Quantcast
Channel: food – Envisioning The American Dream
Viewing all 66 articles
Browse latest View live

Patio-Daddy-O

$
0
0

Vintage illustration suburban barbecue 1948

The Manly Art of Outdoor Cookery

According to chef Bobby Flay and author Daniel Duane, the kitchen is fast  becoming the new man cave.

However back in the prehistoric days of mid-century America, the kitchen was firmly Moms territory, the great outdoors Dads, and the lines were firmly drawn

A Gordon’s gin and tonic in one hand, flipping burgers and franks in the other, brought out the cave-man in my Dad who was as content as Fred Flintstone tossing a tyrannosaurus burger on his prehistoric Weber.

A tradition as ancient as cave men  gathered round the fire or cowboys cooking their grub round the old campfire, there was something that spoke to the innate rugged outdoors-man in every red-blooded American man.

Even in our small suburban parcel of land- there was a feeling of adventure especially for a man brought up in an apartment in Astoria Queens.

Sloppin’ a hunk of meat on the grill was about as he man as you could get in the suburbs.

vintage book on Barbecueing and cartoon character Barney from Flinstones

Big Boys

Strategically wielding the Big Boy barbecue tongs, my father was ready for any barbecue maneuver.

A king size cigarette dangling from his lips, barbecue apron round his regulation plaid Bermuda shorts, his smart masculine styling rated a fashion 21 gun salute.

With its “Big Daddy” type splashed in lurid colors, distinguishing him as commander-in-chief, his grease splattered barbecue apron featured busty beauties brandishing burgers, and a crude drawing of a dachshund devouring a hot dog.

Fuels Rush In

From the days of cave men, men have been fascinated with the pulse quickening quick pulse excitement of making fires.

With the precision used to plan a WWII  bombing mission in the south pacific, Dad calculated the wind velocity, temperature and cloud coverage when making the perfect fire, skills learned as a meteorologist in the Army Air Corp while serving in New Guinea .

vintage illlustration 1950s men at suburban barbecue

Watching my Dad work the Weber, my brother and I were terrified at the sight of the roaring flames, which came perilously close to our wood-shingled house.

After a healthy dose of lighter fluid was squirted on the briquettes- the amalgam of Benzene and butane added flavor magic to a sizzling burger- it ignited in a sudden fireball burst of heat.

Cringing at the blinding flashes of fire, rising to the sky, the smoke billowing into a pyramid-shaped cloud in the sky, we gaped at its brilliance, choked at its smoke and shuddered at its burning roar.

Burger King

Vintage illustration suburban barbecue man in chefs hat

Noisily spitting and crackling as if in protest, the humble hot dogs on the barbecue begrudgingly  ceded space on the grill  to the prima donna arrivistes, the curvaceous patty’s who made their debut like Vegas showgirls erupting in a dramatic pyrotechnic display of fire.

Not only did Dad have a way with wieners, he was also the burger king!

His were not the wimpy buy-em -by-the sackful-square- cut-steamed- beneath- a blanket of onions twoallbeefpattiesspecialsaucelettucecheesepickles-onionsonasesameseedbun burgers.

Those golden arches, the stuff of California dreamin’,  had yet to embark on their scorched earth campaign across the country- Old McDonald’s didn’t even have a stand on Long Island.

No, Dads burgers were Marlboro Man marvels, king size red white and blue burgers, unwieldy mounds of ground fatty chuck, cooked like a cowboy round the open campfire, tamed with a spatula then left to sizzle in peace.

As the billowing smoke burned his lungs, Dads sun-ruddy face gleamed with perspiration as he drained his gin and tonic with great gusto.

It’s how the west was won.

 

Copyright (©) 20012 Sally Edelstein All Rights Reserved -Excerpt From Defrosting The Cold War:Fallout From My Nuclear family



Wag The Dog

$
0
0

Vintage illustration ww2 soldiers vintage image 1950s men at suburban barbecue

Hot Summer…. Cold War Pt III

As the world poised for a showdown between those 2 cold warriors the USA and the Soviet Union, the risk of military conflict between the 2 heated up the summer of 1961 over the crisis in Berlin. The city divided up between the victors of WWII was located deep in the Soviet occupied parts of Germany and now Soviets were threatening to drag it behind the iron curtain.

The fate of Nathans Hot Dogs hung in the balance.

GI Joe in Suburbia

That summer as the melodic sound of Connie Francis longingly asking “Where the boys are” drifted over the lilacs from a neighbor’s transistor radio, the men at my family barbecue could be found shvitzing over the red-hot coals of the grill, shooting the breeze.

When tired of arguing the un likelihood of  NYC Mayor Robert Wagner running for  a third term successfully without the backing of Tammany Hall, libations were replenished as  the men brooded over the storm gathering in Berlin.

Sixteen years ago these sunburned suburban schmoozers had all been soldiers who had happily helped defeat Der Fuehrer.

Now with their missions done, their tooth- notched stainless steel rectangular dog tags with the letter H embossed on them safely tucked away, the roar of guns and bombs a dim memory displaced by the whirl of a Lawn Boy mower and the effervescent bubbling of Canada Dry quinine water, they seemed willing to risk nuclear war to protect the former capital of that former enemy country from the evil clutches of our former comrades in arms, the Russians.

As if shifting gears between enemy and ally was as effortless as the automatic transmission in your Chevrolet, the considerable fury and fear that had fueled our hatred of those bloodless Nazi  had been seamlessly and swiftly re-routed to those God-less Russian Commies

Wag The Dog

vintage ad 1960s man eating hot dog

Eagerly biting into a tongue scalding frankfurter hot off the grill, Moms cousin Milton, a short and stubby man, his GI regulation washboard abs having long gone AWOL leaving his ever-expanding belly stretching the outer limits of his Acrylan shirt, offered up a compelling reason why we needed to step up and protect West Berlin from the clutches of the soulless Russians.

“I have just one word for you-Nathans!” he stated firmly, gobbling his hot dog with as much gusto as he perceived the Soviets would gobble up Berlin.

The men nodded knowingly.

Vintage illustration art & advertising 1950s suburbanites

A Wonderland of Wieners

Ignoring the fact that the former Wehrmacht was a wonderland of wieners and wursts, its rowdy, German beer gardens filled with boisterous, red-faced patrons washing down their bratwurst with thirst quenching weizen glasses of dark amber Dinkel Acker, if Berlin got dragged behind the iron curtain, he argued, the poor Berliners would be deprived of one of life’s great pleasures-noshing on a Nathans hot dog.

No one needed reminding of that near-international incident a few years back when Averill Harriman went to the Soviet Union and was denied a simple request.

N.Y.’s  patrician former governor had asked the hot dog mavens at Nathans to airmail their specialty to him in Soviet Union, but the heartless Russians stopped the shipment of juicy franks at the border, fearful perhaps that if they let the poor Soviet people get even a whiff of good American hot dogs they’d revolt.

Nathans it seems was banned behind the Iron Curtain.

That  was ironic considering those Kings of Coney Island had once catered the big “Carving up the Post War World” party hosted by FDR at Yalta where along with Churchill and Stalin, the 3 big powers greedily chowed down on some red hots while redrawing the map.

Hot Summer ….Cold War  Pt IV next post

Copyright (©) 20012 Sally Edelstein All Rights Reserved -Excerpt From Defrosting The Cold War:Fallout From My Nuclear Family


Kitchen Garden All Year Round

$
0
0

Vintage refrigerator housewife1950s

Thanks to war-time research and  American know how, growing up in suburban mid-century America  I would be the happy recipient of a veritable bushel basket of sun-kissed vitamin rich fruits and vegetables.

No other country we were told  has the good fortune to enjoy such a varied, appealing and wholesome diet”.

And no we did not have a plethora of farmers markets, green grocers or organic community food co-ops: in fact today’s locavore movement- the notion of eating what is produced locally local and shunning what isn’t – would have been laughed at.

Most of the farm fresh goodness I would experience came courtesy of Birds Eye Farms ( quick frozen for quick serving) and the valley of The Green Giant

No matter the season, I could always enjoy cans and boxes of good tasting fresh from the pesticide sprayed farm flavor of fruits and vegetables.

 

Old McDonald had A Suburban Farm

Vintage illustration childrens text book on the farm

(L)Happy days on the farm vintage children’s book illustration from “On Cherry Street” Ginn Basic reader 1950s (R) Vintage ad- Snow Crop Frozen Vegetables Country Fair 1957

 Quick frozen or in cans, dried or powdered, it was like having a farm in your own back yard, which funny enough I did.

Like so many other housing developments of the time, my ranch house sprouted up on what had once been one of hundreds of potato farms that dotted LI.

The original farmer, Mr Gutztsky who looked remarkably like Mr. Green Jeans on Captain Kangaroo, held on to a small plot of his original farm so that in fact for many years instead of rows of split levels houses, there was an actual farm behind us.

For a while there were the early morning rooster alarm clock, the stray clucking chickens in the backyard and even a horse poking his nose in an open window.

Whatever connection of being back to the earth my city-bred parents originally  felt,  was in just a few short years, eventually  totally bulldozed away when Farmer/businessman  Gutzsky sold the last of his acreage to developers.

