Posted on 09/21/2022 3:59:20 PM PDT by mylife
During the Great Depression, people valued high-calorie combinations of protein and fat. Meat and dairy were costly, and consuming enough energy could prove challenging. Enter peanut butter and mayonnaise on white bread. The combination became a staple in Southern households in the United States and, in some regions, it was as ubiquitous as peanut butter and jelly. For the next 30 years or so, the PB&M was a favorite in many American kitchens, perhaps because adding mayonnaise to the era’s rustic, coarse nut butter may have been key for spreadability. According to Garden & Gun, newspapers from the 1940s in Salt Lake City, Utah, and Troy, New York, both advised adding mayonnaise to “moisten” or “thin” peanut butter before adding bacon or shredded American cheese.
In the 1960s, Hellman’s Mayonnaise debuted an advertisement suggesting fun ways to spice up the basic peanut butter & mayo sandwich. To make a “Double Crunch,” one simply added bacon and pickles. A “Funny Face” called for raisins and carrots (and some degree of artistic capability). The “Apple Fandango” featured sliced apples and marmalade, while the “Crazy Combo”—you’ve been warned—included salami, sliced eggs, and onions.
Today, a seemingly limitless array of sandwich ingredients are affordable, but peanut butter and mayonnaise remain a beloved combination among the many Americans who grew up eating them. It also continues to maintain standing as one of the cheapest, highest-calorie pairings out there (one tablespoon of either condiment contains about 100 calories). But while famished people struggling through the Great Depression replenished themselves with the dense snack, for 21st-century Americans, the combo of the two, gooey spreads is more likely to inspire a midday nap.
Spam, fried egg and cheese…
fry dat spam!!
Mayonnaise with some garlic.
Tartar sauce is also a favorite.
I bought a couple extra mayo...I like macaroni and/or potato salad for lunch...or a snack.
Then grill the sammich…
I had a Krim today for lunch.
We put syrup on bread sometimes.
I still do fried baloney...or hot dog coins.
many variants of that theme
PB&M is delicious...one of my favorites.
I have never seen one in my lifetime. Sounds disgusting.
Nah. My grandmother gave us butter and sugar on white bread.
Delucious!
Tomato and mayo on toast is great!
PB on bread toasted or not, sliced garden tomatoes, thinly sliced onions, is simple and cheap.
We had buttered bread, brown sugar and cinnamon, toasted. It was a real treat.
I’m going to have to try it at least once. I usually enjoy big PB N Honey or jelly. Mayo may be a bit more Keto?
yea, going for the sweet, salty combo always wins. I like the thick ruffels chips.
If the onion is a vidalia sweet, I could see that combo working.
“all I have is a burnt weenie sandwich :(”
How’d you get your weenie burnt?
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