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Posts by The Pantry Historian

Every pantry item is an archive if you know how to look.

2 months ago 1 0 0 0

Most people think Jell-O is a children’s dessert.
But in 1962, lime Jell-O with cabbage was sophisticated entertaining.

The box printed recipes for suspending vegetables in neon gelatin.

Convenience and domestic virtue, reconciled in one wobbling dish.

#PantryHistorian #MaterialCulture

2 months ago 1 0 1 0
Preview
Pantry Organization Through the Decades: What 100 Years Taught Us The way you organize your pantry right now—grouped by type, labels facing forward, oldest items in front—didn't exist 100 years ago. Someone had to invent it.

Pantry organization is cultural history disguised as “tips.”
Depression inventories → wartime ration shelves → supermarket categories → Costco deep pantry → Pinterest containers → today’s “use-first” zones.
Full essay: tinyurl.com/pantryhistor...

3 months ago 1 0 0 0

@pantryhistorian.art
I stepped into a room full of historians, archivists, and material culture researchers this week.

Many list degrees and institutions.
I list stories, classrooms, and pantries.

Different paths.
Same devotion to how everyday objects carry history.

So I stay.
I listen.
I build.

3 months ago 1 0 0 0

Before we enter the pantry, we gather in the classroom.

A new story arrives Tuesday—fittingly, on my birthday. #ThePantryArchive #amwriting

3 months ago 3 0 0 0

It’s easier to read pantries backward than forward.

What looks like preference is often anticipation — storage arranged to prevent interruption, not express identity.

3 months ago 0 0 0 0

A pantry with extra staples doesn’t always signal abundance.
Sometimes it signals rehearsal — a learned response to uncertainty.

3 months ago 0 0 0 0

I’m interested in pantries as historical records.

Food storage is rarely treated as evidence, but it quietly reflects labor, trust, fear, convenience, and change.

I’m writing notes and longer pieces about that here.

3 months ago 1 0 0 0