Better n’ Fresh

vintage ad Mr &Mrs Potato Head toys

Actually preparing fresh vegetables seemed as out of date as the horse-drawn plow used on the farm we usurped.

Why bother boiling and peeling and mashing those plentiful local Long Island  potatoes when Instant dehydrated flakes were so much easier.

But the abundance of all those local potatoes did not go to waste.

They came in darn handy in creating an extended family for Mr and Mrs Potato Head, with plenty o’ little tater tots to go around. 387

 A Ripe Idea

Naturally from time to time, we did enjoyed the wholesome goodness of fresh fruits and vegetables straight from Mother Nature herself. The produce section had been set free of the tyranny of the seasons and become global in its choices.

Even with the proper refrigeration  the problem with these gold mines of health was that they were always so gosh darn perishable, but once again American scientists came to the rescue..

Why wait for lazy Mother Nature – when miracle sprays would force all the fruit to ripen and like magic, change color at once.

In this new fast paced jet-age, who had time to wait for vine ripened tomatoes?

Why wait till the end of summer, when with a healthy splash of ethylene gas those rock hard green tomatoes of yesterday suddenly would become today’s garish red ones, conveniently packed in styrephone trays encased in plastic, just ripe for tossin’ in the salad.

 Safeguarding Democracy

vintage ads art &advertising fruits and vegetable pictures

Mother Natures little helpers (L) Vintage Ad for Flavorseal from Food Machinery Corp. 1948 (R) Vintage Ad Pliofilm by Goodyear 1944

 It was a Post War Promise kept – “You can have fresh fruits and vegetables tonight…..even if the calendar says no.

The reason- Flavorseal protection.

Developed by research scientists, Flavorseal was a solution which was sprayed in a thin waxy film over the surface of freshly harvested citrus fruit, tomatoes, cucumbers and other produce helping the products stay fresh and wholesome longer for your enjoyment.

Flavorseal, they boasted, slowed down the natural deterioration of the fruit or vegetable….preserves its original freshness flavor for many extra days or even weeks!

More food to eat- less to throw away.

Was My Face Red

Food could be kept fresh from the vine for months.

Believe it or not the ad claims this gorgeous red ripe tomato was picked ripe from the vine 30 long days ago!

Harvest wrapped in Goodyears miracle wrap Pliofilm- a marvelous new transparent moistureproof, spoilageproof wrapping material that seals in natures goodness and seals out natures gremlins. “

Yes, it was always harvest time in our household, no matter the season. And thanks to science, it was not just canned and frozen vegetables and fruits- but fresh, rot- resistant tomatoes, fresh frost resistant strawberries year ‘round!

The future of good nourishment was well protected!

 

Copyright (©) 20012 Sally Edelstein All Rights Reserved
 

 


Coke, Corn and the Drought of 2012

$
0
0

vintage illustration coke ad american farmer  1940s

Have a Coke and a Smile

There seems to be a whole lot less to smile about these days.

As the good cheer of Coke comes under blistering attack for its empty calories contributing to the obesity epidemic in America, the very corn used to create the high fructose corn syrup used in the sugary concoction, is itself under assault by a perfect storm of drought and excessive heat.

The proud American farmer who once claimed boasting rights to a bountiful corn harvest has been devastated by the drought of 2012.

The post-war farmer in this 1946 Coca Cola ad proudly displaying his prize corn crop to his neighborhood pals at the local soda shop stands in sharp contrast to the countless media images we have seen recently of American farmers woefully holding wilted corn ravaged by the drought.

Corn has been the backbone of Americas agriculture for generations with 75% of our food supply containing corn.

The wilting heat and drought now  threaten to send food prices soaring due to short supplies of staples like corn, soybeans and wheat.

Bubbly Blues

But not to worry soda lovers.

They’ll still be plenty of pop to go around.

Soda makers like Coca Cola will simply switch back to using good old-fashioned sugar instead of the less expensive and considerably sweeter high fructose corn syrup.

In the early 1980s, Coca Cola had pulled a switcheroo in their usually closely guarded formula. It was no secret that they switched from sugar to high fructose corn syrup as the sweet syrup was more cost-effective.

Sweet Dreams

As it turns out there may be a silver lining fans for fans of the sweet carbonated beverages

U.S. sugar stocks are plentiful.

Record crops of US sugar beets are expected this fall as well as large sugarcane harvest in the Gulf Coast region.

For those with a sweet tooth, that’s something to smile about.

For N.Y.C.’s Mayor Michael Bloomberg, not so much.

 

Copyright (©) 2012 Sally Edelstein All Rights Reserved


Picnic in the Post-War Park

$
0
0

 

vintage illustration family picnic 1948

Long before we became a fast food, disposable nation, picnicking required something more substantial and permanent than a Styrofoam clamshell  tossed in a brown paper bag.

According to a 1948 advertisement  by Aladdin, every day was a holiday with your “Aladdin Outing Kit”. Aladdin, the  Nashville manufacturers of those classic metal school lunch boxes with the pictures of your favorite TV star emblazoned on them were previously manufacturers of some more sedate adult fare.

Basically a picnic basket, The Aladdin Outing Kit shared in that marvelous post-war exuberance of carefree living and convenience.

Vintage picture picnic basket

Here’s how they explain their playtime snack bar in a 1948 advertisement ”,,,all outdoors is your dining room when you are the proud possessor of a handsome Aladdin outing kit.”

“With it you’re ready in a jiffy to dine outdoors on food kept fresh and appetizing a coaxing invitation to carefree outdoor hours the year-round. Completely equipped from salt shakers, to Aladdin Hy-Lo Vacuum Bottles, smartly and sturdily cased in lightweight gleaming aluminum…from the time you buy it all outdoors is your living room.”

Apparently sales of the Outing Kit paled in comparison to their maiden venture into manufacturing  decaled children’s school lunch boxes.

Vintage lunchbox Hopalong Cassidy

Their immensely popular Hopalong Cassidy metal lunchbox produced in 1950 was so wildly successful a marriage of peanut butter and jelly with pop culture, it enabled Aladdin to build a new lunch box manufacturing plant.

With the addition of the  Tom Corbett Space Cadett  metal lunchbox 4 years later, the company’s sales really skyrocketed

The rest is school lunch history.

Copyright (©) 2012 Sally Edelstein All Rights Reserved

 


How Hostess Cakes Helped the Housewife

$
0
0
Vintage Illustration club women 1920s

(L) Vintage illustration Club Women of America 1927 by David Robinson (R) Vintage Hostess Cakes Logo 1928

The Great Sugar Rush

Americans with a sweet tooth are rushing to stock up on Ding Dongs, Ho Ho’s, Twinkies and all sorts of sugary Hostess goodies as Hostess Brands announces they will shut down for good,

Say it ain’t so.

Long before these chemically laden sweet treats became the junk food darling of those in need of a sugar rush, there was a time when serving a Hostess cake for the ladies who lunched set was considered fashionable and quite proper indeed.

The Hostess Cakes advertisements that ran in the late 1920s were directed at the new post-war housewife who was looking for up-to-date, time-saving help in the recently maid-less kitchen.

Hostess Cakes, a product of the Continental Baking Company, were part of the new hurry up cooking ethic.

Discussions ran rampant at all the lady’s clubs concerning  this most modern practice of serving a pre-packaged cake for guests, with many of the older set turning up their nose at this new practice. Even if Betty Crocker declared that the 1920s was “the beginning of the real cake era”, some of it began to be store-bought.

Hostess With the Mostess

Vintage Ad 1930s

Mrs.Helen Johnson was in a tizzy. Her cake was a flop.

“Of all times to have my cake go back on me” sobbed Helen, “and just last week I baked such a good one! Why can’t they always turn out right?”

The girls were expected at her house for tea that afternoon and she was without a decent cake. Could she dare serve her guests something straight off the grocers shelf?

So many women shared this baking uncertainty with Helen. They never knew until it was too late what their cake would be like. And when one failed on a “special occasion” what a tragic disappointment it would be!

If the 1920′s housewife was troubled by baking ups and downs “why not try the advice of a smart domestic scientist” who suggested the ease of serving a store-bought cake.

Vintage Ad Hostess Cakes 1928 illustration housewife serving tea

Vintage Ad Hostess Cakes 1928

“Yes, not to worry” Alice Adams Proctor reassured our harried heroine in this 1928 ad. Hostess would come to m’lady’s rescue.

Mrs. Alice Adams Proctor, the domestic scientist extraordinaire from Continental Baking Company the makers of these delectable Hostess Cakes, was  the calming voice of authority in these ads reassuring the lady of the house.

“In all parts of the country Hostess Cakes have achieved enviable success.”

“Their flavor…their texture…their dainty appearance have been a revelation to millions of women.”

“So with complete confidence, Madam, I urge you to try them, too.”

“A single bite will convince you. I believe that baking cake at home is utter folly.”

Vintage illustration housewife 1927

No baking Failures Now

“Baking failures never bother when you buy these delicious cakes. When a Hostess Cake fails, you never know. Only perfect cakes…cakes literally without a single flaw…ever find their way out of the Hostess kitchens.”

