Forsidebilde av showet Home Cooked Stories

Home Cooked Stories

Podkast av Julia Darling

engelsk

Kultur og fritid

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Home Cooked Stories is the podcast for parents who are busy, stretched thin, and quietly longing for more meaning in the everyday — using food as the lens for the conversations that actually matter.Hosted by Julia Darling — working mom of three — this is not a food podcast in the traditional sense. There are no recipes, no cooking tips, no kitchen hacks. Instead, Julia brings in travel and food writers, cookbook authors, doctors, wellness experts, and fellow parents to explore the bigger stories food connects us to: legacy and culture, health and identity, travel and memory, and the grace we give ourselves in the middle of a full, imperfect life.Because food is never just about the food.New episodes every other week. Cozy on in.

Alle episoder

23 Episoder

episode Stop Optimizing Your Summer: A Case for Presence Over Productivity cover

Stop Optimizing Your Summer: A Case for Presence Over Productivity

May is a lot. If you know, you know. Between recitals, field trips, end-of-year presentations, teacher appreciation week, and Mother's Day all colliding at once, most of us arrive at summer break already running on empty. And then we're expected to just shift gears. In this episode, I'm getting honest about my feelings around summer break and what it looks like to work full-time with kids home full-time.  A recent conversation with a friend pointed out that we spend so much energy thinking about what our kids need in the summer - the structure, the camps, the consistency - when in reality, we're not that different from them. We need those things too. We just pretend to be more evolved about it. I'm also sharing why I'm taking a break from publishing new episodes this summer, and what I hope to do with that space. Spoiler alert: it has everything to do with presence and creativity and nothing to do with a productivity hack or a summer bucket list. What do you want to get out of your summer - just for you? I'll be back in the fall with new episodes and new conversations. Until then, enjoy your summer!

20. mai 2026 - 10 min
episode We're All Chasing the Grandmother Aesthetic. But Are We Missing the Point? cover

We're All Chasing the Grandmother Aesthetic. But Are We Missing the Point?

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/].

22. april 2026 - 22 min
episode 10 Years of Family Travel: What Food, Chaos & Unplanned Moments Actually Taught Me cover

10 Years of Family Travel: What Food, Chaos & Unplanned Moments Actually Taught Me

Are family trips worth it — even the chaotic, exhausting, everyone-hit-a-wall-at-6pm ones? After more than a decade of traveling with three kids, a lot of hotel rooms, and more than a few moments of questioning every decision we've ever made — my answer is a hard yes. And in this episode, I'm telling you exactly why. I'm recording this fresh off a long weekend in Atlanta — kids on spring break, husband on a work trip, running on leftover momentum and caffeine. And I figured if I'm going to show up for you, I'm going to show up honest. So that's exactly what this episode is. We're talking about the real stuff: why we keep planning these trips even when they wear us out, how food has become our family's way into every place we visit, and the small, unscripted moments that end up meaning the most.  Because here's the thing — the best parts of a family trip are almost never on the itinerary. Sometimes they're a Thai restaurant you stumbled into across from your Airbnb, owned by an 80-year-old woman with a rice plantation in Thailand and grandma energy that makes you wish you could stay all night. Sometimes they're leftover pizza in hotel pajamas at 9pm. Both count.  In this episode: * Why the shared stories — not the highlights — are the real reason to keep booking the trips * The "one or two anchored activities" rule that changed how our family travels * Why a low-key night in the hotel is not a failed night (and why social media has a lot to answer for here) * How food has become our family's way into every place we visit * Why a two-hour drive from home can be just as meaningful as a flight to Europe * The one habit that will help you actually keep the small moments instead of letting them slip by The trip doesn't have to be perfect. It doesn't have to be far. It just has to be yours. If you're in the thick of spring break, staring down a summer of trip planning, or just on the fence about whether it's even worth the effort — this one's for you. Loved this episode? Share it with the friend who's been putting off that family trip, or the one who needs permission to take a night off mid-vacation. They need to hear this too.  Want more from Home Cooked Stories? Follow the show wherever you stream podcasts, so you never miss another one. Want to go deeper? I write about all of this — and everything else on my mind — over on Substack. Come join the conversation [https://homecookedstories.substack.com/] and get updates delivered straight to your inbox.

