Home Cooked Stories
Grandmacore. Nonna-nostalgia. The slow Sunday. Whatever you call it, something is pulling a lot of us (especially those of us in the middle of full lives and busy schedules) toward a slower, more intentional way of moving through our kitchens and our weekends. And it's not hard to see why. There's something magnetic about those viral videos of Italian grandmothers rolling pasta by hand, the romance of a multigenerational table, and the comfort of a dish that took all afternoon to make. But are we chasing the right thing? In this episode, I'm exploring the grandmother aesthetic trend and what I believe we're actually longing for underneath it. Spoiler alert: it's not the pasta. It's the gathering. It's the ritual. It's the sense of belonging that food gives us. I also share a personal story about cooking my family's Lebanese recipes with my aunt and what that afternoon taught me about grief, memory, and how tradition really travels. It's not through perfect conditions. It's through intention and invitation. If you've ever felt the pull of the nonna aesthetic but can't figure out how to make it fit into your actual life (the one with a mental list a mile long and kids asking for waffles before you've had your coffee), this episode is for you. In this episode: * What grandmacore and nonna-nostalgia are really tapping into and why it's bigger than a food trend * The honest tension between wanting the slow Sunday and living the fast one * Why we're drawn to watching grandmothers cook (and what it says about what we're missing) * Making Lebanese recipes by hand, learning through the senses, and carrying a family legacy forward * Why all you need is one good afternoon and the intention to pass it on * Six practical ways to bring slow, intentional, gathering-centered cooking into a real, busy life Connect with me: Come join the conversation on Substack [https://homecookedstories.substack.com/] at Home Cooked Stories. I use this space to share more behind-the-scenes, go deeper into the stories behind the food, and write more about the life we're building around our tables. You can also find me on Instagram @heyjuliadarling [https://www.instagram.com/heyjuliadarling/].
23 episodios
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