I Followed a 1940s Wartime Meal Plan for 24 Hours...

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  • čas přidán 7. 06. 2024
  • I found this amazing cookbook at an antique store, and when I saw that it was from the World War 2 era, I new I had to get it. And when I saw that it had a wartime meal plan at the back of the book, I knew I had to try it out for y'all!
    Sourdough Sandwich Bread Recipe: www.butteredsideupblog.com/so...
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    PHOTOS AND VIDEOS USED:
    It Happened in the Kitchen Video: • It Happened in the Kit...
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    ARTICLES:
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    The-toast.net article: the-toast.net/2013/12/09/brie...
    TIME STAMPS:
    0:00 Introduction
    1:13 Cooking Breakfast
    3:58 Trying Breakfast
    5:36 Cleanup and Getting Ready
    6:45 Cooking Lunch
    10:59 Trying Lunch
    13:16 Cleanup and Rest
    14:17 Cooking Supper
    17:58 Testing Supper
    22:10 Final Thoughts
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Komentáře • 2K

  • @susangoodman4716
    @susangoodman4716 Před 7 měsíci +2712

    I am 81 years old; I was born in 1942. That’s the diet I ate, that my mother cooked. We often ate cream of wheat for breakfast. My parents drank instant coffee in the morning, and after supper. My mother did not waste any food. We were encouraged to clean our plates “because of the starving Armenians.“ My mother was an excellent cook. After the war she got top cooking magazines and made those dishes for us. We ate three meals a day, and we all sat down together at supper and had big discussions. My husband and I copied that pattern with our sons and they are copying it with their children. I think we have healthy children because of the attention they got at meals.

    • @web2buzz
      @web2buzz Před 6 měsíci +91

      What a wonderful picture you paint ❤ I'm a bit younger than you are, my two boys have just finished university, and I was brought up in a very similar way. When I had a family of my own, I made sure we sat down together to a home cooked meal (from scratch) every night and we would spend mealtimes catching up with each other's days. I believe that this is the reason they turned out to be well-adjusted young men who value family life.

    • @analogueman123456787
      @analogueman123456787 Před 6 měsíci +34

      Good for you girl!
      There's always something positive to be learned from the past. 😀

    • @PoliticalRegality
      @PoliticalRegality Před 5 měsíci +20

      Perfect! God Bless you and your family

    • @morganvillas6436
      @morganvillas6436 Před 5 měsíci +28

      Yes we make sure dinner is spent together. No electronics are allowed and we talk.

    • @apace903
      @apace903 Před 5 měsíci +33

      Im. 73 and have my Mom's war cook books.. Thank you😊

  • @jewelgaither1504
    @jewelgaither1504 Před 9 měsíci +1707

    I have that same cookbook! It belonged to my mother-in-law and she passed it to me. She said she and her sister used to look at the little petit fours inside the front cover and dream of what they would taste like. For her 80th birthday, my daughter gave a tea party for her with four generations of "ladies" -- the youngest being just two years old-- there and we made petit fours as part of the menu. That was such a blessing to experience. She passed away just before her 81st birthday. We have lots of pictures and memories from that day.

    • @hrhtreeoflife4815
      @hrhtreeoflife4815 Před 8 měsíci +23

    • @msbowling5
      @msbowling5 Před 8 měsíci +42

      I have that cookbook, too, also from my mother-in- law. Yes, the petit fours and other illustrations are gorgeous. I am amazed that so many women still own this book.

    • @MyNameHere101
      @MyNameHere101 Před 8 měsíci +42

      I can't imagine that feeling of fulfillment for her. Imagine looking across your DNA being passed down three generations while eating a cookie from your childhood.

    • @jewelgaither1504
      @jewelgaither1504 Před 8 měsíci +28

      @@MyNameHere101 It was a blessing for all of us. Our granddaughters still look at those pictures and remember their great-grandmother.

    • @user-el1be5ki9c
      @user-el1be5ki9c Před 8 měsíci +11

      I found mine at an auction. Great book.

  • @kathryncooper4001
    @kathryncooper4001 Před 7 měsíci +237

    I was born in 1949 and was basically raised on war ration-type foods. Mother fried liver with onions in bacon fat, but I still hated it. Instead of a jellied tomato aspic, we had sliced tomatoes on lettuce with a little mayo smeared on it (no pots or pans to wash). We never had such large meals -- breakfast was Cream of Wheat, oatmeal, or grits with eggs most days, sometimes a little bacon. Lunch was a piece of fruit and a sandwich, usually made from leftovers (again, no cooking utensils to clean up). Supper was always a meat, a starch, a green vegetable, and a salad. My favorite dessert was gingerbread topped with applesauce. Housing was almost impossible to find during the war, so it's likely that most women had relatives or friends living with them to help with the cooking and cleaning. Dishes take forever to wash, but the task goes pretty quickly if two or three people are engaged in the cleanup. Since you wanted to be 1940s authentic ... I don't remember seeing plastic wrap until the 1960s -- we used only wax paper before that.

    • @BarryMoreno-zx4dc
      @BarryMoreno-zx4dc Před 2 měsíci +4

      Makes one think of the Jean Arthur film “The More The Merrier,” with Charles Coburn and Lee Bwman.

    • @Desertcrone
      @Desertcrone Před 2 měsíci +8

      I was born in 1947. My Dad liked liver and onions, she cooked it for him, he liked it. She wouldn’t eat liver so she never expected me to eat it.

    • @jessesgirl10
      @jessesgirl10 Před 2 měsíci +2

      My mom made the liver and onions too and it was one of my least favorite meals. However, I preferred it to the cow tongue she would serve with it being all tongue and taste-buds. So gross!

    • @Diestarlyt
      @Diestarlyt Před měsícem +1

      OMG those two things were my favorite things to eat made by my grandma. So good ​@@jessesgirl10

    • @adajanetta1
      @adajanetta1 Před měsícem +3

      @@Desertcrone At our Seniors Community Centre there is a popular cafeteria that serves lunches. The chef advertises Liver and Onions Day a good week in advance. They have more people arrive on that day than any other- more even than during Bridge Tournaments.
      Well cooked- which means not overcooked and NOT PORK - liver is tasty. I prefer mine with bacon but also occasionally make it with rice and "spanish sauce" which is basically tomatoes and green peppers.

  • @novaricos
    @novaricos Před 3 měsíci +171

    my Nova Scotian grandmothothers, both born in 1899 in Rossway, and lived till 1998 and 2000, told me from their experiences of running their homes as boading houses for the summer visitors who loved coming down there, that you always 'clean as you go' or you'll be disappearing beneath an avalache of pots and pans and dishes! lol. When you are bringing water into the house by the bucketfrul from the well out near the back door, you were VERY careful about being economical with it. Not easy to heat enough on the stove for a bit of a bath sit on a Saturday night so you could all be clean for Sunday mornings and church. (hint grandpa has his first, then do one for the children, washing the cleanest boy child first, dirtiest one last! then ladies when everyone else was out of the house!
    And yes , you were constantly turning around from one meal to start the next, but many things were made once a week on 'baking day' and available to be used and enjoyed all week. Each weekday also had its' sacred' allotted tasks, so that things were kept up with, and didn't become overwhelming or get left undone!
    Prune juice was drunk to assist your bowels in 'regularity', raisins were often added to cream of wheat cereal and cooked in to soften, mmmmm. and organ meats (liver often fried with bacon and onions- Mom loved, me- yuck!) were cheaper and a very necessary source of vital nutrients in the days before vitamins were ever heard of.
    Great-grandpa would be up first very early, just before dawn, light or uncover the kitchen stove fire and get it going, make coffee and have some toast or rolls with marmalade, and bring some up to great-grandmother along with the hot water in a pitcher for the washstand in their bedroom and the girl's, so all could wash face and hands comfortably, then he went out to the barn to take are of the animals.
    When he came back in a bit later, she had a great English hearty breakfast ready for themselves and the hired man, so everyone was well fortified to do a good morning's work, her and the girls inside, the men out in the fields, before coming in at noon for the main dinner, and a bit of a rest, and then back out for the afternoon's tasks. Supper was quite a light meal at the end of the day, (not good to load up on heavy food before bed)!
    They loved their life and often talked fondly of its rhythms and joys and accomplishments, and made sure I knew how to do all those things by hand too, including making kitchen grease soap, (beautiful stuff, a lot like Fels Naptha soap in appearance and clean smell!), dip candles, Canadian molasses bread and white bread and rolls and scones, braided rugs and quilts from old clothes (I still have and love, some of the things they made!). Ahhhh, what a wonderful breed, I am so privileged to have had , known, learned from and loved several generations of them all, for so many years. 🥰

    • @user-cn4bj9ut4w
      @user-cn4bj9ut4w Před 2 měsíci +14

      You should write a book complete with instructions on how to do what you know how to do that you mentioned -- and with full-color photos. It might be essential someday for the rest of us. (And no, I'm not joking...)

    • @smpsailor
      @smpsailor Před 2 měsíci +5

      I love this ❤

    • @novaricos
      @novaricos Před 2 měsíci

      You are very kind, but thank heavens there are a wonderful amount of videos on youtube already with many of these things shown, (but might try my hand at one or two of my own also. should be good for a smile at least!)@@user-cn4bj9ut4w

    • @stephanielambert-vt7yo
      @stephanielambert-vt7yo Před 2 měsíci +5

      While growing up my family our mealtimes were breakfast, dinner and supper. I had never heard dinner called lunch until I went to school. Now everyone calls supper dinner also.

    • @MindfulMusings1
      @MindfulMusings1 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Wow, what a blessing to have family like that and learn so many useful skills!
      I 2nd the book idea. Most of what Ive learned has been self taught! I could use some tips. Lol

  • @rwg5167
    @rwg5167 Před 8 měsíci +534

    The gelatine (collagen), liver, prunes, and molasses, all are rich in various vitamins and minerals. Using these ingredients helped stop gap the shortage of nutrients that comes from food shortages.

