Christina shares her stories of growing up in a multi-cultural food home and what she learned and was inspired by before working in TV with Martha Stewart and other food lifestyle titans. Nick Carter (Host - Market Wagon) (00:01): I think you're gonna love listening in to this conversation I had with Christina Deyo. She was my guest on this next episode of More Than A Mile. Christina is an Emmy award-winning producer of cooking shows and segments for Martha Stewart, Rosie O'Donnell, Emerald Lagasse and more. She now runs Cook n Craft Academy near Knoxville. And this is a great opportunity for me and you to learn from her amazing food experiences and about her love of supporting local food. Enjoy listening in to the conversation. Nick Carter (Host - Market Wagon) (00:31): Welcome to More Than A Mile, a local food podcast from Market Wagon, focused on connecting you to local food through farmer stories from across America. I'm Nick Carter, your host, a farmer and CEO and co-founder of Market Wagon. We are your online farmers market with a mission to enable food producers to thrive in their local and regional markets. Food is so much more than just nutrients and calories. It's actually the fabric that holds us together. And I look forward to crafting a generational quilt of farmer stories and experiences, the victories and challenges of individuals, families, and teams doing their part to help democratize food in America. Thanks for joining me for this episode of More Than A Mile, and thank you for buying local food. It's one critical step in making an investment in food for future generations. Nick Carter (Host - Market Wagon) (01:21): My guest today is Christina Deyo and I'm excited to talk about her business Cook n Craft Academy down near Knoxville. And guess some stories sounds like we're gonna get a lot of good stories of about the background that led up to this. So I'm looking forward to this welcome, Christina. Christina Deyo (Cook n Craft Academy) (01:40): Well, hello, Nick. Thank you so much for having me. Nick Carter (Host - Market Wagon) (01:43): You're an Emmy award winner--eight time. You teach kids and adults how to cook but now we can also buy your food on Market Wagon. So there's a lot of ground to cover and I'm gonna start all the way from the beginning though. You're--can you tell me a little bit more about your family background? Where did your cooking come from? Is that is that from history? Family? Christina Deyo (Cook n Craft Academy) (02:07): Yes. Mom and dad both cook. So my dad is Italian and he learned cooking from his mom. And so every Sunday I would be sitting with my dad watching him make homemade pasta, homemade sauce, meatballs you name it. It's great. I always say like, I've had the best of all worlds because yeah, you know, I've got the great delicious Italian food and then my mom is Slovak. So I've got the stuffed cabbage, the pierogi and the thing I love about you know, their recipes and how they've taught them to me is I feel like it has kind of linked me to relatives in the past that I've never even met. You know, it's a generational thing. It's a link to our history is, you know, those recipes just as like, what's your favorite dish that you had growing up? Nick Carter (Host - Market Wagon) (03:05): Me? Christina Deyo (Cook n Craft Academy) (03:06): Yes. Nick Carter (Host - Market Wagon) (03:06): Something called hamburger rice casserole, which I've learned as an adult--it's one of those Campbell's soup can dump recipe, things that was basically made up and invented by the Campbell Soup Company in the fifties to try and sell their stuff. Christina Deyo (Cook n Craft Academy) (03:22): Wow, and sometimes those are the best ones, right? Nick Carter (Host - Market Wagon) (03:24): Oh, it's just loaded with fat and sodium and it's just fantastic. Christina Deyo (Cook n Craft Academy) (03:29): There you go! Nick Carter (Host - Market Wagon) (03:29): There's a lot of people that grew up in, you know, Midwest America, that those seem like the good old family recipes, like green bean casserole, a classic one. And they're inventions of our industrial food, you know, they don't have, they're not really rooted in the history like what you're talking about--coming across from the old world. Traditions passed down from generation to generation. So... Christina Deyo (Cook n Craft Academy) (03:54): But now that recipe that you love and you maybe make now for dinner, I'm sure it's something your children will love or do love and you know, years from now, when they have maybe kids of their own, they're going to make it and share it with their kids and so on and so on. Yeah. Nick Carter (Host - Market Wagon) (04:13): Yeah. For all levels allow them to, sure. Christina Deyo (Cook n Craft Academy) (04:16): Yeah. Nick Carter (Host - Market Wagon) (04:17): So I I'd have to ask my mom where she even got that recipe. I should do that. Christina Deyo (Cook n Craft Academy) (04:20): Yes, ...