carton over and read the ingredients before deciding whether to spoon it into your breakfast bowl. You can make better yogurt at home for a quarter of the price, in an Insta Pot! Whole milk, two tablespoons of live-culture yogurt, and eight hours in an Instant Pot. No boiling required if you use ultra-pasteurized milk. WHAT TO DO NEXT? Subscribe to the show at podcast.familytreefoodstories.com [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/] so you never miss an episode update. We release new shows every Thursday morning. Then do one thing for a friend and us too! Send this episode to one person [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/follow/] who needs to know yogurt has a Grateful Dead story in it. That's it. One follow, one share. If every listener does that this week, we genuinely grow together , and next week, we do it again. ADDITIONAL LINKS SHARED:❤️ * SURVEY: Please Help Us Learn How To Do More For You [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/survey/pull-up-a-chair-listener-survey/] * Book: My Family Tree, Food & Stories Journal [https://www.amazon.com/Family-Tree-Food-Stories-Memorable/dp/1734841613/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2ETT1Z6Q5J84F&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.9aDj51eTPwkVydIsxOUcm0psz2pwwjU2tA9464i0LYelVWMWkmc9-ft1v7W5bmJM1R9TCjrBIraYcmsIZ8wog4X4ogtbNhkG3EBH1R8jPV1zolTi0TmPdaAy0F7Jsp6SvGSwsUzfPqfaj0BfDOr2fZtOmQ4i1na0rqL3HXfBGiuIhKthz4OOetpp0nORqAyyNTZ_RR6xVoXiMRHTaYKNLZtcygneMGYBWpX9B0np3YU.S3u-1CFzDJusx_U7X3_txBApkxautt9G1C3qrLcNeTw&dib_tag=se&keywords=my+family+tree+food+%26+stories&qid=1730918662&sprefix=my+family+tree+food%2Caps%2C135&sr=8-1] Awarded #1 New Release on Amazon * Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/familytreefoodstories/] Story updates 📸 * Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/FamilyTreeFoodStories/] Family Tree Food Stories GROUP👍 * TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@nancymay877]: Family Tree Food Stories * 👇Share Your Story With Nancy & Sylvia! [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/voicemail/]: Leave us a voicemail * You can send us a DM on Facebook. [https://www.facebook.com/FamilyTreeFoodStories] EPISODE TIMESTAMPS [00:00] Opening — goat stomachs, a Nobel laureate, and the Grateful Dead [02:54] Who invented yogurt? Nobody, it was a 7,000-year-old accident [04:44] Sylvia's Instant Pot yogurt experiment: two ingredients, eight hours [07:54] Élie Metchnikoff and the 1908 Nobel Prize in Medicine [08:49] Sour milk, the elixir: how Metchnikoff turned yogurt into a media sensation [11:39] The real story behind Nancy's Yogurt, Springfield Creamery, Oregon [12:26] The day the Grateful Dead saved a yogurt company [15:43] Getting skeptical: what "Greek-style" actually means on the label [17:48] The six rules of real yogurt, explained [19:10] Three takeaways to keep your own kitchen culture alive ABOUT YOUR AWARD-WINNING HOSTS: Nancy May [https://www.linkedin.com/in/nancyamay/] and Sylvia Franc [https://www.linkedin.com/in/sylviafrance/]e are the powerhouse team behind Family Tree, Food & Stories [https://familytree,food&stories/], a member of The Food Stories Media Network, which celebrates the rich traditions and connections everyone has around food, friends, and family meals. Nancy, an award-winning business leader, author, and podcaster, and Sylvia, a visionary author, foodie, and business leader, combine their expertise to bring captivating stories rooted in history, heritage, and food. Together, they weave stories that blend history, tradition, and the love of food, where generations connect and share intriguing mealtime stories and kitchen foibles. If you missed the first time around... now's your time to listen to Family Tree Food & Stories [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/] and get inspired to make better use of what’s already in your kitchen. Then visit our page to share how you're using your leftovers this year. Waste less. Cook smarter. Tell the story behind your fridge. "Every Meal Has a Story, and Every Story is a Feast." (tm) is a trademark of Family Tree Food & Stories podcast (c) copyright 2026, all US and International Rights Reserved. @familytreefoodstories, @familyfoodstories, #FamilyTreeFoodAndStories #FoodPodcast #FoodHistory #YogurtLover #howtomakeyogurt #instapotrecipes #instapot #FermentedFoods #GreekYogurt #GutHealth #ProbioticFoods #HistoryPodcast #StorytellingPodcast #GratefulDead #FamilyRecipes #HomeFermenting #FoodieFacts #PodcastRecommendations

25 de jun de 202622 min
episode Father's Day Gifts for the Dad Who Says He Wants Nothing. artwork

Father's Day Gifts for the Dad Who Says He Wants Nothing.

