Current:Home > StocksMartha Stewart Claims Ina Garten Was "Unfriendly" Amid Prison Sentence -WealthMindset Learning
Martha Stewart Claims Ina Garten Was "Unfriendly" Amid Prison Sentence
View
Date:2025-04-14 15:06:28
Details are defrosting on Martha Stewart and Ina Garten's storied friendship.
While the pair's relationship goes back over three decades, Martha recently revealed that they had a bump in the road about 20 years ago when she went to prison for charges connected to insider trading.
"When I was sent off to Alderson Prison, she stopped talking to me," the Martha Stewart Living creator told The New Yorker for a Sept. 6 story, referencing her five-month prison stint that began in 2004. "I found that extremely distressing and extremely unfriendly."
However, Ina "firmly" denied her version of events to the magazine, maintaining that the pair simply lost touch after Martha began spending less time at her Hamptons home nearby and more time at her new property upstate in Bedford, New York.
Regardless of the true reasoning for their temporary rift, Martha's publicist told The New Yorker that she is "not bitter at all and there’s no feud" between the cooking icons.
In fact, both Martha and Ina have been effusive about one another in recent years.
"I think she did something really important, which is that she took something that wasn’t valued, which is home arts, and raised it to a level that people were proud to do it and that completely changed the landscape,” Ina told TIME of Martha in 2017. “I then took it in my own direction, which is that I’m not a trained professional chef, cooking is really hard for me — here I am 40 years in the food business, it’s still hard for me."
It was Martha who gave the Food Network star her first big break, too. The same year she purchased a home near Ina's in the Hamptons, she included a writeup of Ina's popular local food store, The Barefoot Contessa. She would later connect her to Chip Gibson, who published Ina's first cookbook of the same name.
Chip recalled Martha's obsession with Ina's cooking at the time, saying she was "overcome" by her desire to stop into the East Hampton store to satisfy her sweet tooth.
"We were in a gigantic black Suburban,” he told The New Yorker. "And suddenly she veered almost crashingly to the curb and said, ‘I’ve got to get lemon squares.’"
Her apparent rift with Martha isn't the only bombshell to come out about Ina's past recently. In an excerpt from her upcoming memoir Be Ready When the Luck Happens—to be released on Oct. 1—the cookbook author revealed that she nearly divorced her husband, Jeffrey Garten, in their decades-long marriage.
"When I bought Barefoot Contessa, I shattered our traditional roles—took a baseball bat to them and left them in pieces," she wrote. "While I was still cooking, cleaning, shopping, managing at the store, I was doing it as a businesswoman, not a wife. My responsibilities made it impossible for me to even think about anything else. There was no expectation about who got home from work first and what they should do, because I never got home from work!"
Ina added, "I thought about it a lot, and at my lowest point, I wondered if the only answer would be to get a divorce. I loved Jeffrey and didn’t want to shock—or hurt—him, so I’d start by suggesting we pause for a separation."
Ultimately, Jeffrey agreed to go to therapy and the couple learned some tools to help them navigate through tough times.
"Six weeks passed. We talked, we listened, and more important, we heard each other when we aired our concerns,” she continued. “Moving forward, we could be equals who took care of each other. It wouldn’t happen overnight, but if we worked toward the same goal, we could change things together."
For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News AppveryGood! (6)
Related
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Surfer Caroline Marks took off six months from pro tour. Now she's better than ever.
- US Open: Aryna Sabalenka beats Emma Navarro to reach her second consecutive final in New York
- Missouri judge says abortion-rights measure summary penned by GOP official is misleading
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Man who killed 118 eagles in years-long wildlife trafficking ring set for sentencing
- How Travis Kelce does with and without Taylor Swift attending Kansas City Chiefs games
- Bachelor Nation’s Maria Georgas Addresses Jenn Tran and Devin Strader Fallout
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Horoscopes Today, September 5, 2024
Ranking
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- An Amish woman dies 18 years after being severely injured in a deadly schoolhouse shooting
- Husband of missing Virginia woman to head to trial in early 2025
- Markey and Warren condemn Steward’s CEO for refusing to comply with a Senate subpoena
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- Selling Sunset's Chrishell Stause Says She Has Receipts on Snake Nicole Young
- New Mexico starts building an abortion clinic to serve neighboring states
- Why Director Lee Daniels Describes Empire as Absolutely the Worst Experience
Recommendation
The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
Marc Staal, Alex Goligoski announce retirements after 17 NHL seasons apiece
Freshman classes provide glimpse of affirmative action ruling’s impact on colleges
Gary Oldman talks 'Slow Horses' Season 4 and how he chooses roles 'by just saying no'
Grammy nominee Teddy Swims on love, growth and embracing change
Rich Homie Quan, the Atlanta rapper known for trap jams like ‘Type of Way,’ dies at 34
Review: 'The Perfect Couple' is Netflix's dumbed-down 'White Lotus'
Caity Simmers, an 18-year-old surfing phenom, could pry record from all-time great