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The Kitchen Sisters Present

An Unexpected Kitchen: The George Foreman Grill

The Kitchen Sisters Present

The Kitchen Sisters & Radiotopia

Society & Culture

4.61.3K Ratings

🗓️ 12 July 2016

⏱️ 22 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Sometimes life without a kitchen leads to the most unexpected hidden kitchen of all—the George Foreman Grill. How immigrants and homeless people without official kitchens use the George Foreman Grill, hidden crock pots, and secret hot plates to make a meal and a home. Featuring an interview with boxing champion and grill-master, George Foreman.

So many immigrants, homeless people and others of limited means living in single-room occupancies (SROs) have no kitchens, no legal or official place to cook. To get a hot meal, or eat traditional foods from the countries they’ve left behind, they have to sneak a kind of kitchen into their places. Crock pots, hot plates, microwaves and toaster ovens hidden under the bed. And now, the appliance that comes in so many colors it looks like a modern piece of furniture: the George Foreman Grill.

We had never considered such a hidden kitchen. So we called him. George Foreman talks about growing up hungry and violent, about his his time in the Job Corps, about cooking for his friends and his work with kids. “Feed them,” he says. “Hunger makes you angry.”

And we contacted the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless. They put us in touch with Jeffrey Newton who has been homeless or in shelters most all his life, from boy’s homes, to reformatories, to prison by age 17. Then he moved out on the streets, where every day he goes “trailblazing” — looking for food, shelter, work, the resources he needs to make it through the day.

Jeffry learned to cook from his grandmother. He feels an urge to cook, especially for other people — under the overpass on Chicago’s Wacker Drive; on a George Foreman Grill plugged into a power pole; with a hot clothing iron to toast a grilled cheese sandwich.

Pat Sherman lived for quite some time in SROs with no kitchen, where cooking was forbidden. She now has a home and works in Glide’s Memorial Church in San Francisco’s Tenderloin District. Sherman was quite ingenious when it came to cooking. Her Crock-Pot doubled as a flower pot — nothing that would arouse suspicion. When nobody was around to check, she would slow-cook her beans while she went to school, then come home to a hot meal.

 

Transcript

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0:00.0

RadioTopia. Welcome to The Kitchen Sisters present.

0:04.0

We're The Kitchen Sisters, Davia Nelson, and Nikki Silva.

0:09.0

It's Nikki of the Kitchen Sisters and I'm very excited to tell you about NeverPost, the newest show in the Radiotopia family.

0:18.0

Have you ever wondered why is the internet like that? That's the question

0:22.4

the folks at NeverPost try to answer in each episode. Why is there something called

0:27.3

influencer voice? What's the deal with TikTok shop? What is posting disease? And do you have it?

0:34.6

The team NeverPost wonders why the internet and the world because of the

0:38.4

internet is the way it is. NeverPost talks to artists, linguists, content creators, sociologists, historians,

0:46.3

philosophers, and more about our current tech and media moment. From PRX's Radiotopia, NeverPost,

0:58.6

episodes every other week at neverpo.st and wherever you find pods.

1:03.3

Welcome to Fugitive Waves. Lost recordings and shards of sound, along with new tales of

1:10.2

remarkable people from around the world.

1:12.6

We're The Kitchen Sisters, Davia Nelson, and Nikki Silva.

1:16.5

Today, we're heading deep into Hidden Kitchens. This story was one of the first we heard

1:22.4

when we opened up our Hidden Kitchens hotline on NPR, asking people to tell us their stories about secret underground

1:29.2

below the radar cooking and about people coming together through food. We thought we'd thought about

1:34.4

just about every kind of hidden kitchen there could be, test kitchens and space kitchens and, you know,

1:40.6

cafeterias and schools and all different kinds of cooking.

1:46.0

But then we heard from Margaret Engel.

1:52.1

Margaret opened our eyes to an unexpected kitchen, the George Foreman Grill.

1:58.6

Message 23 was received at 1.10 p.m. today.

2:04.2

I'm Margaret Engle. A woman who works for legal aid, who's talking to me about how many of her clients get dinner. The people who struggle to even get food on the table because they don't have

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