FATHER'S DAY GIFTS FEEL IMPOSSIBLE BECAUSE DAD SAYS HE WANTS NOTHING, AND THAT'S THE LIE YOUR BRAIN FALLS FOR EVERY SINGLE JUNE. Every Father's Day, the dads in our lives pull the same quiet con: "Don't get me anything." This Father's Day episode is our answer to that lie — because we're convinced Dad wants something, he just can't always say what. In 2026, Father's Day lands on June 21st, sharing the date with the summer solstice and National Peaches 'n Cream Day. Three holidays, one long June evening, zero boring gift ideas. In this episode of Family Tree Food & Stories [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/], Hosts Nancy May and Sylvia France take you to where Father's Day actually came from (hint... it wasn't a greeting card company). Then they dive into the surprisingly seductive history of the peach (because it's also National Peaches and Cram Day), and why the grill is never really just a grill. You'll hear how an oil-drum grill fed more than 100 people, the bullet-shell jewelry engraved with a father's last words, and land on the one Father's Day ritual that ties it all together: the grilled peach.. not the steak! You'll learn about the easiest and most meaningful Father's Day food traditions you can start tonight. So, pull up a chair, the smoke is already rising off the hot grill coals... and by the end of this special Father's Day episode you'll know exactly what to make for the man who swears he wants nothing. A SPECIAL FATHER'S DAY GIFT FOR YOU. * Download PDF [https://files.captivate.fm/library/19fd0cd1-73e4-4406-b4bb-e68ce50bded2/Father-s-Day-Recipes-2026.pdf]: Grilled Peach recipes and special Father's Day drinks to serve everyone. [https://files.captivate.fm/library/19fd0cd1-73e4-4406-b4bb-e68ce50bded2/Father-s-Day-Recipes-2026.pdf] WHAT YOU'LL LEARN ABOUT FATHER'S DAY AND THE GRILLED PEACH. * Why "I don't want anything" is a trap: and the one ten-minute, no-cost gift that makes most dads emotional (it isn't the grill). * The true and often forgotten origin story behind Father's Day: a grieving daughter, a widowed Civil War veteran, and the 62-year wait for a federal holiday no one talks about. * The surprising double life of the peach: from a Chinese symbol of immortality to a French opera star's namesake dessert to a 1970s "miracle cure" scandal the FDA had to shut down. * How to grill the perfect peach, step by step: the 4-to-5-minute backyard move (plus a boozy bourbon upgrade) that turns "happy Father's Day" into a memory. * How to honor a dad who's gone: a tender, screen-free table question and food rituals that let an empty chair still take up space in the room. We love and miss you Dad. But, you're always in our hearts! EPISODE TIMELINE [00:00] Father's Day gift paradox: why Dad says he wants nothing [01:19] Father's Day, summer solstice & National Peaches 'n Cream Day collide on June 21 [03:47] Father's Day origin: the daughter who started it in 1910 [05:21] Father's Day 2026 spending $24 billion grilling obsession [07:04] Grill stories: the oil-drum grill and unforgettable clams casino [10:08] What dads actually want for Father's Day (simpler than you think) [10:45] Long-distance love: ten Father's Day cards and "don't get me anything" [13:28] Peach symbolism: Persia, romance, and a secretly seductive fruit [17:02] Peach Melba: an opera star, Escoffier, and the Savoy Hotel [17:56] Peach cobbler history: democratized genius since 1839 [18:17] Peach pit danger: and the "Vitamin B17" scandal [19:40] Summer solstice 2026, June 21st, Father's Day [21:09] Father's Day grief: honoring Dad after he's gone [22:07] Bullet-shell jewelry [24:30] Grilled peaches recipe: the step-by-step method [25:54] Bourbon-soaked grilled peaches: the boozy Father's Day upgrade [26:16] Father's Day takeaway: what "you didn't have to do all this" really means LISTEN & SUBSCRIBE Pull up a chair. The table just another place setting. Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts, or right here at podcast.familytreefoodstories.com. [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/] SHARE YOUR FAMILY FOOD STORIES! What was your non-recipe meal recreated from memory? We'd love to hear your stories. Maybe you have a Mythbusters one too! Share Your Story With Nancy & Sylvia! [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/voicemail/] ADDITIONAL LINKS SHARED:❤️ * SURVEY: Please Help Us Learn How To Do More For You [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/survey/pull-up-a-chair-listener-survey/] * Book: My Family Tree, Food & Stories Journal [https://www.amazon.com/Family-Tree-Food-Stories-Memorable/dp/1734841613/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2ETT1Z6Q5J84F&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.9aDj51eTPwkVydIsxOUcm0psz2pwwjU2tA9464i0LYelVWMWkmc9-ft1v7W5bmJM1R9TCjrBIraYcmsIZ8wog4X4ogtbNhkG3EBH1R8jPV1zolTi0TmPdaAy0F7Jsp6SvGSwsUzfPqfaj0BfDOr2fZtOmQ4i1na0rqL3HXfBGiuIhKthz4OOetpp0nORqAyyNTZ_RR6xVoXiMRHTaYKNLZtcygneMGYBWpX9B0np3YU.S3u-1CFzDJusx_U7X3_txBApkxautt9G1C3qrLcNeTw&dib_tag=se&keywords=my+family+tree+food+%26+stories&qid=1730918662&sprefix=my+family+tree+food%2Caps%2C135&sr=8-1] Awarded #1 New Release on Amazon * Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/familytreefoodstories/] Story updates 📸 * Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/FamilyTreeFoodStories/] Family Tree Food Stories GROUP👍 * TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@nancymay877]: Family Tree Food Stories * 👇Share Your Story With Nancy & Sylvia! [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/voicemail/]: Leave us a voicemail * You can send us a DM on Facebook. [https://www.facebook.com/FamilyTreeFoodStories] ABOUT YOUR AWARD-WINNING HOSTS: Nancy May [https://www.linkedin.com/in/nancyamay/] and Sylvia Franc [https://www.linkedin.com/in/sylviafrance/]e are the powerhouse team behind Family Tree, Food & Stories [https://familytree,food&stories/], a member of The Food Stories Media Network, which celebrates the rich traditions and connections everyone has around food, friends, and family meals. Nancy, an award-winning business leader, author, and podcaster, and Sylvia, a visionary author, foodie, and business leader, combine their expertise to bring captivating stories rooted in history, heritage, and food. Together, they weave stories that blend history, tradition, and the love of food, where generations connect and share intriguing mealtime stories and kitchen foibles. If you missed the first time around... now's your time to listen to Family Tree Food & Stories [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/] and get inspired to make better use of what’s already in your kitchen. Then visit our page to share how you're using your leftovers this year. Waste less. Cook smarter. Tell the story behind your fridge. "Every Meal Has a Story, and Every Story is a Feast." (tm) is a trademark of Family Tree Food & Stories podcast (c) copyright 2026, all US and International Rights Reserved. @familytreefoodstories, @familyfoodstories, Fathers Day podcast | Father's Day gift ideas | Father's Day food traditions | grilled peaches recipe | peaches history | summer solstice 2026 | National Peaches and Cream Day | family food memories | cooking for dad | Peach Melba history | family stories podcast | southern cooking | family heirloom recipes | Family Tree Food and Stories | best food podcasts 2026