“So I guarantee a cake you can serve with perfect confidence. A cake your friends will notice and praise.”

“I guarantee an attractive cake too. Guests immediately comment.”

“You see, Mrs Proctor said confidently, I know the immaculate kitchens where they are made. I know the talented pastry cooks who bake them.”

“So just order one of these Hostess Cakes as a test. Be critical. Judge it carefully.”

English: A Hostess CupCake, shown whole.

“What…you bought them ? the girls asked Elvira incredulously. No wonder tea guests are frankly amazed to hear that cakes like these can be bought at a grocer.”

“Honestly,” Mrs. Johnson said agreeing, “you’ve never tasted anything as delicate and delicious as these chocolate cup cakes. And your choice of vanilla or chocolate icing! Two for 5 cents!”

These early incarnation of the Hostess cup cake had no white squiggle of frosting or crème filled core. The chocolate cupcake  referred to in the ad originated in 1919 was given its final embellishment, the filling and white squiggle in 1945

How Hostess Cakes Came to the Rescue

Vintage Ad Hostess Cakes 1930

Another success story attributed to Hostess was explained in this 1930 ad about the troubles of a certain Mrs. Leticia Luke whose neglected children were the result of too much time spent baking by mama.

Leticia Luke loved to bake.

There were spice cakes, angel cakes, devil cakes, sponge cakes and fudge cakes. They were stuffed, gilded and embellished with luscious frostings, fillings, and icings, opulently flavored with chocolate, coconut, marshmallow, whipped cream, and pineapple. But she spent so much time baking these creations she had little time for anything else.

vintage illustration 1930s Housewives  shopping

One day while shopping at the local grocers Mrs. Luke was shocked to hear that she was the subject of her neighbor’s gossip!

“I just dread Saturdays when Mrs. Luke’s children are home,” Mrs. Luke heard one of her neighbors say in the grocery store one morning. “They are into some kind of mischief around the neighborhood every minute. And do you know why? She doesn’t take them anywhere or plan anything for them to do.”

Leticia’s face turned beet red!

“She just spends the whole blessed afternoon in the kitchen baking- making a fussy coconut layer cake for Sunday. Imagine! When she could have a Hostess Cocoanut Layer that would be every bit as good and no trouble at all!”

“Yes,” Alice Adams Proctors tells the reader of the ad “overheard gossip has its helpful side Sometimes it opens our eyes to better ways of doing things.”

“There are always things to do nowadays that are more fun- and more important- than baking cake, Alice Proctor points out. “So why bake when you can buy cake like this Hostess Cocoanut Layer- rich, delicious tender as any homemade cake?

“You couldn’t make such a rich good cake as this for anything like the price. Just look at the list of ingredients we use. It’s very seldom that a housewife can command such choice materials for home baking.”

“If you ever buy a Hostess cake that isn’t perfectly fresh, just return the part you haven’t used to the grocer and he will cheerfully refund your money.”

“Won’t you try one of these wonderful ready-to-serve cakes today?”


Stay As Sweet As You Are- Sugar Seduction

$
0
0

sugar  baby ad illustration 1940s

Sugar Seduction

Being a typical up-to-date-mid-century American baby, my very first mouthful of nourishment was a doctor prescribed, sugar sweetened bottle formula.

Modern babies, we were advised, should begin life on Dextrose, cutting their sweet tooth at an early age.

 But, Americans were warned, the end of infancy did not end the body’s need for dextrose.

 No siree!

 On the contrary- Everybody needed dextrose every day of life regardless of age.

 Thanks to the wise wizards of food processors and the Mad men of Madison Avenue, Americans could start on a life long addiction to sugar from the very first sip of their Karo syrup-enriched baby formula.

 Sugar Shock

 It may be hard to swallow but once upon a time sugar was not the unhealthy villain it is viewed as today but an essential nutrient.

 Through the first half of the 20th century, sugar was deemed essential to health- good tastin’ and good for ya’. In fact it was sanctioned by Uncle Sam as part of the seven essential food groups.

vintage ad food cake baby

Vintage Ads (L) Dextrose Sugar- Corn products Refining Company 1953 (R) Betty Crocker Cake Mix 1956

Since my mid-century mother was chief cook and homemaker in our home, she understood that if hers was to be a perfect American family, her husband and her children must be perfectly fed.

And dextrose, that all American sugar, would be an essential part of any good health diet.

Sweet Dreams

candy illustration 1940s kids

Vintage illustration from DuPont Cellophane Ad 1946

“By all means,” one advertisement encouraged,”let ‘em eat cake…and candy too!” It’s nature’s way according to the ad produced by the Corn Products Refining Company, producers of dextrose sugar.

“Nature has her own way of telling us there is more energy in sweets. Today corn syrup rich in dextrose is playing a more important role than ever in supplying active Americans with the sugar that gives power to the body and keeps wits sharp.”

 Candy for example wasn’t just a treat but a nutritious wholesome food! With the modern homemaker’s knowledge of nutrition, she understood that:

 “Candy is a veritable bulwark against between meal fatigue. Even doctors consider candy a desirable requirement of the daily diet…”

Candy is Dandy

sugar dextrose candy children ads 1950s

Vintage advertising (L) Dextrose Sugar- Corn Products Refining Company 1946 (R) Welches Candy CoConut Bar 1952

 The age-old question of  Why Do Children Crave Candy? was answered in one ad my mother read with great interest.

 “Many parents fail to realize that the family menu is generally planned to suit their own appetites and bodily needs. The growing bodies of children have quite different requirements. For instance an active child may need twice as much energy food as an adult and the childs craving for sweets shows that this need is unsatisfied.”

 “Candy is an energy food”

 “Most candy contains dextrose which is food energy in its most readily available form. Pure, wholesome candy, is a valuable factor in balanced nutrition at all age.”

 “Whenever you buy foods labeled  Enriched with Dextrose you can be assured of added enjoyment and genuine healthful food energy value.” the ad declared proudly.

 Sugar Rush

sugar dextrose advertising 1940s illustration woman

All those High School Home Ec classes Mom excelled in during 1940’s war time had really come in handy. “She who eats right, gets more out of life,” the textbook told her. “The important 3 P’s –personality, pep and popularity could be attained by anyone if they followed the rules of good nutrition.”

And the key to pep was sugar, natures energy fuel.

 “Sugar,” we were told, “has an important place in every diet. It furnishes an easily available and economical form of energy and aids in the digestion of fats and proteins. Adequate sugar should be included in the diet.”

 And no sugar was deemed more healthful in mid-century America than the all American Sugar Dextrose, made from all American corn.

 Consumers were told to not merely ask for that corn derived concoction, but demand foods enriched with Dextrose.

 How Sweet It Is

sugar dextrose ads 1940s

Vintage Ads Dextrose Sugar -Corn Products Refining Company 1940s

 In the 1940’s a great deal of money in advertising was spent by the Corn Products Refining Company promoting the virtues of corn syrup, an inexpensive form of dextrose much favored by manufacturers.

 Just as today the Corn Refiners are trying to re-brand High Fructose Corn Syrup as “corn sugar,” so 70 years ago the Corn Products Refining Company was fighting a similar battle to have sugar derived from corn accepted as a wholesome, nutritious ingredient, superior to old-fashioned cane or beet sugar.

 And they succeeded

 Dextrose became the new wonder nutrient touted for its energy giving properties. It was not just an ingredient or sweetener, it enriched food with the energy of the sun.

 “Everybody needs Dextrose every day of life, regardless of age,” the ads proclaimed.

 Sugar as Savior

sugar dextrose ad cave man illustration

Vintage ad Dextrose Sugar- Corn Products Refining Company 1943

 One ad with copy as cloying and saccharine as the product itself,  revealed Dextrose’s miraculous powers:

 “Dextrose is more than “just a sugar”- it’s the sugar for which there is no substitute…the sugar your body uses directly for energy. In fact all other sugars must be changed into Dextrose before they can be used by the body for activity.

 “Doctors prescribe it for young and old in health and in sickness, even for life emergencies!”

 “In short, Dextrose is the one sugar that supports life most efficiently.”

 “That was why intelligent, health minded people prefer products made with Dextrose because they appreciate its great value as the energy fuel of the body…whenever you buy a bar or box of candy look among the ingredients on the wrapper for Dextrose.

 But Dextrose was not just for candy.

sugar dextrose bread packaged deserts

Vintage Ads (L) Dextrose Sugar in Bread 1946 (R) Dextrose Sugar in Packaged Goods 1949

 “You’ll find most foods enriched with this great natural sugar more enjoyable.”

 Naturally all the dextrose produced in the US was used by progressive food manufacturers, the ads explained   to improve the quality and taste of fine foods, breads, biscuits candies cereals, soft drinks, ice cream and so much more.

 Promoters of canned fruits rhapsodized: “The fine flavorful canned fruits and fruit juices which America enjoys the year round are just bursting with energy dextrose. It actually enhances natural flavor and protects natural color.”

 Corn Hucksters

vintage illustration ad corn

Corn syrup, this miraculous substance had a somewhat dubious past. This cheap sugar substitute that was less expensive than beet and cane sugar, and that had been around for years, was something food manufacturers who substituted it in their products, had once tried to keep secret from consumers.

