Ida Cogswell Bailey Allen (January 30, 1885 – July 16, 1973)[1] was an American chef and author who was once popularly known as "The Nation's Homemaker,"[2] writing more than 50
cookbooks.[3] She was described as "The original domestic goddess" by antique cookbook experts Patricia Edwards and Peter Peckham.[4]
In 1924 Allen was food editor of the Sunday New York American. By 1928 she was hosting a regular daytime radio show which expanded to two hours the following year. She not only performed on the show, she also produced and sold her own advertising; she was a pioneer in selling spot advertising rather than having a single company sponsor a show. The program ended in 1932, at which time she began a syndicated cooking show on the
Columbia Broadcasting System.[7][8] She became television's first female food host on Mrs. Allen and the Chef.[4][9]
She once lived atop
400 Madison Avenue,
New York City where visitors were able to see the "latest developments in homemaking", and could watch her staff develop and test new recipes for cooking.[9] A 1932 promotional book she wrote for
Coca-Cola, When You Entertain, was so popular 375,000 copies were sold in under six months.[11]
^
abDeLong, Thomas A. (1996). Radio Stars: An Illustrated Biographical Dictionary of 953 Performers, 1920 through 1960. McFarland & Company, Inc.
ISBN978-0-7864-2834-2. P. 9.
^Kathleen Morgan Drowne; Patrick Huber (2004).
The 1920s. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 70.
ISBN978-0313320132. Retrieved 7 November 2012.