Girls' Lunch

24. Domestic (Science) Partners: Home Economics, Part 2

56 min · 10. des. 2025
episode 24. Domestic (Science) Partners: Home Economics, Part 2 cover

Beskrivelse

Welcome back to Home Economics class! Did you keep your flour baby/egg/baby doll/real human baby alive over the last month? Maybe you'd like to teach it some deeply flawed early Child Psychology? In Part 2, you'll learn how Home Ec went from subverting to perpetuating traditional gender roles in the postwar era due to an unlikely culprit. We'll dive into the Home Ec that exists in the popular imagination, and the "Marriage Course" that now exists in Julia and Nicole's nightmares. And, finally, we will put a baked sweet potato at the top of Maslow's hierarchy of needs, where it rightfully belongs. Our theme song is "Red Onions" by Louie Zong, off of his album Vegetable Soul: https://louiezong.bandcamp.com/album/vegetable-soul We're on Instagram @girlslunchpod. Nicole's website is nicolehylton.com. Have an episode suggestion or question? You can email us at girlslunchpodcast@gmail.com and we will add it to our chaotic list of future episode subjects. Links to Sources: * "Rethinking Home Economics: Women and the History of a Profession," ed. by Sarah J. Stage and Virginia B. Vincenti * "The Secret History of Home Economics: How Trailblazing Women Harnessed the Power of Home and Changed the Way We Live," by Danielle Dreilinger * HEARTH - Home Economics Archive: Research, Tradition, History [https://digital.library.cornell.edu/collections/hearth/about] * "The Bureau of Home Economics: How Women Harnessed the Power of Science and Nutrition to Help Fight WWII and Improve Life on the Home Front," [https://journals.ala.org/index.php/dttp/article/view/8129/11320] by Erika Whinihan * "Giant Food's First Supermarket [https://jewishcurrents.org/february-6-giant-foods-first-supermarket]", by Lawrence Bush * "Carlisle Origin of Giant [https://blogs.dickinson.edu/carlislehistory/2007/09/21/carlisle-origin-of-giant/]," by Ryan Burke

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Alle episoder

29 Episoder

episode 27. Have Your Gay and Eat It Too: A Queer History of Cake cover

27. Have Your Gay and Eat It Too: A Queer History of Cake

As Marie Antoinette definitely once said: Let them serve 💅🏼 cake. In our first standalone episode in literal months, Julia and Nicole talk about what this episode is NOT about, the historical layers of cake, and the popcorn crimes of Mary Hamilton Talbott. Join us from our flying kitchen as we answer two of life's greatest questions: what is cake, and is it gay? Our theme song is "Red Onions" by Louie Zong, off of his album Vegetable Soul: https://louiezong.bandcamp.com/album/vegetable-soul We're on Instagram @girlslunchpod. Nicole's website is nicolehylton.com. Have an episode suggestion or question? You can email us at girlslunchpodcast@gmail.com and we will add it to our chaotic list of future episode subjects. Sources: * On Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen, by Harold McGee * Cake: A Global History, by Nicola Humble * "History of bread and cakes," The History of Food, by Maguelonne Toussaint-Samat (p. 223-246) * Nectar and Ambrosia: An Encyclopedia of Food in World Mythology, by Tamra Andrews (p. 52-54) * Lynne Olver, foodtimeline.org [http://foodtimeline.org] * "Cake Mixes: CU's consultants tasted and examined ready-mix cakes to find which brands were best," Consumer Reports, September 1953 (p. 385-7) * What is Queer Food? How we Served a Revolution, by John Birdsall * "News of Food," New York Times, November 17, 1949 (p. 39) * Popped Culture: A Social History of Popcorn in America, by Andrew F. Smith

I går1 h 0 min
episode 26. Pre-Licked Hershey's Kisses: Hershey, Part 2 cover

26. Pre-Licked Hershey's Kisses: Hershey, Part 2

We're back for the chocolate-coated conclusion of our Hershey series! Picking back up at the turn of the 20th century, Nicole and Julia chronicle the Hershey Company's history through the Great Depression, two World Wars, and (spoilers) the death of its founder and beloved candy man Milton Hershey. They also ponder the ethics of extreme wealth, chocolate as patriotism, the Hershey Company's relationship with the US government, and (of course!) wacky marketing. Don't fill up on your Ration D starvation chocolate—this episode is CHOC-full (hehe) of cool cocoa trivia! Our theme song is "Red Onions" by Louie Zong, off of his album Vegetable Soul: https://louiezong.bandcamp.com/album/vegetable-soul We're on Instagram @girlslunchpod. Nicole's website is nicolehylton.com. Have an episode suggestion or question? You can email us at girlslunchpodcast@gmail.com and we will add it to our chaotic list of future episode subjects. Links to Sources: * The Hershey Story Museum, Hershey, PA * The Emperors of Chocolate: Inside the Secret World of Hershey and Mars, by Joël Glenn Brenner * Hershey, by Michael D'Antonio * "Hershey's Kisses Chocolates [https://hersheyarchives.org/encyclopedia/hersheys-kisses-chocolates/]," Hershey Community Archives * "Ration D Bars [https://hersheyarchives.org/encyclopedia/ration-d-bars/]," Hershey Community Archives * Honeywell Kitchen Computer Advertisement [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3440880], Neiman Marcus Catalog, scan courtesy of Wikimedia

17. mars 20261 h 9 min
episode 25. Milton's Chocolate Corner: Hershey, Part 1 cover