18 de jun de 202629 min
episode How to Make the Perfect Wedding Toast; The Secrets of How it Came to be are Hiding in a Soggy Piece of Bread! artwork

How to Make the Perfect Wedding Toast; The Secrets of How it Came to be are Hiding in a Soggy Piece of Bread!

WEDDING SEASON, AND SOMEWHERE RIGHT NOW, A PANICKED BEST MAN IS GOOGLING "HOW TO GIVE A WEDDING TOAST." This episode of Family Tree Food & Stories [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/] is the #WeddingToast crash course that every best man and maid of honor needs. It’s 6 simple rules for giving a toast people will remember, rather than have to endure. Then, do you know where the word "toast" comes from? It’s about a soggy piece of bread dropped in bad wine. Hosts Nancy May [https://www.linkedin.com/in/nancyamay/] and Sylvia Franc [https://www.linkedin.com/in/sylviafrance/]e serve up wedding speech tips, the myth behind clinking glasses, a 12-hour toasting tradition from the country of Georgia, and the family stories that prove a great toast is never about the wine; it's about who you raise the glass to. From a 300-year-old pickup line that turned a person into "the toast of the town," to a slightly tipsy pastor who serenaded a bride in barbershop harmony, to Grandma's rhubarb wine that only came out when something truly mattered, this episode will make you laugh, teach you something useful, and give you the confidence to stand up and nail your next toast. 🎯 Five Things You'll Learn (and Use for the Next Wedding): 1. The 2-Minute, 1-Story Rule. Stand up. Tell one story that proves who they are. Raise the glass. Sit down. That's the toast people quote for years — and the formula that saves you from becoming the guy who hired a guitarist for his own speech. 2. Why does “toast" literally mean bread? A wine crouton from the 1600s is hiding inside the most heartfelt 15 minutes of any wedding, and it's the dinner-party fact you'll be repeating all summer. 3. The poison-clink legend is fake. Glasses don't clink to dodge poison. They clink to complete the meal's fifth sense, and yes, breaking eye contact in parts of Europe earns you seven years of bad luck (and worse). 4. The toasts ARE a real part of the family tree. In Georgia's 12-hour Supra, the ancestors get named out loud so the kids at the end of the table hear and learn about them. Your toast can do the same thing; naming someone keeps them at the table. 5. You can use a clever “wine-fixer” tonight. From the French Clef du Vin, or a clean pre-1982 copper penny, there's a safe (and a very unsafe) way to smooth out rough wedding wine, or any young wine for that matter. Nancy shares her tested trials, plus the warning that keeps it from poisoning anyone. Whether you're walking down the aisle, dreading the mic, or just want a reason to raise a glass at Tuesday dinner, this is the toast masterclass disguised as a really good story. Hopefully, you'll never sip the same way again once you hear it. LISTEN & SUBSCRIBE Pull up a chair. The table just another place setting. Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts, or right here at podcast.familytreefoodstories.com. [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/] SHARE YOUR FAMILY FOOD STORIES! What was your non-recipe meal recreated from memory? We'd love to hear your stories. Maybe you have a Mythbusters one too! Share Your Story With Nancy & Sylvia! [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/voicemail/] ADDITIONAL LINKS SHARED:❤️ * SURVEY: Please Help Us Learn How To Do More For You [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/survey/pull-up-a-chair-listener-survey/] * Book: My Family Tree, Food & Stories Journal [https://www.amazon.com/Family-Tree-Food-Stories-Memorable/dp/1734841613/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2ETT1Z6Q5J84F&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.9aDj51eTPwkVydIsxOUcm0psz2pwwjU2tA9464i0LYelVWMWkmc9-ft1v7W5bmJM1R9TCjrBIraYcmsIZ8wog4X4ogtbNhkG3EBH1R8jPV1zolTi0TmPdaAy0F7Jsp6SvGSwsUzfPqfaj0BfDOr2fZtOmQ4i1na0rqL3HXfBGiuIhKthz4OOetpp0nORqAyyNTZ_RR6xVoXiMRHTaYKNLZtcygneMGYBWpX9B0np3YU.S3u-1CFzDJusx_U7X3_txBApkxautt9G1C3qrLcNeTw&dib_tag=se&keywords=my+family+tree+food+%26+stories&qid=1730918662&sprefix=my+family+tree+food%2Caps%2C135&sr=8-1] Awarded #1 New Release on Amazon * Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/familytreefoodstories/] Story updates 📸 * Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/FamilyTreeFoodStories/] Family Tree Food Stories GROUP👍 * TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@nancymay877]: Family Tree Food Stories * 👇Share Your Story With Nancy & Sylvia! [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/voicemail/]: Leave us a voicemail * You can send us a DM on Facebook. [https://www.facebook.com/FamilyTreeFoodStories] ABOUT YOUR AWARD-WINNING HOSTS: Nancy May [https://www.linkedin.com/in/nancyamay/] and Sylvia Franc [https://www.linkedin.com/in/sylviafrance/]e are the powerhouse team behind Family Tree, Food & Stories [https://familytree,food&stories/], a member of The Food Stories Media Network, which celebrates the rich traditions and connections everyone has around food, friends, and family meals. Nancy, an award-winning business leader, author, and podcaster, and Sylvia, a visionary author, foodie, and business leader, combine their expertise to bring captivating stories rooted in history, heritage, and food. Together, they weave stories that blend history, tradition, and the love of food, where generations connect and share intriguing mealtime stories and kitchen foibles. If you missed the first time around... now's your time to listen to Family Tree Food & Stories [https://podcast.familytreefoodstories.com/] and get inspired to make better use of what’s already in your kitchen. Then visit our page to share how you're using your leftovers this year. Waste less. Cook smarter. Tell the story behind your fridge. "Every Meal Has a Story, and Every Story is a Feast." (tm) is a trademark of Family Tree Food & Stories podcast (c) copyright 2026, all US and International Rights Reserved. @familytreefoodstories #WeddingToast #WeddingSeason2026 #WeddingSpeech #MaidOfHonor #BestManSpeech #WeddingTips #HowToGiveAToast #WeddingPlanning #JuneWedding #FamilyStories #FoodHistory #FamilyTreeFoodAndStories #PodcastLife #FoodPodcast #StorytellingPodcast #CheersToThat #RaiseAGlass #WeddingAdvice #BrideToBe #GroomToBe #BestManTips #PodcastLife

11 de jun de 202628 min