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Weird Foods People Ate During The 1950s
Conquerer ^ | 5/15/21 | Conquerer

Posted on 05/10/2022 10:42:14 PM PDT by DallasBiff

Weird Foods People Ate During The 1950s

(Excerpt) Read more at youtube.com ...


TOPICS: Food
KEYWORDS: 1950s; jello
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To: DallasBiff

I remember early government subsidized school lunches. One horror was a layered mess of ham(?) slices layered with powdered eggs and a cheese-like food substance. We ate it but one serving was enough.


41 posted on 05/11/2022 3:24:37 AM PDT by muir_redwoods (Freedom isn't free, liberty isn't liberal and you'll never find anything Right on the Left)
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To: cherry

My wife puts celery in Jello. I hate it.


42 posted on 05/11/2022 3:24:48 AM PDT by FroggyTheGremlim (I'll be good, I will, I will!)
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To: pnut22

I remember gummint food...Silver cans with black letters.

Canned meats and veggies. AND we did have cheese...blocks of it.

Late 50’s. IIRC, there was a resurgence in the 70’s during the gas crisis...


43 posted on 05/11/2022 3:37:01 AM PDT by Adder (Proud member of the FJBLGB community: /s is implied where applicable.)
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To: kaktuskid

Both of the items you mention are readily available from the HEB food chain in Texas. But HEB is well known for being one of the better run businesses in the USA.


44 posted on 05/11/2022 3:45:12 AM PDT by ByteMercenary (Slo-Joe and KamalHo are not my leaders.)
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To: Hot Tabasco

Otherwise called SOS.


45 posted on 05/11/2022 3:54:08 AM PDT by animal172 (This ain't the country I grew up in.)
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To: pnut22

What about head cheese? I remember taking sandwiches to school for lunch and being embarrassed about it.


46 posted on 05/11/2022 4:04:59 AM PDT by MomwithHope (Forever grateful to all our patriots, past, present and future.)
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To: DallasBiff

I’m not yet 30 and have never eaten Jello. Or Spam.

However, I have heard food horror stories from boomer parents regarding the fare served to their parents. Among them, an eastern European dish containing pig feet in a gelatinous substance. You could actually see that they were, um, feet. I have never seen the word; it sounded like cochina. Maybe that’s from the French for pig; or akin to the Italian for kitchen...maybe not since the folks who cooked it spoke Hungarian and Russian.

Also, they were known to float recognizable chicken feet in pots of soup.

My WW2 vet grandpa made some horrific coffee, for that matter. They still talk of it now and then.

And people killed their own chickens, right on their laps.
Today you may have to go to China to pick out live food, unless it’s something you can’t relate to at all, like a lobster.

Back to weird stuff, my cousin born in the 80’s recalls “pop rocks,” which crackled in the mouth, and an uncle older than that recalls drinking candy juice from wax tubes, and wax lips you could eat. I’m not sure how that works. They don’t sound traumatized when they talk about such things, but frankly it’s a little triggering.

PS: Great-grandfather put tobacco wads in his mouth, took them out and left them lying around, put them back in later. He didn’t have to, being quite rich later in life.


47 posted on 05/11/2022 4:06:11 AM PDT by Buttons12 ( )
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To: DallasBiff

The Germans put sawdust in bread dough to make it go farther.


48 posted on 05/11/2022 4:08:59 AM PDT by Vision (Elections are one day. Reject "Chicago" vote harvesting. Election Reform Now. Obama is an evildoer.)
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To: 9YearLurker

I like olive loaf but rarely can find it


49 posted on 05/11/2022 4:15:54 AM PDT by SaveFerris (The Lord, The Christ and The Messiah: Jesus Christ of Nazareth - http://www.BiblicalJesusChrist.Com/)
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To: 9YearLurker

“With some miniature marshmallows tossed in for good measure!”

Absolutely! And with whipped cream spread over the top.


50 posted on 05/11/2022 4:23:54 AM PDT by ryderann
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To: Buttons12

The term you are looking for is “pickled pig feet” which along with pickled eggs, whole dill pickles could be bought at the counter of a country store.


51 posted on 05/11/2022 4:54:22 AM PDT by Fai Mao (I think we need more telephone poles!)
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To: Hot Tabasco
"Chipped beef on toast......hated it"
Creamed chipped beef on toast (SOS in the army)......really wasn't that bad for breakfast.
52 posted on 05/11/2022 4:56:34 AM PDT by Hiddigeigei ("Talk sense to a fool and he calls you foolish," said Dionysus - Euripides)
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To: Fai Mao

I looked it up. The Hungarian word is kocsonya, which sounds like “kutchunya.”
Looks like something you could buy in a gag shop.


53 posted on 05/11/2022 4:59:13 AM PDT by Buttons12 ( )
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To: JD_UTDallas

“mortadella”

LOL...Italian bologna.

In Sicily, we’d hit the meat counter at a local grocery store, buy thinly sliced mortadella, prosciutto, salami, various sliced cheeses. Then visit the bakery next door for some hot bread. Cross the street to a park and make sandwiches. No mayo, mustard, olive oil, etc...just meat, cheese and warm bread. We called mortadella “Italian bologna”. The best sandwiches!


54 posted on 05/11/2022 5:04:04 AM PDT by moovova
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To: 9YearLurker

And some other stuff called “liver cheese” and “head cheese”. There was no cheese in that stuff, I tell you.


55 posted on 05/11/2022 5:04:55 AM PDT by virgil (The evil that men do lives after them )
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To: DallasBiff

Fried bread & butter, scrapple with maple syrup, deviled eggs, cinnamon & sugar on dough strips rolled then baked.


56 posted on 05/11/2022 5:16:42 AM PDT by PIF (They came for me and mine ... now its your turn)
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To: Equine1952

I’ve seen plenty of squirrels in Nashville and their fat and healthy looking!


57 posted on 05/11/2022 5:21:52 AM PDT by RedMonqey (Fu%k the Ballot box. Now the Cartridge Box)
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To: Hot Tabasco

Mom made chipped beef gravy & Toast, Dad called it Sh@t on a shingle, but we loved it. Also hamburger gravy, boiled eggs and gravy. Her sausage gravy was made in the same skillet. You didn’t waste grease.


58 posted on 05/11/2022 5:22:05 AM PDT by bleach (If I agreed with you, we would both be wrong.)
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To: ryderann

Or Cool Whip, in the ‘60s.


59 posted on 05/11/2022 5:23:21 AM PDT by 9YearLurker
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To: virgil

Ha. That stuff was closer to toe cheese than cheese cheese. Popular longer in the UK than over here.


60 posted on 05/11/2022 5:25:17 AM PDT by 9YearLurker
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