zetwal said:Perhaps wax could be used to seal jars of preserved foods. Home canning used to be very common.
LizzieMaine said:Great stuff. My grandfather wore a wedding ring, but most of the other men I knew from his generation did not. Jewelry on blue-collar men was considered both effete and potentially dangerous if it got hooked on moving machinery.
CopperNY said:bread crumbs were a wartime staple to pad out other foods. my grandmother never was able to quit. meatloaf was always mainly breadloaf with some meat thrown in.
skyvue said:At the venerable Snappy Lunch in Mt. Airy, North Carolina, you can still order a burger with bread crumbs mixed in with the beef...It's apparently been a popular menu item ever since the Depression. I tried one, and it was pretty tasty.
dhermann1 said:That's where the phrase "This is where I came in." came from.
You could watch a movie three times over if you felt like it, or were unemployed and had nothing better to do, a common occurance during the Depression.
skyvue said:At the venerable Snappy Lunch in Mt. Airy, North Carolina, you can still order a burger with bread crumbs mixed in with the beef (or, at least, you could when I last passed through, though that's been some time now). They ask you if you want your burger with bread in it or regular. It's apparently been a popular menu item ever since the Depression.
I tried one, and it was pretty tasty.
I think the wax was used typically for canning purposes. I have an old box of "Gulfwax" paraffin "for sealing jam and jelly glasses" 1/4# box sold for .08 cents, amazing. Flipskyvue said:I don't have any idea what wax would be commonly used for -- anyone know?
AtomicEraTom said:Ah, the hometown of Andy Griffith, my favorite TV star. We were going to move there a few years back and plans changed. Would love to visit there someday.
Absinthe_1900 said:Wouldn't that be what they called White Gas back in the day?
White gas was a term for Gasoline with no lead or additives, not the other term used for naphtha.
skyvue said:At the venerable Snappy Lunch in Mt. Airy, North Carolina, you can still order a burger with bread crumbs mixed in with the beef (or, at least, you could when I last passed through, though that's been some time now). They ask you if you want your burger with bread in it or regular. It's apparently been a popular menu item ever since the Depression.
I tried one, and it was pretty tasty.