    • @_letstartariot
      @_letstartariot Před 3 měsíci +65

      She keeps mentioning the lack of protein, but I think it’s logical that they didn’t get enough of it considering it was wartime. So they had to make up the calorie deficit with cheaper calories.

    • @byakurenhoujuu
      @byakurenhoujuu Před 3 měsíci

      Were beans/legumes in shortage during wartime? Like the peas she had can count as protein.@@_letstartariot

    • @anetteholm496
      @anetteholm496 Před 2 měsíci +27

      Yes, liver is very high nutrients and gelatin/ collagen is very good for your bones & skin!

    • @user-cn4bj9ut4w
      @user-cn4bj9ut4w Před 2 měsíci +5

      I wondered about that. . . My great grandmother, who was a starving child and young girl in England, would wait outside the back alley door of the local pub and gather the wine dregs which she took home and mixed with crushed eggshells, used coffee grounds and a little Geritol. It's what kept her (nutritionally) from starving. Better stock up on gelatin, prunes, and molasses. I don't think there's a way to "can" or preserve liver long-term in case of last days food shortages.

    • @carriem7832
      @carriem7832 Před 2 měsíci +12

      Really….if you’re hungry anything tastes good.
      My Mom soaked the liver in milk to tenderize it…..drained and simmered with onions and butter ….just till not pink……served with mashed potatoes and gravy….good.
      Mind over matter…..grind the liver and add to hamburger meals for nutrition……

  • @-LivingProof
    @-LivingProof Před 8 měsíci +589

    Those tiny voices in the background are so sweet! Complimenting mama's cooking, telling her how much they like it. Made me smile. 😊

  • @consciousobserver629
    @consciousobserver629 Před 5 měsíci +125

    My grandma was born in 1930. She always served jam on toast at pretty much every meal. They ate a lot of fiber is what I noticed overall whenever I would visit. I always loved mealtimes at grannies. She passed at age 102. At age 94, she had been shoveling snow still. :) She was an active woman and kept a garden that she often ate from. We could learn from previous generations for sure. :)

    • @eatiegourmet1015
      @eatiegourmet1015 Před 4 měsíci +12

      wait... so she passed in ...2032? (sorry, I'm a bit of a math nerd, too)

    • @deRose03
      @deRose03 Před 2 měsíci +3

      1930+102=2032 Hmmm...😁

    • @rhondabitler5474
      @rhondabitler5474 Před 3 dny

      My Grammy always had jam or apple butter spread for bread.

  • @Mediocre00Rebel
    @Mediocre00Rebel Před 2 měsíci +15

    Something my dad taught me is clean as you cook. Soon as you finished with a bowl, wash it. Knife, wash it. Wipe stuff up as you go too. Just take the time to wash 1-2 dishes at a time and you won't be left with a ton at the end. It's helped me tremendously.

  • @boyang234
    @boyang234 Před 8 měsíci +809

    My wife's grandma lived through the war and she's still alive! FYI with those books there's a lot that is not written or left out, it was just assumed that you knew because it was common knowledge at the time. So yes they buttered their toast, esp if they were rural families!. Also those menus were for you to pick and choose from and then to make your own. So you could season the bland foods to your liking with whatever you had in your pantry. The best way to do these kinds of videos is to ask an elder what they did back then and ask them to look through the book with you and go from there!

    • @BeccaBearSc
      @BeccaBearSc Před 8 měsíci +43

      I would adore, truly adore talking to her. Hearing her stories.. maybe get her to hand write a few of her favorite recipes

    • @boyang234
      @boyang234 Před 8 měsíci +35

      @@BeccaBearSc unfortunately she can't see anymore, but we do have copies of her fave recipes and cookbooks with her notes in them. She's still with it even at her age!

    • @KirbyComicsVids
      @KirbyComicsVids Před 8 měsíci +50

      I mean you say they buttered their toast but I grew up with tales of using bacon grease in place of butter as butter was expensive and even got to try it out that why to get a taste of what it was like in the “olden days”

    • @lisareed5669
      @lisareed5669 Před 8 měsíci +6

      Agree.

    • @jenmatt1923
      @jenmatt1923 Před 8 měsíci +21

      My grandfather is 94 and still going strong! And I agree, I think it would have made for a better video if she'd have done basic research by talking to a few people who grew up during that time. I'm guessing they used a percolator for the coffee? (My grandfather doesn't drink it.)

  • @LadyLocket
    @LadyLocket Před 9 měsíci +967

    I would love to see a comparison between an American housewives wartime recipes and expected food quantities versus a British one in the same year from an American CZcamsrs opinion/research.

    • @alexandrasmith7682
      @alexandrasmith7682 Před 9 měsíci +160

      Agreed! Europeans food shortages were much worse than the US.

    • @billgrandone3552
      @billgrandone3552 Před 8 měsíci

      Yes and those of us living in the country or small towns had the luxury of back yard gardens and lax zoning laws and health regulations where you could raise chickens or one person with a baking oven could bake for the neighborhood. That way you could pool your stamps and everyone get a share of the bread or bisquits. People in the country also had fruit trees, berry and grape vines suspended on wire lengths. And if you knew your way around the woods there were nuts, mushrooms and greens to gather as well as hunting for squirrel , rabbits, and birds. Dandelions were a treat in the spring for salads, wine, and even coffee. Coffee could also be made from chickory. Everyone canned the autumn bounty of apples, peaches, pumpkins.and squashes of all types. Cucumbers and tomatos were made into pickles. And fruit that wasn't canned whole was made into jelly. Whole milk could be churned into butter if you had a farmer who would spare a couple of quarts. @@alexandrasmith7682

    • @michellemacdonald7786
      @michellemacdonald7786 Před 8 měsíci +55

      I too. My one grandma was Canadian, the other from Britain. I have heard from her and my aunts about the austerity of British wartime rationing and making do. But no cookbooks.

    • @PattymacMakes
      @PattymacMakes Před 8 měsíci +101

      Wartime Kitchen and Garden is a wonderful BBC series about life in the countryside of England during the war. It’s very interesting.

    • @CelticStar87
      @CelticStar87 Před 8 měsíci +51

      @@alexandrasmith7682that’s because most of Europe were already in war for 2 years before the US officially got involved. Different areas in the US would see different types of shortages due to the Great Depression and its effects hitting differently in different parts of the country (especially urban vs. rural). Very interesting how global events affect countries differently.

  • @Plasmastorm73_n5evv
    @Plasmastorm73_n5evv Před 4 měsíci +61

    Fun fact about Cream of Wheat: It was first manufactured in the United States in 1893 by wheat millers in Grand Forks, North Dakota and debuted at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois.
    Also Sarah Sundin says: Shortages of butter and oils began early in the war. Most cooking oils came from Pacific lands conquered by the Japanese, and the supply plummeted. Fats were also needed in higher quantities for industrial and military use.
    The Secretary of State of Oregon's website talks about rationing: Even though thousands of items became scarce during the war, only those most critical to the war effort were rationed. Key goods such as sugar, tires, gasoline, meat, coffee, butter, canned goods and shoes came under rationing regulations. Some important items escaped rationing, including fresh fruit and vegetables.
    This would explain why protein was lacking in most meals.
    Jellied salads were popular right up to the mid 1980s My mother made them all the time in the 1970s for parties and family gatherings.
    The Mocha ice box cake is just another name for Tiramisu. If you dip the lady fingers into the coffee first you'll get a much richer and bolder bitterness that you're looking for. ANOTHER FUN FACT: Mocha beans were known for their naturally chocolatey flavor. Hence how Mocha came to be known as chocolate and coffee.

    • @sheab101
      @sheab101 Před 2 měsíci

      This is fascinating! My great grandmother who was born in the mid 1910s used to make tomato aspic and I loooooooooooved it. I remember being hesitant to eat it at first but over time I craved it. She lived until she was 98.

  • @bubbysbub
    @bubbysbub Před 2 měsíci +4

    I have a teeeeeeny tiny run down old 70s kitchen, no dishwasher, and a big family to cook for. One little bit of bench just big enough to prep, no room to serve, so keeping things tidy as I go is sooo important. Running a sink full of scalding hot soapy water is KEY to maintaining a tidy kitchen, which makes EVERYTHING go faster. Wash as you go and put ingredients away again as soon as you've used them. Keeps the process flowing, and usually by the time we've eaten, all that's left to wash is the plates we ate off and a few serving bits. And cooking full meals three times a day actually goes a lot faster once you're used to it. Especially as it's more familiar recipes that are staples, so it's easy to throw the oven on once everyone has been fed brekky, and get your date loaves and banana cake on, right? Then make a lunch, add a baked good, fruit, some extra veg, and you're golden till dinner, repeat. I think it's a mind set, that once you're used to it, your brain just automatically compiles a little to-do list, and I still have plenty of time to wash clothes, clean house, exercise, read, hang out with my fam, do craft, watch youtube or a movie, whatever I want, really. Easier today with better access to a full range of ingredients, and hand mixers certainly help, lols.