7. april 2026 - 19 min
episode The 1995 Kitchen: Why Cooking Felt Easier Before the Internet (And What We Can Reclaim) cover

The 1995 Kitchen: Why Cooking Felt Easier Before the Internet (And What We Can Reclaim)

There's a movement spreading among millennial parents right now — a growing push to give kids a more 1990s childhood. Less screen time, more boredom, and unscheduled summers. And I get it. But this episode isn't about our kids. It's about us. Because we're the generation trying to protect our children from overstimulation while personally scrolling Instagram, prompting ChatGPT, and spending 20 minutes reading about baked chicken before we've even decided if we're making it. In this solo episode, I go back to 1995. I wanted to consider what weeknight cooking actually looked like for our parents and make the case that it was, in some real and meaningful ways, easier. Not because the tools were better; they weren't. But because the information field was so much smaller. Fewer decisions. Lower expectations. No ambient pressure that your Tuesday night pasta should be anything more than pasta. I also get into why that feels so hard to replicate now and what it's quietly doing to our self-trust when we keep looking outside ourselves for the answer. This one is for anyone who has ever spent 30 minutes researching a recipe and still didn't know what to make for dinner. Cozy on in.  Resources mentioned in this episode: * The Melissa Ambrosini Show (Episode 693: Why Your Brain Feels Broken (And What It's Actually Trying to Tell You) [https://melissaambrosini.com/podcast/why-your-brain-feels-broken-and-what-its-actually-trying-to-tell-you/] Want more from Home Cooked Stories? Follow the show wherever you stream podcasts, so you never miss another one. Want to go deeper? I write about all of this — and everything else on my mind — over on Substack. Come join the conversation [https://homecookedstories.substack.com/] and get updates delivered straight to your inbox.

24. mars 2026 - 22 min
episode My Husband Traveled for Work and I Tried to Cook Every Night. Here's What Actually Happened. cover

My Husband Traveled for Work and I Tried to Cook Every Night. Here's What Actually Happened.

It’s March 1st. My husband is out of town for four nights. I am sitting in the sunroom with a pile of my favorite cookbooks, a pen, a sheet of notebook paper, and a very clean intention: I am going to cook dinner every single night he’s gone. The plan did not survive the week. And that, it turns out, is the whole episode. If you’ve been in a winter cooking rut — the kind that sneaks up sometime after the holidays, when takeout has quietly become the default and you don’t fully clock it until early March shows up and you realize it’s been a long while since you actually cooked a real meal — this one is for you. In this episode, I’m talking about: • What a real winter dinner rut actually feels like — not the dramatized version, the quiet one • The three recipes I always reach for when I’m getting back into the kitchen after a long stretch away (hummus, granola, and chicken noodle soup — and yes, there is a Lebanese grandmother story involved) • What cooking for my family solo actually looked like — including the night a work call hijacked my mac and cheese plan, the soccer practice stove check, and the early homecoming that changed everything • Why the plan not surviving the week doesn’t mean the reset didn’t happen •  What actually counts when you’re trying to get back to cooking for your family — and why the imperfect, interrupted effort is still the thing There was a stove check between soccer practices. There was a bucket of grocery store fried chicken. There was a work call that derailed the whole Wednesday. And there was a Sunday afternoon where the soup was on, the music was playing, the kids were drifting through the kitchen stealing bites off the granola pan, and everything felt like mine again. That Sunday was the reset. Everything else was just the week being the week. If you’ve been waiting to feel like yourself in the kitchen again — or if you’ve been trying to get back to cooking for your family after a long stretch of ordering out, running late, and getting to Friday wondering where the week went — I hope this one feels like a small nod. A little recognition. And maybe your permission to find your Sunday. Cozy on in. ___________________ Let's Connect!  You can find me on Instagram @heyjuliadarling [https://www.instagram.com/heyjuliadarling/]. And be sure to subscribe to my Substack newsletter [https://homecookedstories.substack.com/?utm_campaign=profile_chips]for deeper thoughts and behind-the-scenes stories.

10. mars 2026 - 14 min
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