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This Is What People Ate When They Had No Money During The Depression
TBI ^ | 11-18-2011 | Vivian Giang

Posted on 11/18/2011 7:47:54 PM PST by blam

This Is What People Ate When They Had No Money During The Depression

Vivian Giang
Nov. 18, 2011, 12:25 PM

Image: Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, FSA-OWI Collection

If you've ever visited anyone's house for dinner and a big, sloppy "secret family recipe" dish is flopped down in front of you, chances are high that the messy goodness could have originated from the Depression era.

Families were taught to creatively stretch out their food budgets and toast, potatoes and flour seem to be the popular, inexpensive ingredients. Expensive meat was typically eaten only once a week.

Some foods were invented during the Depression, such as spam, Ritz crackers, Krispy Kreme doughnuts and Kraft macaroni and cheese, according to livinghistoryfarm.org.

We've compiled some simple, easy recipes from 90-something Clara who shares her childhood dining memories during hard times. They may help you save money during our own Recession.

Click here to see what people ate>

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


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: cookery; depression; egginanest; food; recession; recipes
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To: Beowulf9

NUM.

I do this in the spring - but with fiddleheads and brookies -


121 posted on 11/18/2011 8:57:40 PM PST by maine-iac7 (ALWAYS WATCH THE OTHER HAND)
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To: blam
Hobo's.

Grilled potatoes in tin foil on open fire. Add lard or butter,salt,pepper, onions and peppers.

Got recipe from parents. They were born in the early 1930's in a very poor part of extreme cold northern Maine.

Other recipe was "Ploye", A pancake made out of buckwheat mixed with water(no milk) wrapped in butter.

122 posted on 11/18/2011 8:57:44 PM PST by dancusa (Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy. W. Churchill)
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To: djf

Thanks for the info, storing it away until early spring next year, God willing.


123 posted on 11/18/2011 8:59:35 PM PST by Bellflower (Judas Iscariot, first democrat, robber, held the money bag, claimed to care for poor: John 12:4-6)
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To: boop

***He was so ashamed because he could never “trade” lunch with the other kids, lest they find out how poor he was***

One of my supervisors joked about how he was so poor he took lard sand witches to his one room school. One day he decided he would steal someone’s lunch and have a feast!

He excused himself to go to the outhouse, and on the way out he lifted each lunch in the coatroom. He took the heaviest one he could find and ran deep into the East Texas woods. When he opened the sack, he found...... six hickory nuts and a hammer. ;-D


124 posted on 11/18/2011 8:59:52 PM PST by Ruy Dias de Bivar
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To: musicman

My grandfather worked for GE through the Depression so he and Grandma and their kids were never super poor, but they did struggle. But even when times were tough, Grandma always fed the destitute men who came to the back door seeking work or something to get them through the day.

Times were so different then...


125 posted on 11/18/2011 9:00:08 PM PST by TenthAmendmentChampion (I have a job; therefore I am in the 1%.)
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To: blam

The neat things you learning living in the Obama era.


126 posted on 11/18/2011 9:01:19 PM PST by Tribune7 (If you demand perfection you will wind up with leftist Democrats)
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To: All
Right now I'm sitting here laughing through my tears. Isn't it funny (and nice) how something as simple and down-to-earth as this one "throw away" article can bring so many of us together like a big family around the Thanksgiving table.

Memories are made of this.

127 posted on 11/18/2011 9:02:14 PM PST by LaybackLenny (All hail Her Royal Highness Sarah, Queen of The Hobbits)
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To: blam
One of my uncles was married to a tiny woman who made the best chili ever. For her, it must have been a luxury to make that simple chili, with plenty of meat and beans--which we kids loved. I found out later that the reason she was so tiny was that she had grown up during the Depression, in East Texas. Her family was so impoverished that they literally ate dirt, flavored with chili powder to make it palatable.

I think about that whenever I have to cook dinner for the family and don't feel like it.

128 posted on 11/18/2011 9:02:34 PM PST by giotto
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To: GeronL
Was champagne hard to get in the depression?

Well, at least it was sung about.

