Barefoot contessa husband gay

Ina Garten gets candid on separation from husband Jeffrey: He ‘expected a wife that would form dinner’

At one point in time, Ina Garten needed to add certain ingredients into the mix to make her marriage serve .

The Food Network celestial body, 76, who has been married to her husband, Jeffrey Garten, for 56 years, detailed their one-time separation and near-divorce in the 1970s in her upcoming memoir, “Be Ready When the Luck Happens.”

Ina was working overtime running the specialty food store that would later snap her to stardom, the Barefoot ­Contessa, but Jeffrey, 77, “expected a wife that would make dinner,” she told People on Tuesday.

“There were certain roles that we played, and I found them really annoying,” she continued. “I felt that if I just hit the pause button, I would find his attention.”

Ina decided to quit her job in the White House, where she and Jeffrey both worked, to run the Barefoot Contessa full-time. Jeffrey stayed behind in Washington, DC, and visited the Hamptons on weekends.

Ina recognized how the dynamic shifted after that.

“When I bought Barefoot Contessa, I shattered our traditional roles —­ took a baseball bat to them and left them

Ina Garten recalls asking husband for separation in new memoir: 'I needed that freedom'

Ina Garten opens up for the first time in her new memoir, "Be Ready When the Luck Happens," about a challenging period in her marriage to husband Jeffrey Garten.

In an excerpt from the memoir shared by People on Tuesday, Ina Garten recalled the period after she quit her job at the White House, where she and Jeffrey Garten were both working at the time, to scamper Barefoot Contessa, then a specialty diet store in Westhampton Beach, New York.

"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 reflect about anything else. There was no expectation about who got home from work first and what they should do, because I never got place from work!"

She wrote that when her husband came to visit her in the Hamptons on the weekends, she thought of him as "a distraction."

"I didn't pay enough attention

Unless you're a blogger (or race some other kind of website), you might not realize that our analytics software tells us the search terms that you (my amazing readers) enter into Google, and which lead you to this blog. Though the majority are completely innocuous (usually recipe or ingredient questions), I'm always amazed at the weird ones that seem to approach up again and again.

So, I decided I'd just upload and answer them here. You ask. I answer.

Enjoy!

Q: Is Ina Garten's husband Jeffrey gay?
A:No, Ina Garten's husband Jeffrey is NOT gay. In fact, any right fans of the Barefoot Contessa will have already known this just by watching the adoring way that he looks at Ina whenever she serves him one of his favorite meals. While Ina does seem to have an above-average number of gay male friends who expend time at her house, I'm fairly certain that Jeffrey is not one of them.

Q: Why is Ina Garten's husband Jeffrey always away on business?
A: You'll notice this more in rerun episodes of the Barefoot Contessa because up until 2005, Jeffrey was the dean of the Yale School of Management and spent much of his day in Connecticut (they have a home in Southport), only coming to the

The Untold Truth Of Ina Garten's Husband, Jeffrey

For Ina Garten's fans, the story of Jeffrey Garten's life might contain begun the night he spied her on campus of Dartmouth University, not as a scholar, but the 15-year-old younger sister of a friend. "Look at that girl, isn't she beautiful?" he said of Ina Rosenberg (via Food Network). But he had a life before he set eyes on his future wife, and most of what we know comes from an interview he granted to Johns Hopkins Magazine, which was published in 2016.

Garten was born into a military family, the younger of two boys. His father might include been low-key, but the elder Garten, who passed away in 2015, was a decorated military veteran who served across three wars and picked up a number of medals, including a Distinguished Service Cross, three Silver Stars, four Bronze Stars, five Purple Hearts, the Legion of Merit, two Joint Commendation Medals, and two Air Medals. Garten says he remained in the shadowy about his father's own military career and his heroism until much later, which is no surprise, because as he said in 2016, "Anyone who came into our property, if they didn't know he was in the military, they would own never known he was t