  • @SWIdaho2
    @SWIdaho2 Před 8 měsíci +343

    Yep, my mom pretty much spent the day in the kitchen when I was growing up in the 1950's. I was the eldest of four, Mom cut our hair, sewed clothes for the 3 girls, & grew an enormous garden, which we kids helped weed & then helped with canning & freezing the produce. She fixed liver occasionally - yuck! - but that generation ate most anything - had to. One time she bought a beef tongue. I'll never forget seeing it sitting on the counter in it's entirety! Lots better tasting than liver, though. My dad hunted deer every fall, so we had venison in various forms. Mom made homemade cottage cheese once, but it was too sour for a child's taste buds. I do like commercial cottage cheese. Her homemade bread, rolls, pies, cakes, & & cookies were all delicious. My mom has a cookbook that looks similar to the wartime one you found, but I think it may have been published in the 50's. We had "The Robe" with a red cover. My mom is 96 1/2 & lives independently. We are blessed to still have her! Thanks for the fun video & opportunity to reminisce. 🤗

    • @VictoriaEMeredith
      @VictoriaEMeredith Před 8 měsíci +13

      The best thing about tongue is that it’s very tasty, especially spiced like corned beef. The worst thing is that it’s clearly…an enormous blob of dead tongue. With big ol’ taste buds. I prefer my tongue cooked by somebody else. 🤣

    • @gaylegraves7419
      @gaylegraves7419 Před 7 měsíci +12

      My family served tongue prepared that way however they would slice it into cubes- more attractive. My family ate liver as well prepared with the flour and onions. As an adult I had a Greek friend that prepared it amazingly nothing like what my tastebuds were accustomed to. She oneness baked it but it was covered in olive oil and lots of fennel- the fronds and bulb. Simple and unbelievable flavor and tender.

    • @evelinharmannfan7191
      @evelinharmannfan7191 Před 5 měsíci +6

      I loved liver as a child. My family used to fry it in butter with onions and apple slices and some spices. And if I remember correctly, we soaked it in millk overnight, and it had to be REALLY fresh. Served with mashed potatoes, I loved it very much.

    • @Plasmastorm73_n5evv
      @Plasmastorm73_n5evv Před 4 měsíci

      By the time MY mom was a housewife, women were working and TV Dinners were the all the rage...

    • @Plasmastorm73_n5evv
      @Plasmastorm73_n5evv Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@gaylegraves7419 I grew up eating beef tongue, beef heart, and a few other assorted cuts that were non traditional. Still love them to this day.

  • @jamcakes1650
    @jamcakes1650 Před 8 měsíci +137

    This reminds me of my grandmother. She was born in 1913 on a farm in North Dakota, and lived to be 95. My mother was her only child, born in 1939. Growing up, my grandmas house was my second home. I especially loved her kitchen in the early mornings, with the scents of percolating coffee, and toast. She was very frugal,and kept meals (and life in general) pretty simple. I miss her every day.

    • @judith4158
      @judith4158 Před 7 měsíci +6

      Your grandmother and my mother came of age during the Great Depression, they knew everything about making the most of what little they had, then were thrown into a World War when all able men were gone for years. We come from strong women going back to those who settled the land from the East coast west.

    • @dr.eliciarosen-fox1354
      @dr.eliciarosen-fox1354 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I still drink percolated coffee. The coffee of today is just not hot enough. I need to cook my coffee! The instant decaf coffee was sanka. Is that even real coffee?

  • @Nancy-zk9dj
    @Nancy-zk9dj Před 4 měsíci +120

    A way to measure shortening-- for exanpme, for 1 cup of shortening, fill a 2 cup liquid measuring cup with 1 cup of water. Add shortening until the water level reaches 2 cups.
    Not so messy!
    My depression era Mom taught me this ❤

  • @tracebooks
    @tracebooks Před 6 měsíci +39

    This was great! I can remember my grandmas (one born in 1902 and one born in 1912, but both had small children in 1942) and my husband’s grandma (born 1922) all cooking like that. The prune juice. The instant coffee-often Instant Postum, because they couldn’t get actual coffee. And my great-grandma, born 1893. All made these types of dishes!
    One thing: yes, it was a lot of work, but that cookbook assumes three kids. And unless the housewife had had triplets recently, those kids would have helped in the meal prep and cleanup. The girls definitely would have helped with the cooking, even little ones; in some families boys would have as well. And in most families, the kids would be doing the dishes together.
    Also: very likely they would have used a meat grinder/food mill for the liver. Many, if not most, families had these. My mom remembers that her mom would save little bits of leftover meat all week and then put them all through the grinder to make their own lunch meat. She says it was usually pretty good. This is how families would make their own sausages. Up until 1920 or so, 80% of Americans lived rurally, so most people would have owned one. Even city dwellers did before the invention of the electric food processor. They’re easier to clean, but do take some muscle.

    • @cogit8able
      @cogit8able Před 5 měsíci +2

      I still have one. I grind up
      Leftover ham for deviled ham spread.

    • @grandmajane2593
      @grandmajane2593 Před 4 měsíci

      Aha, someone who remember's postum. I remember a jar of postum sitting on the kitchen table. My father must have drank that. Coffee, butter, meat, many things were denied to us on the pretext of sending them to the fighting men overseas. I remember saving the little pieces of foil that may cover a candy bar because that material was used for the war effort. It really was a unique time, I wish I had written more of it down when I remembered it better. I remember we all had to obtain black-out shades because after dark no light was supposed to be seen from our houses. They painted the upper part of car headlights black to reduce the light into the sky. There were German U boats sited off the coast of Maine where I lived, so it must have been frightening for the adults. Most children were secluded from the facts about the war. The prune juice - my mother used to serve my grandfather a little dish of stewed prunes every morning. They came in cans. I think it helped him with his bowels. I refused to eat prunes then. But now I like the taste of them.

    • @denverdubois5835
      @denverdubois5835 Před měsícem

      I have an (English) friend who STILL loves Postum! He's in his 60s and his Granny used to make it. He's never really switched to coffee, lol.

  • @anissaroberts1403
    @anissaroberts1403 Před 7 měsíci +242

    I loved this. ❤
    Some tips I learned from my grandmother [a 1930s thru 60s housewife] - reclaiming counter space is all in how you stack the dishes. She would fill her sink with hot [scalding hot] water at the start of the cooking day. And into that scalding water, the dishes would go. It saved her space and cleaning time. She also had what she called "a disinfecting bucket." A small bucket of water and vinegar, she'd soak some rags in for cleaning the counter between chopping, rolling, etc. That sat on the counter beside the scalding sink water.
    Now, mind you, she had 11 living children and a husband! 13 total people she was cooking 3 meals a day for.
    I still cook like this. Not 3 meals per day, but I clean as I go, stack to conserve space, have my disinfectant bucket at the ready [i add orange oil to my vinegar. Cuts the sharp smell of the vinegar. I keep a quart size mason jar in my fridge filled with orange peels and vinegar. Put it in a brown glass spray bottle, and it works great!]

    • @YT4Me57
      @YT4Me57 Před 7 měsíci +22

      I was born in the 1950s, and that is how I was taught (and still) wash dishes. I fill a pan with the hottest water and dish soap. Every dish gets a good soak before washing, and I wash as I go, stacking them in a dish drainer. Dish washing was my chore as a teenager, and we were a family of four. I'm single now, but I still use that method because I don't have a dishwasher and limited counterspace.

    • @lachouette_et_le_phoque
      @lachouette_et_le_phoque Před 4 měsíci +11

      Why not go for citric acid, if that's something you can buy in a grocery store? Here in the UK it's readily available as a powder with the cleaning supplies, it's a slightly stronger acid than vinegar and does not smell like much at all. I use this all the time for descaling my electric kettle (it also needs heating up to descale properly, but won't smell horrible).

    • @Plasmastorm73_n5evv
      @Plasmastorm73_n5evv Před 4 měsíci +5

      @@lachouette_et_le_phoque Citric acid is not usually sold in grocers here in the US. It's considered a food additive and also used in science labs. You usually have to special order it from restaurant suppliers or scientific chemical companies.

    • @mardigrasqueenofthesouth8847
      @mardigrasqueenofthesouth8847 Před 4 měsíci +6

      just wash as you go, plenty of waiting for stuff to cook, rise or soak lol! I am cooking from 6am to 10pm every darn day, i know what you mean...

    • @lachouette_et_le_phoque
      @lachouette_et_le_phoque Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@Plasmastorm73_n5evv ah, that's too bad!

  • @shelzp7272
    @shelzp7272 Před 8 měsíci +111

    I learned how to cook from that book more than 50 years ago, it’s the one my mom used… 🤷🏻‍♀️ I still have her copy with her handwritten notes.

  • @cranberry420
    @cranberry420 Před 29 dny +2

    My great grandmother lived during the wars, and I remember how she always did everything by hand (jams, juices, canned goods, etc) she never let ANYTHING go to waste. When she was 80, she still used the same pajamas she got when she was 17... (she had newer ones, but she wouldn't wear the new ones until the old ones were fully broken. They were full of mended holes)
    She taught my mom (who then taught me) how to make everything by hand, how to mend clothes, what mushrooms to pick from the forest, how to care for the garden, how to save money etc. (Her daughter, so my grandma, was and still is too lazy to do anything by herself, and has always opted out for store-made foods and preserves. So glad my great grandma basically raised my mom, and taught her so much)
    I loved her so much, it's been already nearly 8 years without her. I miss her every day, she was a legend.

  • @ellendunn559
    @ellendunn559 Před 3 měsíci +20

    I love reading through old cookbooks -- they are sociological and historical time capsules. Kudos to you for eating some of the liver loaf -- I doubt I would've been that brave! When I was a young child in the early 1960s, my mother (a registered nurse) gave me a glass of prune juice every day, apparently to help with constipation. It tasted okay, but the texture was a little icky and the neighborhood kids teased me when they found out about it. On another note, one thing I think we do better today is we don't boil vegetables to death. My husband and I were both raised by mothers who grew up during the Depression, and they both tended to overcook vegetables to a uniform army green. (Yech!) Imagine our surprise when we tried roasted brussels sprouts for the first time and discovered they were DELICIOUS!

