Ina Garten Says Her Childhood Is the Reason She Didn’t Want Kids: ‘It Was Nothing I Wanted to Recreate’ (2024)

Ina Garten is discovering how her past affected her future.

During a BBC News interview with presenter Katty Kay at her East Hampton, N.Y. home, the Food Network star opened up about why she never had children.

"Did you know you couldn't do what you wanted to do if you'd had them?" Kay asked.

“I think it’s much harder. [But] I don’t think that’s why I made the decision,” Garten responded.

Garten, who married husband Jeffrey nearly 55 years ago when she was 20 years old, said that her own childhood is the main reason why she didn't want to expand her family.

“I’m actually writing a memoir right now and it’s kind of looking back at my childhood. It was nothing I wanted to recreate,” she shared. “And I’m always looking forward to look back and realized a lot of my decisions were based on my childhood. And so I think that was the motivating factor.”

She then added: “And Jeffrey and I were just so happy together.”

Ina Garten Says Her Childhood Is the Reason She Didn’t Want Kids: ‘It Was Nothing I Wanted to Recreate’ (1)

She then shared advice, particularly for fans in their twenties, about big decisions and milestones in life.

“Everybody wants to know, ‘Where am I going to end up?’ Forget where you’re going to end up. You don’t know where you’re going to end up," she said. "All you know is that if you jump in the pond and you splash around, while you’re there you’re going to go, ‘Oh that’s really interesting over there. I think I’ll follow it there.’ And see where it brings you."

The cookbook author has been candid about her childhood in the past. In 2021, she appeared on an episode of Al Roker's podcast, Cooking Up a Storm, where she revealed that despite her profession, she wasn't allowed to be in the kitchen or cook while growing up.

Ina Garten Says Her Childhood Is the Reason She Didn’t Want Kids: ‘It Was Nothing I Wanted to Recreate’ (2)

"I don't know, I think my mother just wanted me in my room and she wanted the kitchen to herself," the Barefoot Contessa star said of her late mom, Florence. "She said, 'It's your job to study, it's my job to cook. Get out of the kitchen.' So I kind of always wanted to do it."

Instead, Garten taught herself how to cook by reading Julia Child's Mastering the Art of French Cooking and practicing every night. "At some point, I thought, 'I want to do this for my work and not just for fun,'" she said.

Ina Garten Says Her Childhood Is the Reason She Didn’t Want Kids: ‘It Was Nothing I Wanted to Recreate’ (3)

Garten told Roker that what she didn’t receive as a child is what she wanted to give as an adult in her career.

"I think what I was craving as a child was connecting with people and I felt that if you feed them, they always show up and you have a good time together," she explained on the show. "That was the connection I loved so, I kept doing it over and over again."

Back in 2017, the home cook explained during an episode of Katie Couric's podcast Next Question, that along with being banned from cooking, her mother, who was a dietician, would even restrict foods from her diet.

"My mother was obsessive about food," she said at the time. "So we weren't allowed any carbs, we weren't allowed any butter. We had margarine. And her idea of a great dessert was an apple."

She joked that her career was "the ultimate rebellion" against her mother.

The full interview with Ina Garten is available on YouTubeand anaudio versionis available on all major podcast platforms. New episodes of "Influential with Katty Kay" are available weekly on the BBC News channel, YouTube and across all major podcast platforms.

Ina Garten Says Her Childhood Is the Reason She Didn’t Want Kids: ‘It Was Nothing I Wanted to Recreate’ (2024)

FAQs

What did Ina Garten go to college for? ›

At 15, she met her future husband Jeffrey Garten, on a trip to visit her brother at Dartmouth College. After high school, she attended Syracuse University majoring in economics, and later went to George Washington University School of Business.

How did Ina Garten get rich? ›

Garten first became wealthy thanks to real estate. Before becoming famous, she purchased, renovated and flipped old homes, which gave her the funds to buy her original Barefoot Contessa shop. After Barefoot Contessa closed, she retained ownership of the property, garnering income from new tenants.

Did Ina Garten ever want children? ›

Ina Garten is opening up about her decision not to have kids. During a recent appearance on Julia Louis-Dreyfus' podcast "Wiser Than Me," the Food Network star got candid about having "no interest in having children" and how her husband Jeffrey Garten has been supportive of her choice.

Did Ina and Jeffrey get divorced? ›

The Food Network star and her husband have been married for over 50 years. Ina Garten, 76, has called her husband Jeffrey Garten the "love of my life" — and he seems to feel the exact same way.

Is Ina Garten religious? ›

Garten is Jewish by birth and heritage, as is her husband, but rarely refers to her religion and ethnicity, though they are showcased through the inclusion of classic Jewish cooking in her television show and cookbooks, when she makes such dishes as rugelach, challah, and brisket.

How much is Ina Garten's husband worth? ›

Ina husband, Jeffrey, is also a financial powerhouse. According to Celebritynetworth.com, Jeffrey is worth $100 million, mostly thanks to his former jobs as managing director of Lehman Brothers and Blackstone Group.

Who is the richest chef in the world? ›

Alan Wong takes the top spot as the world's wealthiest chef by a long shot, with a jaw-dropping estimated net worth of $1.1 billion (£870m).

Does Ina Garten have an MBA? ›

Ina Garten once worked in the White House and worked her way up, which eventually put her in charge of writing the nuclear budget for the United States. She also managed to earn her MBA from George Washington University at the same time.

What did Ina Garten do before she became a chef? ›

For over 20 years, Ina Garten has shared her comforting and foolproof recipes with the world through her beloved cookbooks and "Barefoot Contessa" show. But before becoming a Food Network star, Garten wrote budgets at the White House and ran a Hamptons grocery store. Here's her incredible life story.

Is Jeffrey Garten still at Yale? ›

Jeffrey E. Garten (born October 29, 1946) is an American economist, author, businessman, and former government official who is Dean Emeritus at the Yale School of Management, where he teaches a variety of courses on global economy.

Did Barefoot Contessa go to culinary school? ›

She says it's just in her DNA. The rest is history: She didn't attend cooking school or learn from a grandmother, but she picked up skills out of necessity while running her specialty food store, Barefoot Contessa.

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