But with the great success of the Corn Products Refining Company’s advertising campaign selling the public on the health benefits of their product, food manufacturers began proudly declaring Dextrose it on their labels.

Just as today’s consumer carefully reads food labels for vitamins or whole grains, the 1940s homemaker were admonished to scan labels in search of dextrose.

 “Many progressive food companies recognize that thinking women today select foods for their health benefits as well as for their enjoyment. Next time you market look for “Dextrose among the ingredients listed on food and beverage labels.”

 Sugar Goes to War

WWII Food ads soldier illustration

Vintage WWII Food Ads (L) Libbys Canned Foods 1940s (R) Bakers Chocolate1940s

 It was WWII that gave Dextrose the real boost it needed With wartime sugar rationing, dextrose stepped up to fill a real need.

 Dextrose was now not only the scientific alternative to sugar, it was patriotic.

 “Dextrose,” the Corn Products Refining Company boasted in all its wartime ads “is an ALL American sugar, derived from American corn, refined in American factories by American workers , distributed by American companies.Amrerica can supply every pound of Dextrose sugar needed for American consumption. Dextrose is wholly completely American.”

Sugar Coating

sugar kids 1950s

 By the time I was a toddler the bloated basic 7 food groups of my mothers youth-the FDR approved WWII guidelines went on a reducing diet and were whittled down to a streamlined 4.

Sugar got the axe but it was still considered vitally essential and was to be included in every diet. Americans prodigious sweet tooth would make sure of that

It was felt that because no American diet was likely to lack any sugar, it was unnecessary to include specific recommendations for their use.

My childhood would be filled with sugar-coated goodness.

Copyright (©) 2013 Sally Edelstein All Rights Reserved

 

 


 


Mom’s Suburban Supermarket Adventures

$
0
0

1950s housewife grocery shopping shopping cart

One day while flipping through a 3 year old, dog-eared magazine while waiting for her hair to dry at the Glam-A- Rama Beauty Parlor, my mid-century Mom happened upon an article in the May 1955 issue of Better Living Magazine that caught her eye.

Squirming uneasily in turquoise, hydraulic chair, she did a double take when she recognized the name of the author of the piece as a former college classmate of hers. For just a fleeting moment, a glimpse of envy and regret flashed across my self described, self-fulfilled, self–effacing  Mom’s face.

The article entitled The Lady is Queen of the Supermarket, was a gushing ode to the dazzling world of mid-century supermarkets and the fortunate housewives who frequented them.

illustration supermarket shopping A&P 1950s

“The supermarket is a symbol of Americas attainment of a high standard of living through democracy and is looked upon as one of the great institutions of the world.” began the upbeat article.

“The supermarket is the woman’s store”

 “Self service is more than just a slick way of selling groceries to the woman customer it makes marketing day an adventure.

Mom laughed out loud. I looked up in curiosity from my coloring book as she began reading the article out loud to no one in particular.

“To the woman of today the grocery store is not a challenge but a relaxing place to spend an hour”. Gosh, why go to a spa when you could just as easily melt those tensions away by pushing a shopping cart down the aisle of a supermarket.

 “Every week her supermarket features a new product just on the market ; a dehydrated potato preparation, perhaps a new kind of processed cheez. The slogan of the Supermarket Institute is ‘that there may be more for all. Together we’re learning new tricks in the oldest art in the world-how to keep a woman happy and wanted.’

 New Freedoms

shopping supermarket  housewife 1950s

“By making the housewife queen for the hour she buys she does a better job of selling herself than a dozen eager clerks. She likes the privilege of pulling a can off a shelf”.

I guess that privilege comes right after our right to vote, and she doesn’t even need an amendment to the Constitution for that privilege.

“Yes, the woman of today is self-reliant as never before, sweeping aside old barriers winning new freedom. And when she shops for food she wants to be free to choose for herself!

Mom explained to me that when she was growing up, her mother shopped at a corner grocery store, where you were fenced off from the shelves by counters. Not only did you have to wait for an available clerk to help you with your order, but you had to know exactly what you wanted from a carefully prepared list. So much of the merchandise was out of the customers reach, that impulse buying was limited. Finally the grocer, using a long pole to reach the floor to ceiling shelves, retrieved your item.

1950s housewife supermarket shopping packaged meats

Modern American supermarket were more democratic than old-fashioned grocery stores according to the article, because, for example, self-service meat counters allowed the customers to choose the cut they wanted rather than submit themselves to the whim and favoritism of an autocratic butcher, which now reeked of Communism.

Returning to the article she continued:

“Her husband thinks she’s a wizard with the food budget, and she enjoys serving him high quality meals with little effort or preparation.”

 “She is gratefully aware that all the dazzling carefully arrayed displays are carefully planned to assist her in making a suitable choice. “We always sell just what the customer wants to buy not what we want to sell, a supermarket chain store operator said not long ago.”

shopping supermarket housewives1950s

 “The supermarket is a cornerstone of the American woman’s economic existence as well as her home life. She enjoys mingling with her friends in the store and when she leaves the check out counter she has a feeling of accomplishment, not just the sense of having a dreary routine chore.”

 “She should have for she has put most of her imaginative faculties to work in the hour she spent doing the weeks shopping. She has made 40 or 50 decisions one way or another as to the purchases; she has envisaged certain products as they will appear when served hot at the table.

 She’s restrained only by family budget and that too makes a game of finding the best values to be had.

 No wonder shopping continues to be a constant adventure for her.

An adventure! Somehow this seemed far removed from the adventures Mom had once considered for herself as a girl.

The Big Scoop

vintage illustration  Brenda Starr comic book

(L) Vintage Illustration 1948 by Harry Fredman Women’s Home Companion (R) Vintage Brenda Starr Comic Book 1940s

My mother Betty had once dreamed of being like the heroines she read about in the 1940s magazines- adventurous, career gals with spirit and determination. Most of all, she wanted to be a star reporter for a big city daily. As editor of her school newspaper, she had a good nose for a good story and a keen intuition when people weren’t telling the truth.

She couldn’t wait to get into the newspaper game, unearthing scoops, covering a hot breaking story. But no sob sister stories for her- she didn’t want to get stuck covering the usual girl beat of weddings and social clubs.

No sir, Betty fancied herself more as a glamorous foreign correspondent type- a Brenda Starr kind of reporter. Exotic adventurous, steamy romances- the works!

Brenda Starr was a career gal who was a smart, glamorous, and a headstrong star reporter for the Metropolitan Daily The Flash. She traveled the world solving mysteries, unearthing scoops and stealing the heart of almost every man she meets. When she was not globetrotting in search of sensational stories she was behind a desk stubborn, strong-willed, sassy hard-working and competitive.

Brenda Starr comic strip

But that kind of life wasn’t just in the funnies.

Betty could  imagine herself a foreign correspondent like Martha Gelhorn who covered the Spanish Civil War right on the front lines, Married to the dashing Ernest Hemingway, the two of them covered the important events of the day. Or she’d be a news-hound like columnist Dorothy Thompson, the blue-eyed tornado-a real force to be reckoned with,

One thing was sure. You would never catch her being like Rosalind Russell in the movie “His Girl Friday”, a star newspaper reporter with a smart answer to everything who wants to give it all up leave the paper and marry some mild-mannered mamas boy.

No sir, not for Betty Joseph!

She was going to carve out a niche in the newspapers and she meant to get it carved.

shopping cartoon 1950s

Now she was applying this same determination, and keen eye in the bold undertaking of food shopping. Mom was a first-rate sleuth at uncovering bargains wherever they were and she was willing to travel to the ends of the earth to get them.

Copyright (©) 2013 Sally Edelstein All Rights Reserved

Coming Soon- Mom’s Suburban Supermarket Adventures Pt II The Case of the Supermarket Sleuth

 



Heinz Ketchup Beckons a Man

$
0
0
1934 Food Heinz Ketchup ad illustration man and woman

Vintage ad Heinz Ketchup 1934

Mad Men’s Don Draper was not the first man to be tempted by the beckoning allure of Heinz Ketchup.

During the dark days of the Depression, Babs Johnson learned how to keep her hubby happy and add some spice to her sagging marriage.

Ketchup.

No mystery here.  “Masculine hearts skip a beat when a lucky lady serves Heinz ketchup, the racy and rosy condiment!”

Life might not have been a bowl of cherries in Depression era America, but with a bottle of ketchup everything would seem like they were coming up roses. At least according to the ads Heinz ran in the 1930s.

“Heinz ketchup beckons a man!” one ad copy proclaimed.” It cultivates the habit of coming home to eat.” What man could possibly stray when that pert and perky condiment, that come hither Heinz ketchup bottle beckoned?

You’ll understand why if you listen to this mouth-watering story:

Marriage Woes

Food 1930s Cartoon husband wife

Poor Babs learned the hard way.

Like the country’s economy her marriage to Dan was in the slumps. Romance had taken a holiday in her year old marriage. The honeymoon was barely over when Dan started burying his nose in the newspapers, barely touching his dinner, taking his meals at the local lunch counter.

It was a particularly nasty row over dinner one evening that sent this newlywed into tears.

