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Cooking Golden Era recipes

St. Louis

Practically Family
Messages
618
Location
St. Louis, MO
Has anyone here ever tried salad and dessert jellies? I find them fascinating in a horrible kind of way & have been working my way through a few veg & fruit jellies. I can see why they would be appealing -- some of these things look great in that late-art-deco architectural design way. But I can hardly stand the texture of the congealed gelatin. I'm forcing myself to eat them (I know, hilarious) because there is something so period-correct about them & I want to try to learn to like them. There are some advantages to making a big gelatin veg salad for lunch. It keeps for a few days & the vegetables stay crisp and fresh inside the gelatin.

I think this kind of thing would wow guests for dinner.

My mother used to make a lot of jello for us -- it's an easy & quick dessert -- but that's a different kettle of fish (so to speak.) I don't know how close modern Jello is to the 1930s / 1940s version. Is there any way to find out?

Anyway, right now I'm experimenting with unflavored gelatin. I've reduced the sugar considerably & next, will try it without any sweetening at all.

I'm beginning to understand why jelly molds were so popular during the 1920s-1950s.
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,771
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
I've actually got several boxes of 1930s Jell-O -- and it doesn't look any different from the current stuff. The strawberry version says IMITATION STRAWBERRY FLAVOR on the box, so it certainly wasn't any more natural than you kind you get today. Most fruit-flavored convenience foods of the Era were actually flavored with various combinations of cheap chemical ethers, and this was true going back as far as the turn of the century.
 

Radiospector

New in Town
Messages
17
I’ve had a berry jello salad before that had a whipped cream jello base and it was good. I decided to try the chocolate waffles from the cookbook minus the cocoa powder and it made a decent waffle with a crispy outer shell.
 

Paradoxical

New in Town
Messages
11
Location
Frederick, MD
My wife has made this cake a couple times:

1939doublemocha.jpg


The image above is hosted at this site: http://frugalsos.com/vintage-recipes/double-mocha-chocolate-cake/ The ad can be found in a 1939 Life Magazine issue.

It is a delicious cake but very rich. Too rich for some people. It also has a tendency to crater. My wife bakes cakes regularly throughout the year, and they don't usually crater so it is a bit of a mystery why this one craters.
 

docneg

One of the Regulars
Messages
191
Location
Pittsburgh PA
I inherited the sole cookbook that was in my family's kitchen when I was growing up, the 1943 edition of the American Woman's Cookbook. I have found that the recipes are very simple and workable for me (I'm not the most accomplished cook), probably due to wartime shortages. One thing I noticed, though, is the much longer cooking times for poultry, making me realize that the average bird being eaten back then was of much sturdier stock than today! But overall, these recipes are much more reliable than any modern ones I have tried.
 

vitanola

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,254
Location
Gopher Prairie, MI
A little past the Era, but Emil DeGouy's famous "The Gold Cook Book" of 1947 is perfect guide to the gastronomy of early Twentieth Century America. More than 2200 recepies, and not a bad one in the lot. Everything from "Harlequin Chicken" ( a cold roast bird in black and white aspic suitable for buffet service at the Waldorf) to "Salt Risin' Bread", to the simplest, most delectable sponge cake (unsurpassed when served as short cake, or with his simple hit butterscotch sauce)..

This cook book sold very well, and is usually easily available. A copy should sit in every kitchen.
 

vitanola

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,254
Location
Gopher Prairie, MI
I inherited the sole cookbook that was in my family's kitchen when I was growing up, the 1943 edition of the American Woman's Cookbook. I have found that the recipes are very simple and workable for me (I'm not the most accomplished cook), probably due to wartime shortages. One thing I noticed, though, is the much longer cooking times for poultry, making me realize that the average bird being eaten back then was of much sturdier stock than today! But overall, these recipes are much more reliable than any modern ones I have tried.

A very good basic book. You are dead on about it's reliability.
 

greatestescaper

One of the Regulars
Messages
293
Location
Fort Davis, Tx
Great stuff in this thread! Just the other day, having completed a reading of Christopher Morley's "The Haunted Bookshop" I found myself fixing up a dinner of eggs Samuel Butler! It came out fantastic, though how wrong can a person go piling toast with a few slices of bacon, sauteed mushrooms and red bell peppers, topped with a poached egg and heavily paprika'd hollandaise sauce. Eggs Samuel Butler will certainly find it's way into the regular rotation of meals.
 

Just Jim

A-List Customer
Messages
307
Location
The wrong end of Nebraska . . . .
One waterfront diner in which I briefly worked offered a "hungry man" breakfast consisting of a combination of 2 slices of french toast or 2 "handspan" pancakes (the diameter equal to the span of the cook's hand, typically 8-10"), 4 rashers of bacon or 4 sausage links, a 6" omelette stuffed with choice of diced ham/hashbrowns/chopped onion and peppers, and a bottomless cup of coffee. Other than prices, the menu hadn't changed since the '30s.

Sunday morning from 4-7 AM the special was hot bacon-and-fried-potato sandwiches, usually with plenty of Tobasco sauce and a glass of "thin" tomato juice on the side. It was supposed to cure hangovers, but I always suspected the vodka "thinning" the tomato juice had more to do with that. I knew we didn't have a liquor license, so I never asked.

The kitchen was basically a two-man operation. One guy did the prep work, the other cooked and plated. The griddle man was expected to be able to cook and plate with just a pair of scrapers. There's a knack to cooking an omelette on a griddle that way--without a ring--but once you have that it is much quicker (and who's got time to cook 20 omelettes at once in pans?).

Fast work all, very fast--but good training. A couple guys who worked there over the years went on to be decent chefs, and lord only knows how many eventually owned their own greasy spoons. I once applied for a job on a food truck and was asked to make a Philly cheesesteak as part of the interview. The owner watched me make the sandwich start to finish with just my scrapers and asked, "When did you work for Lou?"
 

Stanley Doble

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,808
Location
Cobourg
Do you know about Glen and Friends Sunday morning old cook book show? Every week he features a recipe from one of his vintage cook books of the 1900 = 1940 period. It's an interesting and fun show, often the recipes are taken from community cook books from around the US and Canada, each region with its own style of food. This one happens to be from a 1932 General Electric cook book promoting that wonderful new invention, the electric refrigerator.
You can see my comments as Mr Danforth 374

 
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MissNathalieVintage

Practically Family
Messages
757
Location
Chicago
I adore cooking from golden era cookbooks and since I am a vegan/vegetarian I tend to mortify recipes from my cookbooks, it has gotten quite easy to sub in meat for seitan or tofu. And with the many dairy free products out on the market it is also a synch to sub dairy too.
I came across this Betty Crocker style vegan cook book that I can not wait to start cooking from once I have the time http://vegetarianstar.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/9781455509331_p0_v1_s600.jpg

I work full-time and cook when I can.

One thing I do cook a lot is butter noodles.
I use whatever noodles I have on hand.
Vegan butter
Salt and pepper to taste
And dried parsley.
 
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Turnip

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,352
Location
Europe
Love to make some of the old stuff like pickled pork, pickled fried herring or pears, beans and bacon, turnip stew...

All seasonal stuff and seasonally made only so after a while I often real look forward to the respective seasons coming...:)
 

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