    • @denverdubois5835
      @denverdubois5835 Před měsícem

      YES, ugggh the boiled veggies and also canned! I still remember how much i hated the taste and weird, squeaky texture of canned green beans. Yuck. I remember that uniform army green shade so well! And yes, my Mom drank prune juice for regularity and forced me too sometimes as well. Oh how I hated the taste. My husband is much older than I am (and old fashioned to boot) and he eats prunes regularly. He likes them, the weirdo lol.

  • @SparkeysMum
    @SparkeysMum Před 8 měsíci +151

    Oh my, I grew up with the prewar version of this cookbook. My mother received a brand new edition of it when she was a bride in 1939, before the outbreak of WWII. Her original one eventually fell apart! When she and my Dad moved to Virginia, he found a beautifully maintained copy of the wartime version, which features regional dishes and wartime cooking hints, and bought it for her.
    When Mom passed at 92 in 2002, the much loved cookbook came to me and sits on a shelf in my kitchen and I'm 74.
    Cherish this glimpse into history.
    Thank you for sharing your interest!
    Just a suggestion: the music you used is more 1920's-ish. Try something a little more along the lines of The Andrews Sisters, Glen Miller, etc. GREAT JOB!
    Enjoy and cherish this classic which
    passed at age 92

    • @ButteredSideUp
      @ButteredSideUp  Před 8 měsíci +23

      Thank you for sharing that story!
      Yeah, I realized that the music wasn't completely current with the 40s, but it's kinda tough to find good quality music that matches the era and the emotion of the video. The record I played had music that was recorded I believe in 1938, and I figured people would still be listening to their records that were a few years old. :)

    • @SparkeysMum
      @SparkeysMum Před 8 měsíci +21

      @@ButteredSideUp
      So sweet of you to read my comment!
      If you delve into the cookbooks of wartime America, you'll notice the frequent references to rationing and encouraging creative ways to use ingredients and parts of animals not ordinarily used for human consumption. Sugar, butter, meat were all rationed because these foods were sent to the people actually fighting in the forces. Bacon grease (when you could actually find bacon, that is) Along with tallow (beef fat) was collected and used in making munitions! "Victory Gardens" were started in back yards to supplement home grown vegetables and fruits.
      I didn't come along until 1948 so I wasn't affected by rationing in the US, although England was still rationing certain food into the mid-1950's.
      When the young Princess Elizabeth was engaged to the dashing Philip, young women sent their rationing books to her to help her with the cost of not only her wedding meal but also to help with her wedding dress! I understand that the future Queen was quite moved by their gesture.
      If you get a chance to watch the movies of that era, you might be impressed by the spirit of their themes. In many ways, the young adults of that time (like my Mom and Dad) really were "The Greatest Generation".
      And I'm sure you're right about your choice of music playing "on the Victrola"! It hadn't occurred to me that people would play their older favorites...as we do these days. Please forgive my presumption!

    • @bbymks5
      @bbymks5 Před 6 měsíci +2

      I have the 39 edition as well! The spine is cracking, but it's a great one!

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 Před 5 měsíci +7

      @@ButteredSideUp
      I laughed so hard when you said that you kind of doubt an electric flour mill was common in households in the 1940s… Girl, that shit is not common even today! Hardly anyone owns one of those things! 😂😂😂

    • @Plasmastorm73_n5evv
      @Plasmastorm73_n5evv Před 4 měsíci +2

      I really hope you are going to pass the cookbook on to one of your children or grand children and keep the memories and recipes alive!

  • @eleanoreagly4844
    @eleanoreagly4844 Před 9 měsíci +94

    During WW11 butter was not available. Margarine was a substitute, it came white with a packet of coloring to make it look like butter. It did not taste like butter. Some people substituted a grain base drink for coffee. Postum was a brand name that I recall, and was caffeine free. Sugar was rationed as were many other foods. Victory Gardens and keeping chickens were also a WW1 thing. my family even raised a pig and mother preserved the meat by canning as were the garden vegetables.

    • @SWIdaho2
      @SWIdaho2 Před 8 měsíci +8

      My mother's home canned mincemeat, with real meat, made a wonderful pie! Store bought mincemeat cannot compare.😏

    • @dawnelder9046
      @dawnelder9046 Před 8 měsíci +6

      ​@@SWIdaho2Real mincemeat has meat. That stuff they sell in the store is just over sweetened fruit.

    • @judith4158
      @judith4158 Před 7 měsíci +11

      Eleanor, I'm still impressed by the way our country, and England, pulled together for the common good. During our pandemic, plus and being a retired nurse, I was appalled at the lack of the ability of our country to do that. It seemed the in convenience of protecting others was just too much for many. I kept remembering how lining up for our polio injections was such a relief for everyone. No parent questioned the safety of doing it. It doesn't bode well for our future. Worrisome. Did the children in your family argue over whose turn it was to make the margarine yellow?

    • @eleanoreagly4844
      @eleanoreagly4844 Před 7 měsíci +6

      @@judith4158 No arguments. I was too young and my brother, ten your older was out hunting rabbit and pheasant for meat, and he had a 4-H pig that our parents butchered and mother canned the meat. I'm a retired veterinarian and worked for years in policy development , evaluation and licensing of biologicals. Have had extensive training in disease control for epidemics and foreign animal diseases. Gov. of Michigan was one of the few that started correctly to protect people and all she got was ridicule from the the man who was president in 2020 who told the populace that it would be all over by Easter of the same year. Hospital X-ray tech had to do so many x-rays of intubated patients in ICU for physicians to determine how patients lungs looked. She of course welcomed vaccine but was dumbfounded that some nurses refused with no factual basis. Myself have had five shots, the latest being the newest strain.

    • @katherinegaston5229
      @katherinegaston5229 Před 5 měsíci +4

      I remember having the job of kneading those dye packets into the white “Oleo”, my grandmother would add a splash of buttermilk to make it taste better and allow it to be whipping into a creamy spread. Instant coffee for use was using the superfine grind found at the back of the grinder drawer and a pinch of salt to settle the grounds.
      As I read what you wrote it brought back memories.

  • @shannaspencer8105
    @shannaspencer8105 Před 4 měsíci +8

    For sticky cookie doughs chill the cookie dough before rolling, and roll in batches. Only take out half out of the fridge at a time.

  • @nruegner
    @nruegner Před 7 měsíci +28

    My mom liked liver. My dad used to say, "Your mom cooks liver about once a year, but if she forgets one year, I am okay to wait until the next year." You are such a champ to eat that liver loaf. GAG!!! I just found your channel and I really liked it. Thanks for sharing that horrible dinner

    • @grandmajane2593
      @grandmajane2593 Před 4 měsíci +2

      My husband used to like liver and I tried to cook it for him, but I found out that there were blood vessels that had to be removed with a pair of tweezers before cooking. Doing this makes a more pleasant piece of meat to eat. But I couldn't do it, it made me nauseous, so we comprimised on chicken livers. They were easier to cook. I could just dump the container of them in the pan without having to look at them. Never could clean a fish either. He used to go fishing but it was his job to gut them and clean them.

    • @feliciagaffney1998
      @feliciagaffney1998 Před 3 měsíci +1

      ​@@grandmajane2593 calf liver has less membrane and is more tender. I love liver, and just pull the membrane out as I eat it.

    • @grandmajane2593
      @grandmajane2593 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@feliciagaffney1998 - You'r right about that. I might be able to eat a little piece if someone else cooked it.

  • @elenasabakuno6805
    @elenasabakuno6805 Před 8 měsíci +141

    For people who do not like instant coffee because it sometimes can taste slightly burned, stir it into a little bit of room temperature water until it is devolved and than add the hot water. ❤

    • @mirandaandrews2872
      @mirandaandrews2872 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Thanks

    • @clockworkhearts4085
      @clockworkhearts4085 Před 7 měsíci +16

      make sure to add a tiny pinch of salt too, it brings out the flavour

    • @JesusistheOnlyWay222
      @JesusistheOnlyWay222 Před 2 měsíci

      Or the cold milk if taking w milk:) I heard this is why granulated coffee was developed

    • @dr.eliciarosen-fox1354
      @dr.eliciarosen-fox1354 Před 2 měsíci +1

      instant decaf coffee was Sanka brand in my grandmothers house. That was the only thing I was allowed to drink. They still sell it. The smell reminds me of being 5 years old and waking up on Saturday morning for coffee and bagels. In NY even in the 1940's they had bagels with a schmear... cream cheese and jelly.

    • @JesusistheOnlyWay222
      @JesusistheOnlyWay222 Před 2 měsíci

      @@dr.eliciarosen-fox1354 wow coffee at 5!?

  • @OMGitsaClaire
    @OMGitsaClaire Před 8 měsíci +94

    This style of cooking, with all it’s food groups, very much reminds me of my grandma’s style of cooking. She had worked as a maid/kitchen girl in the 1930’s at a boarding house while a teen and raised three boys through the late 1940’s and 1950’s. She was a big proponent of “proper nutrition” and therefore every lunch and dinner she ever served had a fruit and a vegetable on the table. Even if the fruit was canned pears or peaches, which it often was in the winter. She was the one who taught me to eat and like rutabaga as a kid.

  • @phylliscraine
    @phylliscraine Před 5 měsíci +13

    Your copy may have a recipe for Butter-Nut Drop cookies,I know it was in the 1949 edition. My mother made these every Christmas and I make them as well, I have a batch chilling in the fridge for tomorrows baking. This cookie is a light-as-air , buttery orange/lemon drop dipped in egg white and rolled in walnuts (or Brazil nuts as in the original recipe) then baked with a piece of candied cherry on top. Delicious and so nostalgic.

