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Cooks love Ina Garten. The recipes in her 13 bestselling cookbooks are beautifully photographed, produce delicious dishes and don’t require a fully stocked commercial kitchen. Her television shows embody what’s so special about being around a table, as she invites loved ones to share the dishes she makes with her audience. And she possesses an intuitive sense for what real people want to eat, whether plating food for to-go lines at the original Barefoot Contessa store or assuring time-strapped home cooks that, really, store-bought items are just fine.
“When I had my first book contract, the idea I started with was very specific,” Garten, 76, tells AARP. “I wanted you to be able to open a book and say, ‘That looks delicious.’ Then I wanted you to look at the recipe and say, ‘I can actually make that.’ And that hasn’t really changed.”
Now the beloved cook has a new memoir, Be Ready When the Luck Happens, a candid look at the many side plots and surprises that helped set her course. “Writing a cookbook is simple compared to this,” Garten says. “Working on the memoir was hard. It required me to really go back and think about where I came from and how I challenged myself and why.”
Battling decades-old insecurity
In the book, Garten opens up about the abuse she suffered from her late parents, citing their constant criticism as a key source of insecurity even all these years later. “The negative voice in my head is my mother saying, ‘You think it’s a good idea, but it’ll turn out badly,’ ” Garten explains. “I don’t think you ever get rid of it. But now I’m diligent about making sure that when I hear that voice, I counter it. I go, ‘Oh, that’s her voice. It’s not me. What do I think?’ ”
But quieting the cruel voice in her head has been an ongoing process. Lately, for example, Garten starts each morning listing five things she knows she does really well. “At first, I thought, Well, that’ll get me through a day, maybe a day and a half,” she says, laughing. “But what I found is that over a period of several weeks, I could always think of five more things, big or small. When I get anxious about my ability, I sometimes go to that list.”
Community is another key driver for Garten. “I surround myself with people who are happy and positive and smart and funny, and we support each other,” she says. “That alone gives you a sense of confidence.”
Perhaps the most celebrated of those supporters is her husband, Jeffrey, who takes a starring role in Be Ready When the Luck Happens. The pair met when Garten was still in high school; he spotted her out a library window when she was visiting her brother at Dartmouth, and he wrote to her, asking if he might be able to take her out sometime. Garten was 20 when the couple married, and his approach to life (a perspective she describes as “Just try it!”) would shape her business trajectory as much as her personal one.
“If he and I want two different things that seem disparate, his whole goal is to figure out a situation so that everybody is happy,” Garten says. His outlook became a key influence in her approach to negotiating. “It’s not about winning. It’s about making sure everybody gets what they want,” she says.
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