25. Milton's Chocolate Corner: Hershey, Part 1

Milton Hershey was not always a chocolate man. But he was, for most of his adult life (and his teens) a candy man. And in his journey from confectioner to chocolatier, Milton had his fair share of oopsies. (By our count, at least three failed business ventures and one mental breakdown.) But thankfully, for those of us in the present who enjoy his chocolate (and his theme park!) Milton Hershey also had some really clutch women in his corner who helped him keep going. Join Nicole and Julia in this exploration of Milton Hershey's early life and the founding of Hershey's Chocolate. We'll also take a brief step into the conching room (iykyk) to see how chocolate is made and put some respect on the names of the women that made Hershey what it is today. Our theme song is "Red Onions" by Louie Zong, off of his album Vegetable Soul: https://louiezong.bandcamp.com/album/vegetable-soul We're on Instagram @girlslunchpod. Nicole's website is nicolehylton.com. Have an episode suggestion or question? You can email us at girlslunchpodcast@gmail.com and we will add it to our chaotic list of future episode subjects. Links to Sources: * The Hershey Story Museum, Hershey, PA * The Emperors of Chocolate: Inside the Secret World of Hershey and Mars, by Joël Glenn Brenner * Hershey, by Michael D'Antonio * "Hershey and Dandelion Media to Unwrap Founder's Story in Upcoming Major Motion Picture "HERSHEY," Set for 2026 Release" [https://stories.hersheypa.com/hershey-and-dandelion-media-to-unwrap-founders-story-in-upcoming-major-motion-picture-hershey-set-for-2026-release/] Press Release * The Dispenser's Formulary, Soda Fountain Publications: New York, 1925

28. jan. 20261 h 22 min
episode 24. Domestic (Science) Partners: Home Economics, Part 2 cover

24. Domestic (Science) Partners: Home Economics, Part 2

Welcome back to Home Economics class! Did you keep your flour baby/egg/baby doll/real human baby alive over the last month? Maybe you'd like to teach it some deeply flawed early Child Psychology? In Part 2, you'll learn how Home Ec went from subverting to perpetuating traditional gender roles in the postwar era due to an unlikely culprit. We'll dive into the Home Ec that exists in the popular imagination, and the "Marriage Course" that now exists in Julia and Nicole's nightmares. And, finally, we will put a baked sweet potato at the top of Maslow's hierarchy of needs, where it rightfully belongs. Our theme song is "Red Onions" by Louie Zong, off of his album Vegetable Soul: https://louiezong.bandcamp.com/album/vegetable-soul We're on Instagram @girlslunchpod. Nicole's website is nicolehylton.com. Have an episode suggestion or question? You can email us at girlslunchpodcast@gmail.com and we will add it to our chaotic list of future episode subjects. Links to Sources: * "Rethinking Home Economics: Women and the History of a Profession," ed. by Sarah J. Stage and Virginia B. Vincenti * "The Secret History of Home Economics: How Trailblazing Women Harnessed the Power of Home and Changed the Way We Live," by Danielle Dreilinger * HEARTH - Home Economics Archive: Research, Tradition, History [https://digital.library.cornell.edu/collections/hearth/about] * "The Bureau of Home Economics: How Women Harnessed the Power of Science and Nutrition to Help Fight WWII and Improve Life on the Home Front," [https://journals.ala.org/index.php/dttp/article/view/8129/11320] by Erika Whinihan * "Giant Food's First Supermarket [https://jewishcurrents.org/february-6-giant-foods-first-supermarket]", by Lawrence Bush * "Carlisle Origin of Giant [https://blogs.dickinson.edu/carlislehistory/2007/09/21/carlisle-origin-of-giant/]," by Ryan Burke

10. des. 202556 min
episode 23. It's all Coming Up Home Economics: Part 1 cover

23. It's all Coming Up Home Economics: Part 1

After a brief hiatus, Nicole and Julia are back at it again; yelling about food, feminism, and how the United States' culture is just good marketing. In this episode, we discover how everything is Home Economics, you know, that one class your mom took in the 80's. We discuss the origins of the movement, it's rise and fall of influence in the American government, and maybe some ethically quesitonable decisions around babies. Come for the history, stay for the lava cakes, and leave after the bell rings. Our theme song is "Red Onions" by Louie Zong, off of his album Vegetable Soul: https://louiezong.bandcamp.com/album/vegetable-soul We're on Instagram @girlslunchpod. Nicole's website is nicolehylton.com. Have an episode suggestion or question? You can email us at girlslunchpodcast@gmail.com and we will add it to our chaotic list of future episode subjects. Links to Sources: * "Rethinking Home Economics: Women and the History of a Profession" by by Sarah J. Stage (Editor), Virginia B. Vincenti (Editor) * "The Secret History of Home Economics: How Trailblazing Women Harnessed the Power of Home and Changed the Way We Live" by Danielle Dreilinger * HEARTH - Home Economics Archive: Research, Tradition, History [https://digital.library.cornell.edu/collections/hearth/about] * The Bureau of Home Economics: How Women Harnessed the Power of Science and Nutrition to Help Fight WWII and Improve Life on the Home Front [https://journals.ala.org/index.php/dttp/article/view/8129/11320] * "DE GUSTIBUS; The Cakes That Take New York Erupt With Molten Chocolate," [https://www.nytimes.com/1991/11/27/garden/de-gustibus-the-cakes-that-take-new-york-erupt-with-molten-chocolate.html] by Florence Fabricant for The New York Times * "How the Chocolate Lava Cake, the Hottest Dessert of the '90s, Lost Its Cool," [https://www.thrillist.com/eat/nation/chocolate-lava-cake-dominos-dessert-history] by Khushbu Shah for Thrillist

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