Babs: “It’s the same hash you raved about at Ann’s Sunday night supper. You were so keen on it I made her give me the recipe,”

Dan: “Then one of us is crazy. Why I wouldn’t eat this for love or money”

 “I’ll get a bite downtown,” Dan fumed storming out leaving Babs bothered and bewildered.

She had yet to learn that no gal can trust a plain meal to satisfy a man. This new bride was in need of a menu check up.

What That Man Of Yours Really Wants

Food 1940  Heinz ads Housewives

Man pleasin’ meals (L) Vintage Ad Heinz 1940 (R) Vintage ad Heinz Ketchup 1940

It took the wise counsel of her more experienced gal-pals to set this young bride on the path to matrimonial happiness.

Pointing to a Heinz ketchup advertisement in the latest issue of Woman’s Home Companion, Babs eyes lit up: “Looking for something to make a husband sit up and take notice at the table?” she read with great interest. “Something he’ll give you a kiss and a compliment for? Then make sure you serve a bottle of ketchup with every meal.”

“The man isn’t born who doesn’t love ketchup”said her pal Madge getting right to the point. “Still the shortest route to your man’s heart! That extra little dash makes the meal. A juicy steak and Heinz rich tomato ketchup are a winning combination all men go for!”

Between sips of her Chase and Sanborn coffee, her neighbor Doris offered this tip “He loves corned beef hash doesn’t he? Well, here’s a quick simple table trick, straight from Heinz themselves, that gives this favorite dish an extra appeal. Put Heinz Ketchup on the table- handily where he can reach it and pour it readily….And that goes for his omelette, his steaks- all his pet dishes! “

Goes Over Big

food 1930s couple

“Keep a bottle of the worlds largest selling ketchup on the table-the way good restaurants do- another in the kitchen, and one near the stove, suggested Heinz in their ad “ See how easily and economically you can give your meals those intriguing little touches your family loves! give – your cooking the worlds favorite flavor. Remember Heinz ketchup is no bugbear to budgeteers for its so rich a little goes a long way.”

“And every cook knows it transforms leftovers into snappy culinary triumphs! chirped in Helen. “Men have a yen for this sauce. He’ll be smacking his lips!”

Happy Days Are Here Again

Babs couldn’t wait to try it out.

 “Come on home for supper, Darling! Corned Beef Hash, poached eggs and a new bottle of Heinz ketchup” Babs cooed provocatively into the phone.

 Dan could barely contain his excitement “Coming soon, angel! That bright fresh ketchup flavor has my mouth-watering already?”

No more wandering eye at lunch counters

No more whispers that Bab’s marriage was on the rocks. No more lonesome unhappy hours. For now, her husbands rushing home after work, Lucky Babs learned the secret to keeping a man satisfied.

“This dumb bunny’s never fooled again,” Babs said firmly.

She’d learned the first principle of culinary witchery- keep a bottle of that lusty condiment Heinz Tomato Ketchup handy in the kitchen!

Something Megan Draper might want to keep in mind, to keep her hubby Don from straying.


July 4th Hot Diggety Dog

$
0
0
suburbs barbecue vintage illustration 1950s

Gathering for the Family Backyard Barbecue-Vintage illustration McCall’s Magazine 1955

 

A summer staple at my 1960′s family barbeques was the ritual hot dog competition not in competitive eating but dissecting who made the best toothsome well turned frank.

The mouth-watering aroma of grilling franks wafting through the suburban air sparked the inevitable debate about who made the best hot dog.

There was fierce loyalty and intense competition.

food ads  Hot Dogs Faces

A Hot Dog Makes Them Love Control!
Vintage advertisements (L) Del Monte Catsup 1961 (R) Gleam Toothpaste 1950s

The faithful kosher deli coalition whose Hebrew National dogs were grilled flat on a gas griddle to a crispy puckering finish, scoffed at the sacrilege of the  “dirty water dogs” languishing in a warm water bath sold by the city street vendors, whose devotees swore by the steamed Sabretts, heaped high with rich day-glo orange-colored sweet-tart onion sauce.

Loyalists to NYC’s  West Side Greys Papaya formed an unlikely alliance with their East Side rival Papaya King, both of which thought it blasphemous to  wash down a frank with anything but papaya juice, certainly never an orange drink, even if the frank dressed with mustard relish and nestled in a buttered toasted bun was “Good …like Nediks!”

For some the pontificating took on the seriousness of a rabbinic argument, though in actuality it more closely resembled a bunch of kids arguing over which were the best baseball cards, Topps in the nickel wax pack  or Bazookas cut from panels on the gum boxes, and like both discourses, no one ever won the dispute.

But on one point they agreed.

Nathan's Famous Hot Dogs Stand

Vintage Photo Nathans Hot Dog Stand, Coney Island, NY

No one dared tamper with that most sacrosanct of hot dogs the one consumed on Coney Island on Surf and Stillwell Avenues-Nathans.

It’s the Wurst

Hot dogs on a grill barbecue

 With the dexterity and skills of a fencer, Dad nimbly poked and prodded the franks on the grill. Normally the only dogs to sizzle on our Weber were those approved by a Higher Authority, Hebrew National, but as a surprise my grandfather had brought us cartons of gen-u-ine New York Yankee- approved-Stahl Meyer hot dogs direct from their Ridgewood Queens factory.

The boxes of pork and beef frankfurters were more than likely a token of thanks to my pawnbroker grandfather from a Stahl Meyer delivery truck driver with a penchant for poker who had pawned his Timex for the umpteenth time.To show his appreciation for my grandfathers leniency, he had made an unscheduled “delivery” to Edelstein Brothers Pawnshop on his regular route supplying dogs to Yankee stadium

The very mention of a Stahl Meyer hot dog brought boyish grins across generations of Dodger and Giants fans, instantly transporting my curmudgeon great Uncles and their broad beamed sons from the comfort of their webbed aluminum lawn chairs to the hard, gray painted, wood slatted seats of the bleachers of the old Polo Grounds and Ebbitts Field.

Even those observant Jews like my Great Uncle Leo who would never dream of eating a hot dog that wasn’t kosher, crossed a sacred boundary with ease at a baseball game.

Like eating at a Chinese Restaurant, age-old prohibitions were suspended for the day, as he willingly succumbed to the enticing aroma of a steamy Stahl Meyer dog fished out of rapidly cooling water by vendors dressed in white lugging around iron trays shouting “They’re skinless and boneless and harmless  and homeless”  as they bounded up and down the narrow aisles.

Not everyone was so enthralled.

illustration barbecue suburbs

For some members of my family any hot dog that wasn’t a kosher Hebrew
National, might well have been the same as barbecuing bacon.

As Dad casually nudged the plump Hebrew Nationals to one side of the grill, my  great Aunt Rena watched like a hawk making certain that a rogue Stahl Meyer frank did not accidentally defect over to the other side of the barbecue. It wasn’t just that these franks were not sanctified by rabbinic law, no it was far worse.

These dogs had Deutschland written all over them.

As if the factory was on the Rhine and not Ridgewood Queens, Aunt Rena shuddered at the thought of some former Bund Deutscher Madel blue-eyed blonde, meat-packing Fräulein fondling the Fuher’s frankfurters in their natural casings, while lustily humming the Nazi anthem “Horst Wessel song.”

couple eating Hot Dogs and vintage wwii illustration  Hitler

Vintage Ad (L) Skinless Franks 1948 (R) Vintage Saturday Evening Post Cover 7/31/43 illustration Kenneth Stuart

Ridgewood, where the hot dogs were manufactured was a notoriously German neighborhood.

Not surprisingly, Aunt Rena was not the only family member who was convinced its many multi family row houses built-in the 1920s by Germans for Germans , brick by golden-colored Kreischer brick, was still populated by men in brown shirts, black Jack boots and wide Sam Browne Belts, rank and file members of the German American Volksbund who 25 years earlier, believed in Nazi power and strength to conqueror the world who still refused to embrace Aus der traum.

As the Stahl Meyer dogs rolled perilously close to the Hebrew Nationals, a shiver of terror went through some of my relatives, as if Joseph Goebbels himself had cheerfully stuffed those plump terra-cotta tubes with not only pork and spices, but a hefty serving of Nazi propaganda for good measure.

When it came to Germany, a wall had already been built by my family, beating the Russians by a full decade.

© Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream, 2013. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

You Might Also Enjoy

All American barbecue

Wag the Dog

Licensed to Grill

Patio Daddy-O

Have A Coke and a Smile

Remembrance of July 4th Parades Past


Candy is Dandy

$
0
0
Candy ads vintage children eating candy

“Modern nutritionists agree that when the body calls for energy, candy is one of the quick and happy answers.”
Vintage ads (L) Mars bar 1957 (R) DuPont Cellophane 1958

With Halloween approaching, panicky parents are getting spooked at the prospect of  their children overloading on candy .

Relax.

In mid-century America a Snickers bar would have been greeted with the same encouragement as chowing down a serving of kale.

Nothing to Snicker At

It may be hard to swallow but once upon a time candy was not the unhealthy villain it is viewed today but an “essential” nutrient. Through the first half of the 20th century, sweets and  sugar were deemed essential to health- good tasting and good for you.

