Jennifer Garner to Appear on Ina Garten’s Food Network Show
By Movieguide® Contributor
The Food Network will soon premiere the fourth season of Ina Garten’s show BE MY GUEST WITH INA GARTEN.
This season, the chef will bring on several special guests, including actress Jennifer Garner, to whip up some delicious recipes.
“It’s a perfect day for Ina when her friend Jennifer Garner joins her at the barn for cooking and conversation. Since Jennifer mentions she has trouble nailing her grandmother’s cornbread recipe, Ina troubleshoots with her incredible Brown Butter Skillet Cornbread. After discussing family, love and childhood memories, they head into the kitchen for a pizza collaboration to create the ultimate Garner and Garten Pizza and Jen’s Pizza Crackers,” a summary of the first episode reads.
Other guests include astronaut Nicole Mann, culinary entrepreneur Danny Meyer, journalist Frank Bruni, actress Emily Mortimer and editor David Remnick. In each episode, Garten and her guest cook up recipes with special meanings behind them,
“I learn so much about my guests when they visit and viewers will too,” Garten said. “There’s nothing better than chatting with interesting people over great food – each episode is filled with unexpected stories, laughs and inspiration.”
“Ina is beloved by her guests and our audience,” Food Network chief Betsy Ayala added. “These one-on-one visits at her barn treat viewers to intimate conversations and entertaining as only Ina can do it – she is truly a singular talent.”
Along with BE MY GUEST, Garten is known for her show THE BAREFOOT CONTESSA, her cookbooks and her website that provide people with tasty meal ideas. “There’s nothing like a home-cooked meal to make everyone feel happy and loved,” she writes.
The six-episode series will premiere April 21 at 12 p.m. ET on The Food Network.
Movieguide® previously reported on Garner:
In a recent interview with Harper’s Bazaar, actress Jennifer Garner shared some unexpected beauty advice she gives to her two teenage daughters.
“Look in the mirror less, obsess less, and look at the rest of the world to see what you could be using your time for instead,” she said.
Garner recognizes that the current cultural obsession with the self causes people to focus on their appearances more.
“We all look at our faces more than people used to,” Garner shared. “It doesn’t do you any good.”
In a world where people “obsess over changes or how to fix something on your face,” the mom of three encourages women to “be cautious when it comes to injecting anything into your face.”