  • @KissMeImABBW
    @KissMeImABBW Před 4 měsíci +5

    Love reading the comments with people sharing stories. Very cool!😊

  • @juliemoore6957
    @juliemoore6957 Před 9 měsíci +203

    The tomato salad was supposed to have finely chopped celery and green pepper in it. They called it tomato aspic salad.

    • @gaylegraves7419
      @gaylegraves7419 Před 7 měsíci +22

      I still make it- season with Tabasco and small shrimp in the summer- it’s great on a green leaf salad topped with a teaspoon of mayo- just like grandma made it!

    • @Melissasch1
      @Melissasch1 Před 5 měsíci +2

      I still love tomato aspic, I grew up eating it. My grandmother made it most every Sunday dinner. Yum!

    • @catherined.398
      @catherined.398 Před 5 měsíci +5

      Yeah, no way they would have tossed the meat of the salad out.

    • @ladyflimflam
      @ladyflimflam Před 4 měsíci +5

      @@gaylegraves7419oh! I’ve not tried it with shrimp. I think some salad shrimp tossed in and it would be like a solid shrimp cocktail.

    • @Lilly-ud6qs
      @Lilly-ud6qs Před 4 měsíci +2

      My Mother used to make this all the time! Absolutely love it 😊

  • @randyromines7364
    @randyromines7364 Před 9 měsíci +22

    In 1958 my gramma moved in with us. My mother humorously told other ladies she had a "built-in dishwasher" her mother! Then in 1960 we built our first house and she really had a built in dishwasher, we still had gramma too, who retired to resident cat cuddler.

  • @carolgladney9890
    @carolgladney9890 Před 3 měsíci +4

    First time viewer, I will definitely be back! I share your aversion to liver and the tomato aspic. I hope that I'm fortunate enough to find such a wonderful cookbook. At 77, I ate a great many of those meals because that's how my mom learned to cook. Hearing your babies laughing and playing add such sweet touch to your video.❤

  • @darlenebradley6756
    @darlenebradley6756 Před 3 měsíci +9

    I'm sure that a meat grinder was likely used for finely chopping the liver. Most households had one of these, and they came with several blades for various gradients of mince...and I love liver! Especially liver and onions!

    • @dr.eliciarosen-fox1354
      @dr.eliciarosen-fox1354 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Yes I remember the meat grinder as well but my grandmother didn't use that for liver, she used it to make chopped meat and then make meatballs or stuffed cabbage. Meat/chicken/turkey was not sold in package in the chopped form, you had to do it yourself. It had a vice grip with a bottom that was rubber and you had to attach it to the counter or the table. I think the liver would have turned so sticky it would not go through the little holes. My great grand mother and grandmother used a big wooden bowl and a curved double blade.

  • @alandoman-ig4oe
    @alandoman-ig4oe Před 9 měsíci +218

    I loved your video. As a child growing up in the wartime UK I would have found this menu very luxurious indeed especially as you used half a week's ration of butter on your bread.The section on liver was funny though I'm biased as I love liver, the most nutritious meat, as I grew up eating it. One recipe that might interest you is a favourite of mine and that is bacon and onion suet pudding. This enabled three rashers of bacon to feed a family of four. A pudding in the UK is sweet or savoury, usually made with suet (the hard fat from around the kidneys) and boiled or steamed in a basin or cloth. Look forward to more input from you.

    • @nancybrewer8494
      @nancybrewer8494 Před 9 měsíci +18

      She could have had butter for breakfast, lunch and dinner with that amount on one piece of bread at supper.

    • @tina6277
      @tina6277 Před 8 měsíci +18

      She used bacon so she could have used the fat from that to butter her bread.

    • @kathimorrical9912
      @kathimorrical9912 Před 8 měsíci +7

      I've NEVER had an automatic dishwasher. Never had one growing up, or in any of my other places I had lived.
      I love liver as well, tho I'm in the minority with my friends and others. I dated one guy who loved it as much as I did, made it for dinner, a friend stopped by, and left almost immediately! Couldn't stand the smell. We nearly died laughing.. choking on liver.

    • @BeccaBearSc
      @BeccaBearSc Před 8 měsíci +7

      Would you ever be willing to write a few of your childhood recipies or memories for me to read. I LOVE history and love hearing it from people who lived it.

    • @tina6277
      @tina6277 Před 8 měsíci +25

      I grew up in small town 🇺🇸 USA. We were on general relief also known as welfare. Mom was an unemployed single parent of a preschooler and a high school kid (me). At first they gave you a monthly check to cover bills, rent, and food. We rarely had a phone so she would go to a pay phone or local business to use their phone. Laundry was taken to the mat or done by hand. Once food stamp became a thing you left town to shop as you didn't want your neighbors to know that you had to be on them. A lot of times you had to be a creative cook. First you never made plain burgers the amount of burger for two people could make a pot of spaghetti, chili, or a pan of sloppy Joe and could feed you more than one meal. No plain hotdog you got one hotdog per person and cut it up and added it to something else. Usually box Mac n cheese. Milk was for cooking if you ate cereal the milk in the bowl had to last you a week. Drinks were kool-aid or water. Occasionally we got gifts of food from family members. Mom would make deals with store owners for fruit and vegetables that might not be able to be sold to regular customers. Like it it had a bad spot on it but was still mostly good. Meat that was still good but passed the time it could be sold. Meats that were not popular like pork hocks, trotters, chicken wings and backs. Tuna lots and lots of canned tuna. Lots of macaroni, lots of potatoes, and tons of cream of mushroom soup, ketchup, and tomato based products. Chili wasn't plain chili it was chili Mac. Spaghetti was made with macaroni so more like goulash. But at the end of the week all the leftover veggies, Spaghetti, or chili,got thrown in a pot with water a few potatoes carrots, onion, and maybe a can or two other vegetables that would get a big old squirt of ketchup to become soup. Each day for 3 days it got more water and ketchup. We ate that for every meal except breakfast. We were encouraged to eat until we had our fill. Anything left after supper on Sunday got tossed. Cold spaghetti sandwiches or reheated spaghetti. No microwaves yet. Another meal but no left over from this one . A big boiled with the jacket on potato and hamburger gravy. Served with a side of vegetables. The gravy was 1/4lb burger crumble fried with a can of cream of mushroom soup, water to thin it out a bit. My favorite soup my mom made back then we called cabbage soup. Mom made a broth out of pork hocks . Simmered them until they fell apart. Scoop out the meat and bones set aside. To the pot Add potatoes, carrots, onions, black pepper, take the biggest cabbage you can sneak out of a cabbage field or can buy cheap. Cut up a quarter of the field cabbage or half a grocery store cabbage. Take the meat skin and connecting tissues off the bones of the hocks discard bones chop the rest very well add back to the pot. Then you take mostly vegetables and a small amount of broth and only on or two pieces of meat . Yes this is your meal every night until the cabbage is gone . It is served with a slice of buttered bread. It might get more potatoes and carrots and a cup or two of water every night. Although still good the last night or two it tastes more like cabbage than anything else. My mom's cabbage soup recipe can be found in cook books under the name New England boiled dinner. The last thing she made a lot was fried potatoes with hotdogs and onions when the vegetables are done and potatoes tan. Add a good squirt of ketchup and a cup of water. Simmer until thickened.

  • @alisonsmith8653
    @alisonsmith8653 Před 7 měsíci +36

    I ate cream of wheat very often growing up during the winter blizzardy years of the 1970's. Sprinkled with milk and white sugar. It was delicious!

    • @brigittavesei4796
      @brigittavesei4796 Před 2 měsíci +1

      My mother made it with sugar and cinnamon, and we ate it as-is, without milk.

  • @simplelivingwithconniekeen9485
    @simplelivingwithconniekeen9485 Před 3 měsíci +6

    I love your little one complimenting the food 😅😊 Growing up in a Hispanic household, we ate a lot of Cafe con Leche (even as kids) with buttered toast for breakfast. Still like that today ❤

  • @lisamounts6555
    @lisamounts6555 Před 3 měsíci +2

    What an awesome book you found. Ty for sharing. Enjoyed this video ❤

  • @margaretbedwell3211
    @margaretbedwell3211 Před 9 měsíci +139

    You were very brave to make that liver loaf. I hate liver and won't eat it at all in any form. One thing I might add, since I was raised in the late 30's early 40''s, my mom fixed boiled cabbage often and she always put butter, salt, pepper, and a drizzle of cider vinegar. I still eat it this way. Also, dishes were washed up as you go, fill sink with sudsy water, put dishes in as used and when the prep is done, wash up those dishes. This was a fun experiment and although you didn't care for the tomato dish, see if they have a tomato aspic recipe in that book. That has more seasoning and is delicious. It was most often served in the classier hotel dining rooms. I remember making it in my home economics class in the 9th grade. Thanks for sharing this with us, I hope you will try some more recipes from the book. Have a Blessed day. Meat loaf was big in those days (still a favorite) also mac& cheese was for a meatless dinner meal. We couldn't always have meat because of rationing.

    • @alexandrasmith7682
      @alexandrasmith7682 Před 9 měsíci +15

      I was raised by my Grandmother. First job in the morning for me was drawing the hot water and making a sink full of soap suds. Followed by doing the first lot of washing up, drying, and putting away. Then I would eat my breakfast on the run between waiting on her lodgers as they had breakfast. Would complete by clearing their table, and doing the next round of washing up, drying, putting away and off to school. It repeated at night time, although I had additional tasks then. Total .... Five lots of washing dishes in a day .
      😂

    • @margaretbedwell3211
      @margaretbedwell3211 Před 9 měsíci +9

      @@alexandrasmith7682 My grandma always had borders. They were two elderly ladies (so they seemed at the time but probably not )LOL. They cooked their own meal in their rooms though. She did not provide food. One of the ladies worked and I think she had her main meal at lunch time so she didn't cook a lot at her evening meal. You really had your hands full doing all those dishes and still going to school as well. You were a very good grand daughter for sure.