In fact it was sanctioned by Uncle Sam as part of the 7 essential food groups during WWII. No wonder the government rations for our fighting men included candy as a dietary supplement.

 Sugar Rush

Vintage candy Ad Mars Bar image girl carrying chocolate bar

In a nation of can-do Americans nothing was more can-do than candy!
Vintage Candy Ads Mars Bar 1950

Flush with victory after the war, can-do- Americans were ready to surge into the post-war future and candy would be there to facilitate the rush.  In a nation of can-do Americans, nothing was more can-do than candy! And conscientious mothers made sure America’s youngest citizens had adequate supplies of this energy producing miracle.

Sweet Dreams

Mother holding tray of Milky Way Candy

Mother’s made sure their children had adequate supplies of energy candy
Vintage advertisement Milky Way Candy 1948

In 1946 Dayton,Ohio housewife Dotty Draper was an up to date homemaker, schooled in the latest scientific nutritional facts.

As chief cook and dietician, she understood that if hers was to be the perfect American family, her husband and her children must be perfectly fed. All those home-ec classes she had excelled in during High School would really come in handy.

illustration mother and son

Vintage ad Ovaltine 1948

When Dotty’s thoughts turned to preparing her children for life of course she thought of their  health – to keep them rosy, robust, chubby and strong.

Sometimes she felt as if the bold headlines of the advertisements in her magazines screamed out just at her: “And remember if a child becomes thin and nervous, frail or under par, the cause is your fault mothers, faulty nutrition. Remember always that the most common correctable cause is faulty nutrition- even among supposedly well fed children. And this cause is one that you the mother can do something about”.

Dotty understood that an active child might need twice as much energy food as an adult and according to the experts, a child’s craving for sweets shows that this need is unsatisfied. The answer: Candy . Real nourishment which quickly translates into action.

Dotty had taken a solemn oath: “There is nothing more important in this world,” she was fond of quoting to her brood of freckled face kids,“than the feeding of your ladies and gentlemen of tomorrow! And your fathers and mothers realize too that on your healthy strength and growth depends not only the happiness of the family but the future of the nation.”

That’s why in-the-know-Dotty was sure to load the kids up on plenty of  wholesome candy!”

Sugar Shock

vintage baby ruth ad illustration family

When the chill blasts of winter keeps you inside, there is always cozy comfort with baby Ruth around. The whole family-grandma, dad, mother and the young folks, even the tiniest tot-enjoys this delicious candy and finds real nourishment and health building energy in its wholesome goodness.
Vintage Baby Ruth Ad 1927

By 1946, candy’s place in the diet had been firmly entrenched with the dietary authorities recognizing its nutritional food value. Home Economists – especially those in the employ of candy manufacturers – were quick to point out the nutritional value of candy aiming to show candy as good wholesome food..

Modern nutritionist’s called it a muscle food. It’s carbohydrates “were as important to the human body as coal or oil is to the furnace.”

Full Steam Ahead: Stoking the Engine

Vintage nutrional booklet 1940s

Vintage Nutrition Booklet 1944
You and Your Engine by Laura Oftedal National Live Stock & Meat Board

All Mothers understood that food was foremost fuel.

As long as you kept stoking the engine like a Pullman train you’d keep running full steam ahead. This was the marvelous age of the engine. Engines moved cars, trains, ships; they ran machines that could clean our floors, heat our home.

Because we were told to think of our body as an engine, mothers were instructed that they were the engineers of the worlds finest kind of engine- their childs.

vintage illustration All engines need good fuel

Vintage illustration-from Nutrition Booklet 1944
You and Your Engine by Laura Oftedal National Live Stock & Meat Board

Before you fill your childs tank again, mothers were warned, you better read and learn and remember. A good railroad engineer or automobile driver, knows what fuel is best for his engine. So if you wanted to be a good mother it was imperative to learn what fuel is best for your child’s engine to keep your children streamlined and in good condition.

The best fuel was the food which gives your child engine muscle, heat, and energy.

Vintage illustration girl and boy flexing muscle

Wholesome Candy provides energy, muscle-building protein and healthy protective minerals.
Vintage ads (L) illustration from Carnation Milk ad 1942 (R) Mars Bar Ad 1957

Candy was wholesome energy food with muscle-building protein and health protecting minerals. “You’ve burnt up energy you need energy refuel. That’s the fundamental story of candy-quick energy for bodies that need energy more.”

“If your body never sent out an “SOS” for energy  there would be no call for candy…exept for pleasure purposes. But bodies do need energy, and candy is steam on the job, whether you’re working at a factory, on the job in an office or at home, or playing football on the corner lot.an energy food.”

“Yes, America, we are growing beyond those stern days which ruled, “If it tastes good to you, it mustn’t be good for you.”

In the know-Modern nutritionists now agreed that when the body called for energy candy was one of the quick and happy answers.

Candy Land Trick or Treat

Vintage ads for Candy

Vintage Ads 1946 from the Council on Candy of the National Confectioners Association . “The crave for Candy is a call for energy! The fundamental story of candy- quick energy for bodies that need energy. Candy is dandy-keep it handy!”

In 1946, The Council on Candy of the National Confectioners Association ran an aggressive ad  campaign titled: The Crave for Candy is a call for energy. Headquartered in Chicago The Council on Candy  was “an organization devoted to maintaining high standards of quality in candy and the dissemination of authoritative information on its use as an energy producing, morale building food.”

sillustration children looking at woindow of candy shop

“By All means, let em’ eat cake…and candy too!” Illustration from Vintage 1946 ad for Dextrose Sugar who encouraged the benefits of sweets. Corn Products Refining Company, producers of Dextrose fanned the sugar flame with their own heavy advertising

“Isn’t it true that you often have a hankering for candy”? the  Council on Candy asks in one of its ads.

“Well here’s the reason.”, they explains.  “Scientists have learned that bodies hanker for foods that contain elements they need when they need them. Whether your golfing mowing the grass or going to the store, you need Can Do- and Candy is the can-do food!”

“Modern nutritionists now agree that when the body calls for energy candy is one of the quick and happy answers. That’s why we remind you in rhyme when its energy time: Candy’s Dandy/ Keep it Handy !”

Nutrition You Should Know

Candy Quiz children 45

1945 Vintage Ad children’s Candy Quiz – Council on Candy of the National Confectioners Association

The Council eagerly provided a handy quiz for parents on the value of candy.

It explained the wholesome, nutritious value of candy.”Candy contains not only pure sugar for energy building but, from orchard and field and from the dairy farm it takes the products that make candy the wholesome,  colorful food that it is.”

“When you know the answers don’t you get a brand new picture of candy’s place in nutrition?” the ad asked the reader.

vintage illustration children and candy

Illustration from Vintage Ad for Du Pont Cellophane 1946

“Yes, candy has a definite part to play. Naturally its outstanding usefulness is providing quick energy in a most inviting pleasant and handy form. “If you followed the experts advise “you would send your children off to school with a surge of power that will thrill you!”

“We call this the can do” of candy.”

Wholesome candy…trick or treat? You be the judge.

© Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream, 2013. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

You Might Also Enjoy

Stay as Sweet as You Are

The Big Gulp

Hooked on Oreos


Thanksgiving Treats

$
0
0

Vintage illustration couple embracing 1940s

Butch Bradley was nervous.

Normally a cool cucumber, he was sweating bullets. You see, he was invited to his best girl Rosalie’s home for Thanksgiving for the very first time. Wanting to make a good first impression on his gal pals parents, poor Butch struggled with what to bring.

“A pumpkin pie is tops”, said his work buddies, “You can’t beat a bouquet” chirped his kid sister

“A corsage is nice, but candy is dandy,” suggested the lady at the candy counter. “Nothing beats a swell tin of Almond Roca,” she said opening up one of the tins.

”Sniff the locked in fresh fragrance,” she coaxed Unwrapping a piece she urged him to bite into it. “Let the luscious milk chocolate melt smoothly on your tongue. Sink your teeth into the crisp center. That’s butter you taste” she cried.

Butch was sold, but because it was Thanksgiving he really wanted to make a memorable impression…something that truly said “Happy Thanksgiving.”

So with a box of Almond Roca candy in one hand, and a squawking Tom turkey in the other, Butch proudly knew it would make for some happy remembrances.

Happy Thanksgiving!

Vintage Ad Almond Roca Candy 1947

Vintage Ad Almond Roca Candy 1947

Copyright (©) 2012 Sally Edelstein All Rights Reserved


Transformative Power of Trans Fats

$
0
0

food crisco SWScan00478 - Copy

Heartwarming Memories

Tis the season for trans fats….tra la la la la!

What better time of year to don your apron, and get busy in your kitchen, baking heartwarming holiday treats to fill your home  and heart with the comforting scent of Christmas memories.

But this may be the final holiday season for those flaky pie crusts, melt in your mouth pastries and  feather-light cakes made with shortening, the king of hydrogenated oils.

vintage illustration housewife Xmas food 1920s

Before Crisco, Mother’s didn’t have a Merry Xmas. She slaved the whole day away preparing and serving Christmas meals. “Now Christmas is Merrier For Mother Too!” proclaims this Crisco ad from 1928.  “Crisco is a Christmas time saver. No more old-fashioned, time intensive holiday cooking. If you follow directions and methods carefully you will have what I wish for you all: ‘A merry and Easy Christmas.”
Vintage ad Crisco 1928

Baking and Crisco have been at the heart of every holiday for generations.

