Lincsong
I'll Lock Up
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I don't like onions. If onion powder is used in the food fine, but I don't want to look at little green things in my food, or slimey things either.
Especially during WW2 when food was rationed, you can eat animals like rabbit and possum, or other animal parts like brain and liver.
I can still remember the first time I went to my husband's grandmother's house. She told me to get the salad out of the fridge and I couldn't find anything that looked like a salad, vegetable, or piece of fruit. She is from a time when the generic term salad refers to: leaf salad, fruit salad, and jello with things- namely fruit- in it. Each meal is comprised of meat, a "salad", and a potato dish.
I'm rather fond of jelly when flavoured with the juice of real fruit and whatnot, the flavoured stuff that comes in satchels is not high on my list of delicacies. Jelly is an integral part of one of the great puddings, Trifle, which melds it with cream, custard and cake.
I'm rather fond of jelly when flavoured with the juice of real fruit and whatnot, the flavoured stuff that comes in satchels is not high on my list of delicacies. Jelly is an integral part of one of the great puddings, Trifle, which melds it with cream, custard and cake.
I do love offal, something that is thankfully coming back into fashion, 'nose to tail eating'. Devilled kidneys, liver and bacon, stuffed hearts, crumbled brains, steak and kidney pie. Even tripe, when cooked properly. Delicious, cheap and thrifty.
You roll the dice every time you eat raw egg in anything - mayo, Caesar dressing, even the beloved cookie batter. Salmonella lives in some eggs and quite a bit of poultry. But some say it's more common now that the birds are factory farmed.Mayonaise was popular too. Home-made, in a way that in most restaurants today is prohibited - eggs not cooked, somebody told that they can give severe health troubles. But these mayonayses were very tasteful!
I think the reason people didn't talk about it then is that people weren't as susceptible to it then. We're loaded full of antibiotics now, between the drugs we take every time we have a sniffle or a toothache and the stuff that's in the food itself, and we slather ourselves in antibactierial soaps and lotions and gels every time we go out the door, and as a result our natural immune systems are all out of whack. Hence, salmonella has a field day.
They say kids were a lot healthier when they used to play outside in the gutter. I can believe it.
As far as scrapple goes, I'll have a double helping, please. And I once worked in a meat market, so I know where it comes from.
Salmon Mousse. Does anyone still eat this?
I can understand not wanting to put pickles in Jell-0 but none of you had Jell-O with say; fruit, ice cream or whipped cream mixed in it?
Sounds like this lady was lazy. Complaining about making breakfast?I haven't looked at all the responses yet so someone may have already posted this, but a gal who did a 50's housewife experiment last year blogged about some of the atrocious recipes she came across, and made (and forced her husband to eat, lol). The meat jello was particularly vile. Scroll through her blog to find the food entries.
http://www.jenbutneverjenn.com/2010/05/welcome-to-50s-housewife-experiment.html
Ditto, I was wondering the same thing.I wonder what they'll say in fifty years about the trendy stuff people eat today? There's some pretty nauseating-looking stuff on the Food Network.
As far as scrapple goes, I'll have a double helping, please. And I once worked in a meat market, so I know where it comes from.
I wonder what they'll say in fifty years about the trendy stuff people eat today? There's some pretty nauseating-looking stuff on the Food Network.