    • @roku5071
      @roku5071 Před 8 měsíci +6

      My dad and his sister loved tomato aspic....they were the only 2 that did so they had it all to themselves 😄
      Dad was born Dec. 1919 and died Oct. 2013.

    • @serenitymoon825
      @serenitymoon825 Před 8 měsíci +5

      The only time I've ever genuinely enjoyed liver was when I had foie gras. It doesn't have the same metallic taste that chicken liver does. I won't eat it again because the ducks are force fed to make their livers fatty like that

    • @autumnramble
      @autumnramble Před 8 měsíci +6

      "boiled cabbage often and she always put butter, salt, pepper, and a drizzle of cider vinegar"
      Oh, young boiled cabbage, but with lard and bacon roux instead of butter is one of my favourites.
      But I live fried liver and liver stew too, so I think is just depends on what we are familiar from our childhood.

  • @mommas2470
    @mommas2470 Před 9 měsíci +90

    My grandmother would chop up the prunes or other fruits and added them to the muffins for added sweetness and vitamins. No wasted food!😊

    • @ChristinaPelley
      @ChristinaPelley Před 7 měsíci +6

      My great-grandmother served the stewed prunes as a light dessert - just topped with thick canned cream. Yum!

    • @katiestover8954
      @katiestover8954 Před 4 měsíci

      Those people had gone through the depression and had been forced to learn to use everything.

    • @mommas2470
      @mommas2470 Před 4 měsíci

      @@katiestover8954 exactly.❤️

    • @dr.eliciarosen-fox1354
      @dr.eliciarosen-fox1354 Před 2 měsíci

      or chop up the prunes and put it in the cereal.

  • @lordmusea
    @lordmusea Před 2 měsíci +4

    Most food content creators are looking to show the sexiest version of cooking available: no spills, all cheese pulls. I really like that you present a cooking challenge as exactly what it is…a challenge. Unfamiliar ingredients/combinations, unpalatable foods (I share your dislike of liver and tomato jelly…grandma had served both before), juggling a child with your cooking endeavors, etc. I particular appreciated the time lapse of dishwashing, the worst curse of all! 😂
    Now that I’ve found your channel, I look forward to seeing more content. You seem genuine and I appreciate that!

  • @Spunky_Lass
    @Spunky_Lass Před 6 měsíci +1

    That is so cool - thanks for sharing!

  • @lilypudd
    @lilypudd Před 9 měsíci +37

    In the 40s there were many households that didn't have water heaters so to wash the dishes, you would have had to heat that up in a kettle or pan.

  • @michellemacdonald7786
    @michellemacdonald7786 Před 8 měsíci +30

    I have that cookbook. It was my Grandma's and I cherish it. It is very dog eared and has some of her recipes on pieces of paper stuffed between the sheets. It is valuable because it gives info that isn't used anymore. We will need it.

  • @pipermoonshine
    @pipermoonshine Před 4 měsíci +4

    my grandmothers, my mom, aunts uncles and inlaws were alive during this time and one of the most important things they recommended was to clean as you go and that way you would not have a huge kitchen to clean when done eating.. My grandmothers and fathers were born in the 1800's and my mom, father, father in law and mother in law were raised in the early 1900's so I learned about rations from them and I drink instant coffee which my parents drank when I was growing up. best coffee ever in my opinion. many of these foods I ate as well. I have my mother's cookbook published in 1953 and I learned how to make biscuits from that book. I lost my mom's book in a fire and I was sad but low and behold I found an exact copy and I bought it.. so now I have "her" cookbook and I can cook those biscuits again.

  • @annking8633
    @annking8633 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Love the immersive experience. Staying true to the period with fantastic detail. Blown away.

  • @hearsthewater
    @hearsthewater Před 7 měsíci +60

    The tomato dish from lunch reminded me of a dish my father used to make all the time. He called it "Aspic" and made it with V-8 juice and gelatin. He also used celery and bell pepper, but they were diced up small and put in the gelatin to add a crunchy element. It was actually very good.

    • @eatiegourmet1015
      @eatiegourmet1015 Před 4 měsíci +7

      So called because it IS Aspic, a gelatin derived from meat collagen. Meat aspics were popular long before fruit "jello" was invented. Aspic is a Great source of protein and amino acids.
      Your Dad's version is absolute Classic aspic, and quite good for you!

    • @SilasBeau123
      @SilasBeau123 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Aspic is one of my favorite things. My mom always made it for holidays. It looked a lot better than hers! There use to be canned tomato aspic too. (My children die over the things we ate 😄)

    • @karrinwilley8079
      @karrinwilley8079 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Of course it was.....my mother & grandmother made the same thing. It made a refreshing salad in the summer..🍅 aspic!

    • @vanessagenens1608
      @vanessagenens1608 Před měsícem

      My grandmother made tomato aspic and I couldn't get past the texture.

    • @dwhitman3092
      @dwhitman3092 Před 23 dny

      Been thinking of making it when the weather finally warms.

  • @EmilyGOODEN0UGH
    @EmilyGOODEN0UGH Před 8 měsíci +22

    Liver and cabbage both just need a lot of cooked onions and salt. And I am pretty sure the butter dish was just EXPECTED to be on the table with the salt, pepper, and probably ketchup (which might have helped the liver and cabbage too).

  • @nicolerotenberry7379
    @nicolerotenberry7379 Před 4 měsíci +2

    You are adorable- I love how brave you are with experimenting with stuff you don’t even like and your honesty. Love love love - I now want to do this with my kids ❤

  • @pattiprater
    @pattiprater Před 2 měsíci +1

    This was such a well done video, from the concept, to the visuals and music you used. And I LOL at your reaction to the liver loaf! Well done! I subscribed!

  • @BDTrooper76
    @BDTrooper76 Před 8 měsíci +32

    I was born in 1958, so some of the meals during my childhood were somewhat holdover recipes from the war years. My father was a 1943 graduate of Berkeley High School, so he knew he was going to serve. He went to the south pacific and served as a medic with the U.S. 6th army. He served again in Korea as a medic with the U.S. Air Force. My mother was a year younger.
    One recipe my mother made during my early years was a tuna casserole, which I still make today. Call it a childhood comfort food. You might want to try this one. Ingredients are one 6 oz can of tuna packed in water, one 10.5 oz can of Campbell's cream of mushroom soup, one 16 oz container of frozen peas and carrots, one cup jasmine rice, quarter pound of shredded mild cheddar cheese. Preheat oven to 350 f. Put the 10.5 oz of cream of mushroom soup plus the obligatory can of hot water into a casserole dish, add the undrained contents of the tuna can and the frozen peas and carrots. Stir until the warm soup mix has broken the peas and carrots apart. Add the rice and stir until evenly coated. Cover. Bake for 45-60 minutes until the rice is suitably softened. Remove the casserole dish and remove lid. Distribute the grated cheese evenly across the top and return to oven uncovered. Cook for another 15-20 minutes or until the cheese is evenly bubbling. Let stand 5-10 minutes to allow the rice to absorb more of the water. Serve with tossed green salad and either dinner rolls or garlic bread.
    I hope you enjoy this recipe from many decades ago.
    Added note: My wife is from Poland. Her parents lived through a very nasty WWII. Her grandparents lived through both WWI and WWII. Those who lived through the wars in north America had it comparatively easy.

  • @Chronicmom68
    @Chronicmom68 Před 9 měsíci +30

    Wow! Don't know how this channel showed up in my feed, but I'm so glad it did! I love all things 1940s! This was very interesting to watch! Made me very thankful for my dishwasher!! Some of this reminded me of my great-grandmother's cooking. Love this video!

  • @townandcountrystyle2448
    @townandcountrystyle2448 Před 6 měsíci

    This was fun to watch. Thanks for all that research and hard work!

  • @christinedehn3257
    @christinedehn3257 Před 4 měsíci +3

    My Mom made liver for us, but never as a loaf. It was an economical cut of meat. I've never minded the taste, but Mom always said if you cook it too long it ruins it. It gets a metallic taste.
    She would sauté the onions in margarine or fat, have everyone come to the table and we began dishing out the salad and sides while the meat was in the pan for a few minutes on each side. The liver was sliced pretty thin so it was cooked through quickly. Onto a platter, pan dripping gravy on the side. It was good.
    Another economy cut was kidneys. She couldn't make that palatable and we only were put through that a couple of times. Mom was married in 1945 so the US was trying to feed a starving Europe and frugal cooking was still important here even though the war was over.
    Your lunch, by the way, was not low on protein as peas and grain (pasta) make a complete protein.
    Great presentation and clear explanations of your process.

  • @cathylemay2215
    @cathylemay2215 Před 9 měsíci +15

    Back during the war organ meat was what many households relied on as the better cuts were reserved for the forces. The prunes themselves would have been healthier stewed and eaten (fiber don't you know)

  • @TheLeslieMichelle
    @TheLeslieMichelle Před 8 měsíci +31

    OMG! My Mom literally had that same cookbook! My Dad bought it for my Mom when they first got married. I literally learned to cook from this book also when I was in Middle School training for Home Economics class. I learned basic things that no one makes anymore by hand without using cheeze whiz or Ritz crackers, like Hor d'oeuvres for instance. I loved this cookbook! It was old-fashioned, but some of the recipes are delicious if given a chance without cheating.

  • @lindapendleton9176
    @lindapendleton9176 Před 2 měsíci +2

    My mother used the wash as you go method to handle the dishes build up with food prep.Rinceing the liver with boiling water killed any parasites lurking in the meat.

