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What'sHerName

THE BAKER Sally Lunn

What'sHerName

Dr. Katie Nelson and Olivia Meikle

Society & Culture, Documentary, History

4.8538 Ratings

🗓️ 2 July 2018

⏱️ 34 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Sally Lunn was born in France, but moved to Bath, England in 1680 to escape religious persecution. She brought with her a special skill: baking delicious brioche-style bread. Developing her own unique recipe, she sold her buns in the streets of Bath, soon becoming famous for the “Sally Lunn Bun.”Fast-forward 350 years to the 1930s: a baker in Bath with a love of archaeology decided to excavate the ground beneath his own house. What he uncovered resurrected the story of Sally Lunn and revealed in microcosm the whole history of Britain! Come along on a tour of the oldest house in Bath and wander the streets of the historic town through our vivid soundscape. Katie interviews guest Simon Lloyd-Williams, general manager of the Sally Lunn’s House restaurant and museum, on the site of her original bakery in Bath, England. Simon Lloyd-Williams has been the General Manager of Sally Lunn’s House in Bath for about a year. He has lived near Bath for the past eight years and previously worked as a chef. You can find a modern recipe for a Sally Lunn bun here. If you’d like to dig deeper into the “did Sally Lunn really exist” debate, The Food Timeline is a great resource. Music featured in this episode included “None Shall Plunder But I”, “The Merry Milkmaid,” “Blew Cap,” “Now the Fight’s Done” and “Amarillis” composed by John Playford and performed by Philip Serna. Dr Serna also runs the fantastic nonprofit Viols in our Schools which is dedicated to bringing Early Music to a wide audience. Want to help us “make history”? Become a Patron or Donate here! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

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0:29.8

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0:32.5

A subscription box inspiring girls to believe

0:35.3

that they can be and do anything.

0:38.7

Real women make the best heroes and every month they deliver them to your front door. Hi Olivia. Hi Katie. Today I want

0:48.5

you to harness your imagination. Ooh. Okay. Ready? Imagine this. It's the 1680s, Bath, England. Oh! And it's a walled city. It's got a

1:01.5

medieval wall all the way around it, and it's got an impressive Gothic cathedral right in the

1:07.0

middle. Which is my favorite. Yeah, Bath Abbey. So surrounding Bath Abbey, there are

1:13.6

little alleys and winding streets all around. The city is, it still has its medieval infrastructure.

1:21.3

So there's no sewers, there's no plumbing, there are no landfills. So when you have to throw

1:27.1

stuff out, like all stuff, I mean all stuff,

1:32.5

does that make sense? Yes, yes, yes, I know. Okay. Stuff. Yes. Stuff. Yes. Stuff that happens.

...

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