Blue Champagne--Glenn Miller, 1941

129 posted on 11/18/2011 9:02:59 PM PST by Fiji Hill
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To: blam

Tomato gravy on a bed of steamed rice is my favorite comfort food. I hurt myself when we have that.


130 posted on 11/18/2011 9:03:22 PM PST by rightly_dividing
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To: Beowulf9

My family calls them ‘birds’ nests’.


131 posted on 11/18/2011 9:03:23 PM PST by Freddd (NoPA ngineers.)
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To: LaybackLenny
One of my favorites, that was a favorite of my grandpa was when my grandma would fry hamburger or roundsteak or make a roast, she'd make gravy.
Dessert was always white bread with gravy. YUUUUUUM!

To this day, I love it. When I go to Cracker Barrel and have their pot roast w/ mashed potatoes and gravy, I always have them bring me an extra bowl of gravy. After dinner, I have them bring me 2-3 slices of white bread.

I think know I'd love that as entire meal.

132 posted on 11/18/2011 9:04:08 PM PST by mountn man (Happiness is not a destination, its a way of life.)
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To: djf

I made honey with dandelions for the first time this past summer. It was a learning experience, yield could easily have been better. I’ll be doing it again this spring.


133 posted on 11/18/2011 9:04:28 PM PST by Ladysmith (The evil that's happening in this country is the cancer of socialism...It kills the human spirit.)
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To: Ruy Dias de Bivar

I don’t recall the butter or the sugar - but it was toast in WARM milk. Come to think of it - it might not even have been toast! Just bread and warm milk.

Everytime my wife serves up some good meat I have to tell everyone how when we had meat for dinner, it would be sliced about twice as thick as bacon and we would each get two or three slices. I suppose mom bought one cut of meat from the farm up the road and sliced it so as to serve all six of us.

I don’t recall her growing potatoes, but lettuce and tomato was from the garden. She’s 93 now and has a better memory than I do. Always interesting to hear her talk of the old days.

She was not in dire straights though back then. Her father was a tailor - so perhaps did better than some with people wanting to mend their old clothes rather than buy new. She said it was something that everyone needed - and a lot of it was for barter. Including doctors, dentists, farmers, etc.


134 posted on 11/18/2011 9:05:10 PM PST by 21twelve ("We can go from boom to bust, from dreams to a bowl of dust....and another lost generation.")
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To: blam

**I bought three of those frying pans and a boiling pot at a garage sale today...for almost nothing.***

Griswold? Wagner? SK?

I still have my mom’s huge Griswold skillet, Griswold pancake cooker, and an unnamed skillet she bought on the high plains in 1945.

I have also collected quite a few Wagner skillets I use. I’ve got my children using good quality cast iron!


135 posted on 11/18/2011 9:05:53 PM PST by Ruy Dias de Bivar
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To: mountn man

MMMMMM! You betcha ;0)


136 posted on 11/18/2011 9:06:41 PM PST by LaybackLenny (All hail Her Royal Highness Sarah, Queen of The Hobbits)
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To: blam
"Some foods were invented during the Depression, such as spam, Ritz crackers, Krispy Kreme doughnuts "

Donuts were invented well before the depression. The Krispy Kreme business STARTED during the depression.

137 posted on 11/18/2011 9:07:47 PM PST by Rebelbase (Yes we Cain!)
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To: giotto

You know, I eat dirt all the time: lake dirt, garden dirt (this is on accident) and it really doesn’t taste bad or weird. Never occurred to me to cook with it but I wouldn’t have a problem trying if times got that hard.

Dirt recipes?


138 posted on 11/18/2011 9:10:03 PM PST by txhurl
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To: blam
"Some foods were invented during the Depression, such as spam,"

A true creation of the Devil himself. There was only one request that I gave to my wife, after our marriage 45 years ago: "Never bring a can of spam into our house". I have not eaten spam since the 1950's, as a young child.

139 posted on 11/18/2011 9:10:11 PM PST by matthew fuller ((1) fully fund defense, (2) transform entitlement programs, and (3) do not raise taxes!)
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To: tubebender

My Dad called them “toe sacks”.


140 posted on 11/18/2011 9:10:23 PM PST by GeronL (The Right to Life came before the Right to Pursue Happiness)
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