  • @janesmith1398
    @janesmith1398 Před 3 měsíci +2

    1993's "The Wartime Kitchen and Garden" with Harry Dodson and Ruth Mott is a wonderful 8 part series produced in the UK about rationing and the war. There is also an accompanying book written by Jennifer Davies. There are several other series starring Harry, including The Victorian Kitchen Garden, The Victorian Kitchen and the Victorian Flower Garden.

  • @katherineskaggs4490
    @katherineskaggs4490 Před 9 měsíci +21

    People probable ate what they could get. I know my mother sometimes didn’t have anything to eat. But kudos to you. You tried everything!

  • @melinaz3385
    @melinaz3385 Před 8 měsíci +13

    Unmolding tomato aspic or jelly salad, for a brief moment dip the gelled ramekin in warm water to soften the inside just a touch to allow it to unmold.

    • @williamjackson5942
      @williamjackson5942 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Also don't cook the onion and peppers add raw for the crisp addition it gives the salad!

  • @bethgrove2636
    @bethgrove2636 Před 3 měsíci

    LOL You're reactions to the dinner. Very entertaining. Thanks for this fun video.

  • @copacopa1013
    @copacopa1013 Před 6 měsíci

    I want you to make more of THESE videos! I love this!

  • @luminousmoon86
    @luminousmoon86 Před 9 měsíci +58

    I actually like liver, but that liver loaf looked rank. My mom dredges liver in seasoned flour and then fries it in a pan with butter and onions and it makes like a gravy, and it's really good. But even I'd take a pass on the loaf, lol. At least you had bread and butter!

  • @billgrandone3552
    @billgrandone3552 Před 8 měsíci +28

    My mom had this cookbook.I may still have it somewhere. I remember the pictures! As for prune juice dear, you drink it, But it is a laxative so don't have plans until after 10 a.m.I know i do have a book put out by a company called Lighthouse that has a lot of Depression recipes. No break after lunch! There is a mountain of dirty clothes in the basement waiting for you and you have to have them washed and hung on the line before 4:00 when you start supper so it;s ready by 5;30 when hubby comes home from the aircraft factory. Be glad he has a wartime job and is not in the Pacific or somewhere in Africa. The key to liver is drowning the stuff in catsup or stashing the dog under the table and slipping it to him when no one is looking. Why do you think our dog was named "Pal"?😬

    • @SparkeysMum
      @SparkeysMum Před 8 měsíci +5

      "Thanks for the liver, Mom...signed 🐾Pal, your under table pup!"

    • @billgrandone3552
      @billgrandone3552 Před 8 měsíci

      Exactly. Ony if Pal wanted more liver he couldn't thank MOM WITHOUT "OUTING" ME.@@SparkeysMum

  • @daniellejarvis157
    @daniellejarvis157 Před 4 měsíci +1

    My grandma was given that book for her wedding, and when she passed I got that book! It has EVERYTHING in there - how to render lard, make crabapple pie, and has recipes for every piece of the meat, from tongue to brain to hoof and tail!

  • @alainadacosta1222
    @alainadacosta1222 Před 6 měsíci +1

    This was a cool video! I felt overwhelmed with all those lunch dishes

  • @janicew6222
    @janicew6222 Před 8 měsíci +50

    My mother would take wheat to the local grain mill to be milled, so you aren't too far off milling at home. The hot water closes the pores on the liver so it doesn't soak up a lot of the 'fat' it is cooked in and it is more tender. I actually love liver both beef and chicken. I was raised on it because it was cheap. Thankfully, my children love it too.

    • @SWIdaho2
      @SWIdaho2 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Thanks for explaining about the hot water. 😊

    • @ZimVader-0017
      @ZimVader-0017 Před 8 měsíci +2

      My grandmother would use milk to boil the liver. She said it also got rid of the strong taste.

    • @laurastrele
      @laurastrele Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@ZimVader-kh2zg my partner thought me to just soak liver in milk. Helps not to over cook and draws out some blood.

    • @Gingerblaze
      @Gingerblaze Před 5 měsíci

      The boiling water also helps make it sturdy enough to chop up.

    • @melmelbry5754
      @melmelbry5754 Před 5 měsíci

      Where the heck do we get wheat from "in the wild". If the apocalypse came and we cant buy flour, where do we get wheat to make bread? And how do we mill it?

  • @nancydeis7121
    @nancydeis7121 Před 8 měsíci +16

    You are a champ for even attempting that meal. I love your kitchen. You mentioned all the dishes and counter space, well from the homes I have come across that are older and they had little to no counter space. I know that my mom would hide dirty pots etc when we had company so she could do them after everyone left. I love farmhouse sinks. All I could think was how much water was wasted lol. At our cottage we have a fair size kitchen sink and we put a big basen on stove to heat water then washed dishes in the basen.

  • @JHeyworth1
    @JHeyworth1 Před 2 měsíci

    A terrific video, and a great idea you had to do this!

  • @chrisroper2731
    @chrisroper2731 Před měsícem +1

    Nothing can replace eating dinner at the table as a family! You discuss everything.

  • @AnnM97A
    @AnnM97A Před 8 měsíci +14

    I think you did a very nice job in you 24 hour presentation of a 1940’s meal plan. It would be nice to see you do the same teaching how to make substitutions to a meal plan with other dishes that interest you palate more. Thank you for sharing. I really enjoyed it.

  • @jerrihadding2534
    @jerrihadding2534 Před 8 měsíci +37

    I have so much enjoyed your video! Regarding liver. As a teenager in California I was anemic and so my mother prepared liver for us fairly regularly. She fried it covered in flour and with onions. I actually LOVED it! Now I have lived in Sweden with my Swedish husband for 25 years and in all of those 25 years I have prepared liver exactly ONCE because I found liver in the grocery store exactly ONCE! This would likely make you very happy! 😂 On the other hand, I have literally found raw chicken FEET, various cuts of horse meat, and oh, let me not forget, raw pigs feet in Swedish grocery stores. And NO! I did not buy them! But not to insult Swedish meat options, please know that every cut of pork is relatively cheap here. A whole 2 pound chicken (the standard size) has risen in price from approximately $4.00 to $7.00 this year. If I choose to buy, for instance, only chicken thighs, that costs me, at a minimum, $12.00. And, as a major splurge for our 25th wedding anniversary, I bought two sale priced pieces of steak for a “mere” $16.00. If I am fortunate enough to find turkey in the fall, I pay up to $17.00 for a five pound turkey! What is cheaper and easily available is fish and shell fish. Generally we gorge on fresh crab and lobster around Christmas time. An entire fresh caught Norwegian crab costs around $6.00! An ENTIRE lobster, perhaps $5.00. It is also essential to note that, exactly as it is in the USA, prices depend not only on market driven intentions to “earn” as much as possible, but also on availability. If you have read this entire comment, I salute you! 🥰

    • @SparkeysMum
      @SparkeysMum Před 8 měsíci +3

      Excellent information!
      Can you find Crayfish in Sweden? And do you use them for things?

    • @jerrihadding2534
      @jerrihadding2534 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Crawfish are EXTREMELY popular in Sweden! The season for them begins in August. My husband will eat masses of them. Personally, I loath them!! In the first years of our marriage I made him eat them in our garden so they wouldn’t “stink” up our house 😂. However I don’t suffer. While he eats his crawfish, I eat an entire lobster. Life is good!

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 Před 5 měsíci

      You’re eating animals that had LIVES, and didn’t want to die, but you’re complaining about the price of it???

    • @grandmajane2593
      @grandmajane2593 Před 4 měsíci +3

      @@anti-ethniccleansing465 The fish and shellfish are going to get eaten one way or another. A bigger fish will get them or human beings can catch them, so what's the problem.

  • @allisonwymer8851
    @allisonwymer8851 Před 4 měsíci +5

    My dad was born in 36, so he remembers war rations well. He said there was definitely a butter shortage, so they were given a tub of lard and a yellow dye packet to mimic butter, which is what they put on their toast. He said it was not good. Also, my grandmother had a 'victory' garden, which is where they got most of their vegetables. Also, the depression had made people really creative with ingredients, so there were a lot of mock ingredients, like crackers and peanut butter. 15 dollars a week was a lot of money for a poor family. My grandparents took in about 5 dollars a week total and much of that went to their rent.

    • @denverdubois5835
      @denverdubois5835 Před měsícem

      Remember the Ritz cracker pie? "Tastes Just Like Apple Pie!" I sooo bet that was a Depression era innovation!

  • @Trisha1165
    @Trisha1165 Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you Michele. I ordered it and I'm super excited for all it entails :)

  • @theresaanndiaz3179
    @theresaanndiaz3179 Před 9 měsíci +71

    I think the recipes were very nutritious, molasses is high in iron and other vitamins.
    I like liver, I usually do it as liver and onions with bacon and tomato sauce. Soaking it in milk first helps with the strong taste.
    I bet the 1940s household had a meat grinder that you clamp on the table, so the food processor wasn't really cheating.
    Aspic (geletin) salads were a big thing in the 1950s and even 60s. I have even seen recipes for meatloaf in aspic.

    • @SWIdaho2
      @SWIdaho2 Před 8 měsíci +8

      My mom had a clamp on meat grinder. I actually like tomato aspic.

    • @VictoriaEMeredith
      @VictoriaEMeredith Před 8 měsíci +4

      We had a lovely cast iron (?) meat grinder when I was a kid, and we used to clamp it to the edge of the table and go to town. Every once in a while, I really miss that thing.

    • @judith4158
      @judith4158 Před 7 měsíci

      I use mine for making cranberry relish every holiday season. It's cast aluminum I believe. Love it for many things, makes washing it worth it. Look in antique stores I've seen them there occasionally. @@VictoriaEMeredith

    • @shadowfox009x
      @shadowfox009x Před 6 měsíci

      We still have my greatgrandmother's meat grinder and use it to make a special kind of christmas cookies (German Spritzgebäck). I don't think my mom has ever used it for grinding meat.