What is Christmas without Crisco?

A lot more heart healthy apparently.

This past fall a heartless Uncle Sam announced some heart breaking news.

If the FDA has their way about it, bad-for-you- hydrogenated oils, i.e. trans fats, will be banned from the American diet come next year.

Hard to Swallow

Vintage Crisco Ad cartoon

“Mother Learns Digestibility Secret -Vintage Crisco Ad 1936

It may be hard to digest but once upon a time vegetable shortening like Crisco was a smart, wholesome choice. Labor-saving, economical, character-building, and man-pleasing, this cooking fat was a miracle for the harried, health conscious  housewife.

For over a century, Crisco was as ubiquitous in the American housewife’s kitchen as the all American apple pie she would bake with it. Crisco and other partially hydrogenated fats were not just a substitute for other fats.

It was the healthy alternative. “A gift for your digestive system,” Crisco promised in a 1927 ad. This creamy white food was something “the stomach welcomes.”

Crisco’s  heartfelt promise to protect your digestion was sincere. They just never anticipated the long-lasting effect it would have on your cardiovascular system.   Many scientists erroneously believed that trans fats were harmless or even beneficial because they substituted for saturated fats.

Eat Well and Feel Well

food crisco 1500 SWScan00041

Before you french fry another potato or make another pie let me tell you some thing about Crisco that’s terribly important,” begins one ad. “Crisco digests quicker. Crisco doesn’t overtax the stomach!”
“For over a year a very noted biologist has been testing Criscos digestibility against all sorts of fats. And after thousands of tests this famous scientist told me ‘Everyone should know that Crisco digests quicker –more easily. Eat well and feel well.”

When Crisco first appeared in 1911,  they  tempted  a nation suffering from chronic heartburn  with this groundbreaking  news:

“A few months ago if you had told dyspeptic men and women that they could eat pie at the evening meal and that distress would not follow, they probably would have doubted you. Praise of Crisco by hundreds who at one time had been denied such foods as pastry, cake and fried foods but who now eat these rich yet digestible Crisco dishes.”

Endorsements by doctors, dietitians and scientists put the seal of health on the product.

The vast American waistline was about to expand.

The Road to Success is Paved with Crisco

Grandfather little girl eating pie vintage ad 1930s

“Why long for pie but fear to eat it? Why condemn fried foods as indigestible?” asks this Crisco ad from 1937. “Doctors know that Crisco gives easy digesting food for junior to Grandpa. Here’s the case where food that’s good for you tastes extra good.”
Vintage Crisco ad 1937

Crisco and capitalism just seemed to go together. In the depths of the depression it could actually help you succeed in life.

“A good digestion will mean much to the youngsters health and character,” explained one 1933 ad. “A man seldom seems to be stronger than his stomach for indigestion handicaps him in his accomplishment of big things.” Eating Crisco was good for the economy.

And it was never too early to start making deposits in your childs cholesterol bank, deposits that would last a lifetime.

“Equip you child with good stomachs by giving them wholesome Crisco foods means a healthier future. They may eat Crisco doughnuts or pie without being chased by nightmares.”

“Sweet dreams follow a Crisco supper.” Clogged arteries would follow a lifetime of trans fats.

Have a Heart

Vintage Crisco ad 1943

“Want him to say you’re wonderful when you make his favorite dishes? The way to a mans heart is surer than ever with Crisco.”
Vintage Crisco ad 1943

A sure way to your man’s heart was with Crisco.

“Want to delight the man in your life? Bake him a cake with real man appeal! Let him have “another” of those luscious foods fried crisp and tender in pure Crisco!”

“Remember  9 out 10 doctors say Crisco is healthy!”  ( of course those may be the same doctors who also preferred to smoke Camel cigarettes)

By the post war years Crisco was solidly in place in the hearts of Americans –literally and figuratively.

Scientific Discovery

1915 kitchen SWScan00463 - Copy

Once upon a time trans fats were the very symbol of progress

The turn of the last century was filled with wonders.

In an age of milestone scientific discoveries and advances, the development of trans fat rates right up their  with the electric light bulb when it came to convenience for the American family.

And in no small way the two are connected.

vintage ads P&G Soap Crisco

Crisco vegetable shortening was designed in a lab to replace lard. Made from partially hydrogenated vegetable oil a process that turned cottonseed oil from a liquid to a solid like lard, but was more digestible.
(L) Vintage P&G Soap Ad (R) Vintage Crisco Ad 1934

In the 1890s Proctor and Gamble owned many cottonseed oil factories in Mississippi that produced oil for use in their P&G soaps and candles. But with the invention of the light bulb, the candle business was in decline. What to do with all that extra oil they now had?

A light bulb went off in their heads

At that time there really wasn’t any alternative to lard and butter for frying and baking.

In 1907 a German chemist EC Kayser arrived  at P&G headquarters in Cincinnati with a new invention. Creamy white, it looked liked lard, cooked like lard, but contained no animal product.

It was hydrogenated cottonseed oil.

Eureka!

Vintage ads Crisco and Lard

Doughnuts to Dollars Crisco went on an aggressive ad campaign. Crisco was presented as healthier, more digestible, cleaner, more economical, more enlightened and more modern than lard. Capitalizing on all the stories of adulterated lard , Crisco was endorsed and encouraged by doctors and dietician who lauded the product as one that would make food more digestible.
(L) Vintage Crisco Ad 1918 (R) Vintage Armor Lard Ad 1915

Perfect for baking and frying the new fat was cheaper than butter and easier than lard to use and best of all hydrogenated oils meant products could sit on shelves for months at room temperature … big profits ensued.

The hydrogenation process was developed in the late 1890s by a French chemist and it  was a German scientist Wilhelm Normann who in 1901 found that liquid oil could be hydrogenated to form trans fatty acids and patented the process in 1902 .

A German may have invented it, but it took good old American know how to turn a healthy profit.

The product was named Crisco a modification of phrase “CRYStallized Cottonseed Oil”

Winning American’s Hearts

food crisco 15 SWScan00336

“Look for the Grocer Who Shows this Display” exclaims an ad from 1915. “It means that he recommends Crisco for all cooking purposes as a standard, high-grade cooking fat. In your pantry your kitchen cabinets and closets today you use dozens of labor savers and time savers your grandmother never dreamed of. The old countries look with amazement at the quickness of America women in adopting improvements. Alert American housewives consider Cisco indispensable today!
Vintage ad Crisco 1915

“Science has made a discovery of far-reaching importance to every human being,” P&G proudly proclaimed in 1911 when Crisco first appeared on the grocery shelves.  Housewives accustomed to cooking with lard and butter had to be convinced  that this new product was superior.

For the next decades Crisco wooed Americans with a massive advertising campaign until Crisco became the  modern indispensable product for the kitchen.

food crisco 46 digestable SWScan00477

It was advertised as pure and wholesome, a healthier alternative to animal fats and more economical than butter and then went right to the heart of the housewife…it saved work.

Crisco won over American’s hearts

Save Work

Vintage Crisco Advertisements

In 1939 Crisco introduced “its new million dollar Gyro-Turn Process- which whips and beats Crisco to new easy blending creaminess prepare yourself for the compliments.”
L) 1939 Crisco Ad (R) 1948 Crisco Ad

“Ladies why slave over baking! Spare your arm!” shouted  one headline in a 1934 ad.”  Whisk up your cakes with Crisco  creamed shortening”.

Making a cake with stiff shortening meant baking it until your arm ached, then you dribbled in the sugar but with Crisco you could dump the shortening sugar and eggs into mixing bowl because Crisco blended with sugar and eggs in one operation.

And because frying was now less of a greasy, smoky, chore than before, Americans went into a frying frenzy – if it could be deep-fried, Americans would fry it.

Vintage illustration housewife cooking Crisco

“My hurry-up suppers got lots of hurrahs…and I got a frying hint! From now on I’m taking the hint and frying with wonderful Crisco giving my family their fill of crisp tempting fried foods”
1947 Vintage Crisco advertisement

Thanks to the ease of Crisco, frying became the most popular cooking method especially deep-frying which  according to testimonials from satisfied housewives like Mrs Winifred Carter in a 1930 advertisement, was  a real lifesaver:“ Crisco saves me so much time and bother at meal time when there are so many things to do. Really I do not know how I could keep house without Crisco and all the good things it gives me.”

Vintage ad Crisco Contest 1939

In this 1939 Contest you were asked to write a slogan for creamier Crisco using 10 words or less for the chance to win $5,000 Cash or 500 second prizes of Sunbeam Mixmasters.
Vintage ad Crisco 1939

Proctor and Gamble  perfected the modern art of branding.

In addition to publishing a cookbook “The Story of Crisco” containing 615 Crisco recipes (all traditional recipes that contained butter or lard now contained Crisco)  that was distributed free of charge to housewives, it shipped samples to hospitals and schools, produced cooking programs on radio and ran dozens of contests.

