LizzieMaine
Bartender
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- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
For what it's worth, the "ideal American middle-class meal" of the 1930s would be a small chop -- pork or lamb, likely -- or a serving of roast beef, with mashed potatoes, peas or string beans, bread and butter, coffee, and a slice of pie for dessert. That sounds like a heavy meal until you realize the portions would have been much smaller than they are today. Gluttony was still considered one of the deadly sins, not something to be celebrated and encouraged.
Chicken was for poor people, turkey was for Thanksgiving, and steak was a treat you had at a restaurant. Hamburgers were something you grabbed on the run from a lunch wagon. Unless you lived on the coast, you didn't eat much fish other than sardines or canned tuna or salmon.
Nobody ever heard of "pasta." Macaroni and spaghetti, however, were popular.
Chicken was for poor people, turkey was for Thanksgiving, and steak was a treat you had at a restaurant. Hamburgers were something you grabbed on the run from a lunch wagon. Unless you lived on the coast, you didn't eat much fish other than sardines or canned tuna or salmon.
Nobody ever heard of "pasta." Macaroni and spaghetti, however, were popular.