The Sovereign Kitchen Society
Before doctors. Before pharmacies. Before anything modern existed in the mountains of West Virginia, Kentucky, Virginia, and Tennessee there was a woman every community depended on. She was called a Granny Woman. And most people have never heard of her. In this episode of The Sovereign Kitchen Society, Molly Bravo goes deep on one of the most important and most forgotten women in American history (the Appalachian Granny Woman). She was a midwife, a healer, an herbalist, and the person every family called when things went wrong. She attended over a thousand births in her lifetime. She knew which plants stopped a hemorrhage and which herb brought a fever down through the night. She built a pantry that could carry her family through the hardest months of the year. She worked entirely for barter. And she earned her title over decades of practice. What you'll learn in this episode: — What a Granny Woman actually was and how she earned that title — The three cultural traditions that shaped Appalachian folk medicine: Cherokee plant medicine, Scots-Irish herbal tradition, and African healing knowledge — The specific herbs she used and what modern science now confirms about why they worked — elderberry, boneset, catnip, wild cherry bark, mullein, plantain, and more — How her kitchen and her medicine cabinet were one and the same — A story of a real day in her life, drawn from Foxfire archive accounts — Why this knowledge disappeared — and why it's almost gone — How to find the Granny Woman in your own family's lineage — Three things you can do this week to start reclaiming what she knew, starting with a simple elderberry syrup recipe This episode is personal. Host Molly Bravo never met her grandparents — her McKeand, Wilson, Hammock, and Holbrook lines run deep through West Virginia and Kentucky — and she is in an active race right now to sit with living family elders in their 90s before that knowledge disappears with them. This research is urgent. And it's meant to send you looking for your own family's version of her. Topics covered: Appalachian heritage, folk medicine, herbal remedies, ancestral nutrition, food sovereignty, traditional foods, food preservation, pressure canning, water bath canning, fermentation, from-scratch cooking, homesteading skills, plant medicine, self-reliance, self-sufficiency, generational wisdom, lost kitchen skills, natural remedies, Foxfire archives, Appalachian history, Granny Women, midwifery history, ancestral healing, sourdough, bone broth, seasonal eating, real food, family history. New episodes every week. Subscribe so you never miss one. 📖 The Essential Canning Cookbook — on Amazon [https://www.amazon.com/Essential-Canning-Cookbook-Pressure-Recipes/dp/1400352010] 🌿 Deeper companion piece + plant profiles — wylderspace.substack.com [http://wylderspace.substack.com] 📍 Wylder Space Farm-to-Table Catering (Santa Cruz Mountains) — wylderspace.com [http://wylderspace.com] 📲 Instagram & TikTok — @sovereignkitchensociety Food is and always will be our medium for connection. — Molly Bravo, Wylder Space ----------------------------------------
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