4.8 • 642 Ratings
🗓️ 26 February 2015
⏱️ 50 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
I think a lot of us have had the dream of leaving the city and moving to a farm or cabin or beach somewhere – living off the land and creating (what we imagine will be) a simpler life for ourselves. Well, food writer and author Rochelle Bilow did just that.
Rochelle and I discuss her year of living on a farm, falling in love, setting intentions, and her book that chronicles it all: The Call Of The Farm, An Unexpected Year of Getting Dirty, Home Cooking, and Finding Myself.
Here’s Rochelle:
Listen and subscribe in iTunes
Listen and subscribe in Stitcher
Show Notes:
The Call Of The Farm
Edible Finger Lakes
Jamie Stelter
Roasted Citrus & Avocado Salad Recipe
The Power Of Intention
Seamus Mullen
Rochelle On Instagram
The Experiment
Got something to say about this episode?
Leave a comment, tweet it, share it on Instagram, and make sure to tag @jessicamurnane or #onepartpodcast.
Want more?
Head over to iTunes to subscribe and leave a review. The more reviews, the greater chance someone else will hear Rochelle’s story.
And please share this episode with someone who might need it!
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | It's the one part podcast, episode 24. |
0:17.3 | Hey, it's Jessica Mernan. |
0:19.6 | It's the one part podcast and I am bringing you lessons in next level inspiration. |
0:25.0 | Thanks so much for listening. Everyone that listened to last week's episode is the number one downloaded episode of this podcast so far. |
0:35.8 | And I mean, I knew I liked the story, but apparently I wasn't the |
0:41.3 | only one. So thank you everyone that listened to Mariah Naila's episode. If you haven't heard |
0:46.0 | that episode, go back, listen to it. If you liked it, could you leave a review on iTunes? |
0:51.9 | I know sometimes it can seem annoying because like iTunes takes a long time to open |
0:56.9 | and then you got to figure out your old username and password and then it's not, I don't |
1:05.0 | know, it's not that bad. |
1:06.8 | Just do it. |
1:07.6 | You only have to do it once. |
1:09.6 | And the thing is, is it's not like I'm trying to be cool and, like, have all these followers. It's just that if you leave reviews, then it gets, it pushes the podcast up and then more people are able to see it. And then also, as I'm asking people to be on the pod, to like how I abbreviated it, to be on the podcast, they're able to look and they're able to see, okay, people are listening to this thing. There's an engaged audience. I want to be on this thing. So if you could do that for me, that would be awesome. Okay, please. All right. So this week's guest is Rochelle Bilo, and she wrote the book, The Call of the Farm. |
1:49.2 | I just picked it up. |
1:50.1 | The subtitle of it is an unexpected year of getting dirty, home cooking, and finding myself. |
1:57.5 | The getting dirty part? |
1:59.9 | I know that she probably meant it was, you know, getting dirty, |
2:04.4 | pulling up roots, beet roots in the garden of the farm, but this book also gets kind of dirty |
2:11.7 | in other ways, if you know what I'm saying. Rochelle and I talked about her year on the farm and what led her there, |
2:19.2 | what made her stay, and why she decided to leave. And I think that, I don't know, maybe we don't |
2:26.0 | all have the fantasy of kind of giving things up and moving to a farm and a cabin and just |
2:32.2 | kind of living off the land, away from everything. |
... |
Please login to see the full transcript.
Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Jessica Murnane, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.
Generated transcripts are the property of Jessica Murnane and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.
Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.