    • @yeeaahhzz
      @yeeaahhzz Před 4 měsíci

      MILK SOAK FOR LIVER FTW

  • @monicajohnston8364
    @monicajohnston8364 Před 7 měsíci +5

    Liver was a staple in wartime meals because its an excellent source of iron and, as you saw from the rest of your menu, meat was in short supply. Also, butter and other fats were heavily rationed during WW2 and "oleo margarine" and shortening would have been more common because they used fewer ration tickets to acquire.

  • @jillachen7217
    @jillachen7217 Před 5 měsíci

    Love this show!! Thank you!!

  • @randydinglehopper62
    @randydinglehopper62 Před 6 měsíci

    Super interesting. Thank you!!

  • @Randompersonontheinternet13

    I never suspected a Bible channel would tell me to watch a cooking channel

    • @ButteredSideUp
      @ButteredSideUp  Před rokem +10

      😂

    • @naomi8097
      @naomi8097 Před rokem +5

      Huh?

    • @lisalewis3891
      @lisalewis3891 Před 9 měsíci +2

      You get an A for effort.

    • @jeremynv89523
      @jeremynv89523 Před 9 měsíci

      This is because Christians want you women to be meek little housewives who are at their husband's beck and call 24/7.
      Grow a spine, sister.

  • @marcietownsend3635
    @marcietownsend3635 Před 9 měsíci +9

    OMG! My mother had that book! I used to love looking at the pictures - in particular the petit fours in bright colors.

  • @AlyInTheKitchen
    @AlyInTheKitchen Před 3 měsíci

    Awwww . . I loved this! The cookbook has some of the same pictures and recipes from my granny's old cookbook, 1947 edition of San Francisco Chronicle's Prudence Penny. I still have her cookbook and grew up eating a few of the meals you cooked. Thank you for recreating those memories.

  • @cynstric
    @cynstric Před 6 měsíci +2

    First, I can tell you worked hard on this excellent and unforgettable video! Second, the dinner episode was hilarious.

  • @LaundryFaerie
    @LaundryFaerie Před 7 měsíci +6

    Prunes were a big thing because a) dried fruit was easy to store and transport, and b) folks from ages past were apparently OBSESSED with avoiding constipation.
    Also, they would pour boiling water over the liver to par-cook it and make it stiff enough to chop.

  • @kathleendigregorio1701
    @kathleendigregorio1701 Před 8 měsíci +19

    I bought a 1950's how to book written for the upper middle class to society debutantes and young brides; definitely for the "town and country" set ~ it was a wonderful find. Menus for each occasion, photos of elaborate place settings, correspondence samples, setting up a household after marriage, hiring servants, engagement protocols 😍

    • @dragons8822
      @dragons8822 Před 7 měsíci

      What's the name of this cookbook that you're talking about ? Would be interesting to see.

    • @lat1419
      @lat1419 Před 6 měsíci

      I have one somewhere that came down through the family. It had a section on how to serve breakfast "without a naid". This was a family joke as grandma had been a kitchen maid (in service at a large hoise), and hated it.

    • @mandyheart8754
      @mandyheart8754 Před 6 měsíci +2

      It would be interesting to see her make a similar video with a menu that featured recipes from an “upper/upper-middle class” aimed cookbook, like the one you discussed.
      To be candid, I quickly got a very “affluent” vibe from her (groceries such as the cream of wheat, gelatin powder, instant coffee, packaged liver, etc. were from “fancy” brands - ala Whole Foods stock - opposed to the groceries being from common, affordably-priced “value” brands that are widely available at more discount-aimed markets.) Seems like a “classier” menu might suite her taste a little better?

    • @wg8859
      @wg8859 Před 3 měsíci +2

      ⁠@@mandyheart8754
      I don’t think the grocery store or particular brands matter at all. The focus of this is making period - appropriate food not
      the labels or store name.

    • @Moocow2003
      @Moocow2003 Před 2 měsíci

      Lol, my family's copy of the Mrs Beeton's cookbook has a section on how to properly address different members of the royal family should you encounter them

  • @oldmomma56
    @oldmomma56 Před měsícem

    These methods and recipes reminded me of the hours I spent learning in my grandmothers’ kitchens and the stories they shared!

  • @wendywelsh8729
    @wendywelsh8729 Před 2 měsíci

    Good job! Brings back GOOD memories

  • @bingcoteeagle6932
    @bingcoteeagle6932 Před 8 měsíci +6

    Soaking the liver does take out some of the metallic liver taste. Although it might deplete your some of your weekly milk ration. That was very brave of you to actually taste that liver loaf. I remember sitting at the dinner table as a child staring down at a plate of liver and onions while my grandmother stared down at me with the 'eat it or else' look...

    • @freespirit3891
      @freespirit3891 Před měsícem

      As kids, we had liver and onions at least once a month, sometimes once every 3 weeks. At least nowadays if you buy it, it has been deveined, not like in the old days. Those foods are remembereances of our past good or bad 🙂.

  • @leobevard822
    @leobevard822 Před 8 měsíci +6

    A lot of this food was there because of food shortages and prices during the war. Things like liver didn't transport as well so it was easier to get a hold of stateside.

  • @Chirpy_Chirp
    @Chirpy_Chirp Před měsícem

    That was a delight! So fun!❤

  • @tracieperez2629
    @tracieperez2629 Před měsícem

    I love that you did this! What a lot of work. Those women were busy and worked hard in the kitchen for their families. I loved it when you tried the tomato jelly thingy... You--"maybe it will taste good?" Me --thinking" that's doubtful", but you were a good sport. I'm certainly glad recipes have improved!

  • @genevieve8873
    @genevieve8873 Před 8 měsíci +10

    Have you tried this cooking with the ration portions you would get back then? I think you would be surprised at just how small the food rations were

  • @redtankgirl5
    @redtankgirl5 Před 8 měsíci +8

    I grew up trying recipes out of this cookbook as a kid. My mom had it and had received it from her father when she got married. He was the primary cook when they were growing up both during the depression and wartime. I now have the cookbook. It’s dog eared and well used but I still go to it for a recipe often enough.

  • @robjohnson8522
    @robjohnson8522 Před 4 měsíci

    This is one of my all-time favorite videos! Apparently, you are a history buff as well! I think you should do a series! Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, etc!
    They say you should always leave the audience wanting more. Well, you knocked it out of the park in that regard as I really do want to see more from that book!!!

  • @krazedvintagemodel
    @krazedvintagemodel Před 3 měsíci

    I thoroughly enjoyed this. That book seems fabulous, and you were a good sport about the liver. A lot of work to cook all that and manually clean up, agreed! Peace and Blessings 🌻

  • @johsheli
    @johsheli Před 9 měsíci +16

    We used to have mushroom sauce and noodles back in the 50s and 60s. The sauce came in a small can and they still sell it today. We also had liver and onions which I absolutely hated. I couldn't understand how something could smell so good yet taste so bad! We never had aspics or vegetable jellies and I'm glad they sound horrible!

    • @LaLagunz187
      @LaLagunz187 Před 8 měsíci +4

      I hate liver as well, the only reason I’ve tried more than once is because it smells so good when it’s cooking. Gets me every time 🤢🤭

    • @debbyparker5431
      @debbyparker5431 Před 6 měsíci +1

      I use that Dawn Fresh brand mushroom sauce too ❤

  • @calypsoc3630
    @calypsoc3630 Před 7 měsíci +5

    I applaud you for trying all of these recipes! I learned some new recipes - like the liver thing and molasses cookies - and got a new appreciation for my grandmothers 😃

  • @robinwetzel3314
    @robinwetzel3314 Před 5 měsíci

    The dinner prep made me laugh!;You brave soul! You were great! I will watch you again!

  • @MyFullFiguredLife
    @MyFullFiguredLife Před 2 měsíci

    Loved this ❤

  • @lindamcdermott9980
    @lindamcdermott9980 Před 8 měsíci +11

    I was born in the ‘40s, so meals from that era are familiar. My mother made liver and onions, but she never made me eat it! Her words were, “there is always peanut butter and jelly”. After watching you prepare and try to eat that liver, I am now so grateful! In the ‘40’s, they would have made something else out of the leftovers. Gladly it is 2023, you can throw it out! The other things from the ‘50’s that I dreaded on the meal rotation was salmon loaf, because your taste buds we’re expecting meatloaf, and oyster stew. My bowl just had the buttery milk broth and crackers, she didn’t make me eat the oysters……
    This was a very good video, costume, lipstick, vintage utensils and all. I really enjoyed it. I’m going to subscribe, just to see what you do next.
    Btw, in those years, there were big families and help to do the dishes, or a hired neighbor girl as a mother’s helper.

  • @Yobydobie
    @Yobydobie Před 8 měsíci +4

    I love that you talked about how the recipes made you *feel* not just how they taste. You gained a sub from me!

  • @sandraboyd7468
    @sandraboyd7468 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I’m so glad we found your channel. You make the foods our depression era patents cooked. It’s tasty and wonderful to hear your kid say “I like this momma”! Can’t wait for more content from you.

  • @DS-zj2on
    @DS-zj2on Před 5 měsíci +2

    I'm around 80 as well. Learning to cook was vital and taught in schools as one grew. Also, canning food was prominent. Everyone I knew canned food. As someone else said, there was never waste with food. Food was respected. We had lots of soup to stretch money. Everything was made from scratch in our family. As an 8th grader my job was to make bread every Saturday, or rotate that with doing all the family ironing. Everyone also had a garden. It was all hard work, but so grateful for it now.

    • @eatiegourmet1015
      @eatiegourmet1015 Před 4 měsíci

      re: waste My mother liked to remind us, "someone had to Work for you to have those grains of rice.'