Vintage ad Crisco Cook Book 1949

The all new 1949 Crisco Cook Book- Yours for just 15 cents!

Have Trans Fat Will Travel

All American Crisco boasted “that the entire culinary world was revising its cookbook on account of Crisco an altogether different cooking fat.

It would win over the worlds hearts as well.

vintage illustration international children

Crisco boasted “that it was adopted by people of all nationalities,” claiming “that the entire culinary world was revising its cookbook on account of Crisco as an altogether different cooking fat. The old countries look with amazement at the quickness of America women in adopting improvements. Alert American housewives consider Cisco indispensable today!”

“Crisco has been adopted by French Chefs who used olive oil, Japanese cooks who prefer coconut oil, by the old negro cooks in the south instead of cottonseed oil, in the Far west by Chinese servants who used butter, and in American homes where lard has been for generations the only cooking fat known.” Crisco explained in its book The Story Of Crisco. “This wide-spread adoption of Crisco has been one of the most convincing proofs of the universal need of such products.”

But it was the niche marketing to the Jews that was truly revolutionary , one for which Crisco claimed “the Jews have waited 4,000 years for!”

Stay Tuned: Transformative Power of Trans Fats PT II Crisco and the Kosher Kitchen

© Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream, 2013. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

You Might Also Enjoy

Stay as Sweet as You Are -Sugar Seduction


Viva Velveeta

$
0
0
vintage illustration family watching football game on TV and pictureof  nachos

American cheese meltdown- Will Velveeta run out before the biggest dipping day of the year?

The Case of the Vanishing Velveeta

Americans beware; your nachos are in danger!

Last week Kraft issued a statement that some parts of the East Coast were experiencing a shortage of Velveeta.

Now it seems Kraft has confirmed the cheesepocalypse is real. Many consumers won’t be able to find Velveeta products on their store shelves over the next few weeks ….and worse still, the shortage could spread!

A Velveeta shortage?

Cheez whiz ! Say it ain’t so!

With the Superbowl mere weeks away what will Americans put on their nachos?

Does Velveeta put the “Kitsch” in kitchen

Vintage Velveeta Ad 1951

“A fun, family friendly food” Vintage Velveeta Ad 1951

Feelings about Velveeta are varying- fiercely loved by many, reviled by others.

Though some might wish for Velveeta to be vanquished permanently from the culinary landscape, to others venerable Velveeta has earned a place of honor in the America kitchen.

Food snobs, convinced that Velveeta puts the kitsch in kitchen, may turn up their refined noses at the creamy processed cheese spread but once upon a time Velveeta was considered a wholesome, nutritious food, welcomed by the modern housewife.

It was during the dark days of the depression followed by the food shortages of WWII  that helped catapult this gooey cheese into the  hearts (and arteries) of Americans.

“Triumph in Cheese Making”

Vintage ads Velveeta and Pyequick

American know how improves upon Mother Nature
(L) 1948 Vintage ad for Pyequick Pie Mix from Betty Crocker a far easier way to make an apple pie from a freeze dried apples and pie crust mix. (R) Vintage ad Velveeta processed cheese food

Velveeta is as American as apple pie, especially if the pie is made from a packaged mix.

When it comes to food no other country has devised so many elaborate methods for altering, emulating and improving upon basic ingredients.

A miracle of modern science, Velveeta cheese food, the orange-hued velvety smooth cheese hybrid that miraculously melts in one piece, was a careful concoction based on chemistry.

Though Kraft would eventually purchase Velveeta in 1928, it was created a decade earlier, the brainchild of a Swiss born cheese-maker Emil Frye who lived in Monroe N.Y. once home to some of the leading cheese makers in the country.

A few years earlier Frye, a cheese-maker with the Monroe Cheese Company, had struck gold with his creation of Liederkranz a soft ripening, spreadable  cheese and it soon became one of the most popular cheeses in the country.

But Frye had a bigger vision.

The Birth of Velveeta

food velveeta 1918

In 1916, he began experimenting in his home kitchen. For 2 long years he fiddled with broken and misshapen wheels of Swiss cheese, blending them with whey and other byproducts of cheese making until he  created a smooth end product with a velvety consistency.

By turning waste into profit, a new cheese making process was born.

The visionary cheese-maker named it Velveeta.

With packages bearing the tag line “A Triumph in Cheese Making,” the brand spun off into the independent Velveeta Cheese Company in 1923, until it was sold to Kraft in 1928.

You can count on Velveeta

Food Velveeta Recipes ads1948

Vintage Velveeta Ads 1948 Grand main dish meals with Velveeta

“Never before,” Kraft announced a bold headline  in a 1933 ad for Velveeta.

“For many years cheese makers have regarded one thing as “impossible”-to give you full natural flavor in packaged pasteurized cheese.”

“Now Kraft does the impossible, with a new secret method discovered by Kraft experts and available only to these Master Cheese makers.”

Velveeta could do Mother Nature one better.

No matter the season or location you could always count on Velveeta to be the same consistency and flavor, unlike plain old ordinary cheeses that naturally varied in flavor ( the character of milk itself changes with the seasons so cheese would naturally follow suit.)

You could always count on Velveeta, it spreads, it slices, it melts to perfection every time.

illustration food velveeta 39

Vintage ad Velveeta 1939

“How is it that the Kraft cheese you buy always tastes the same?” a quizzical housewife wonders in one ad from 1939.

“That’s easy.” the cheese-maker in the ad answers. “The Kraft process of blending cheeses!”

“Master Blending of many cheeses was the secret formula of Velveeta,” the Kraft cheese-maker explained,  and that  “they kept a full record of every cheese they use- a sort of birth certificate and personal history on it to assure consistency of flavor. The blending and processing of the cheeses that go into Velveeta protects the flavor peak deliciousness at every step. The result is utmost uniformity,” he  states beaming.

Whats more Kraft claimed proudly, “When making this famous pasteurized process cheese spread, Kraft returns to it important food values from milk that are usually lost in cheese making.”

Artisanal Cheese was plain  old-fashioned; why eat regular cheese when you could give your family the benefits of processed American cheese food.

Velveeta improved on anything a mere cow or a dairy farmer could produce.

© Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream, 2013. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

Tomorrow: Velveeta  Through the Decades


Viva Velveeta – Dependable Dishes for the Depression

$
0
0

food velveeta family

Though some might wish for Velveeta to be vanquished permanently from the culinary landscape, to others venerable Velveeta has earned a place of honor in the America kitchen.

Like Faith Channing. For over 80 years Velveeta has been a vital part of her life.

It was during the dark days of the depression followed by the food shortages of WWII  that helped catapult this gooey cheese into the  hearts of Americans.

Bargain in Nutrition

vintage ads 1930s housewife and velveeta illustration

During the Depression, Velveeta was a treat for the budget as well as the family
(L) Vintage as 1934 (R) Vintage illustration Velveeta Recipe

In the thrifty thirties, Velveeta was a boon to budget conscious mothers concerned about giving their growing children adequate nutrition.

Five year old Faith was often frail and underweight.

In 1934 Faith’s mother Blanche was always fretting about the food bills.

vintage housewife 1930s ad

Vintage ad 1934

On her husbands Tom’s salary saving money on food really meant something. “When you do all your own housework and cook for a family of 5 you soon learn the meaning of true economy,” she would often sigh. And Blanche Ralston had to learn- because her food budget was only one-third of what it used to be.

“Of course I want to save money on food bills!”  Blanche bemoaned. But safeguarding the health of her children was vital.

Every housewife understood how difficult it was  to be economical and still give your little ones only the best.

But making sure Faith and her 2 brothers grew up strong and husky could break the bank.

vintage photo little girl and her dog at table 1930s

“Are your children fully protected?” advertisements shouted out at mothers. “Danger threatens constantly in the years 1 to 6. A touch of over-strain and the door is thrown open to whole group of serious troubles.”
Vintage ad 1936

In a depressed economy, children were viewed as little spendthrifts of vital energy.

Like thousands of thrifty housewives, Blanche brooded, especially when it came to fragile little  Faith:

“Can my child live on her income…the income of nourishment she gets from the meals I serve?”

One thing Blanche knew for sure “Dairy would keep your youngsters thriving and making weight gains.”

Did her diet include an abundant source of milk?

Dairy Dream

milk bottles

Vintage Ad Duraglas Milk Bottles 1936

By the 1930’s milk had taken on an almost magical mystique.

So pure, so white, so wholesome, a bottle of milk was a bottle of health, and children needed to drink at least a quart a day.

The gospel of milk as proselytized by devout domestic scientists, that milk was nature’s perfect food, was established in the dark days of WWI.

Milk they said would be the key to greater health of this generation and future generations. Because scientists had recently found that milk contained Vitamin A which caused growth, mothers regarded it as a magic potion.

But milk could be expensive to a family like Faiths who were carefully watching their pennies.

Well Lady, you’re in luck! Velveeta came to the rescue.

Vintage ad Velveeta Cheese 1936

especially for the kiddies….Velveeta was like drinking a glass of wholesome milk.
Vintage ad 1936

“Velveeta is wholesome and solves this problem for you,” Kraft reassured the smart modern mother. “It’s economical and is a fine quality food.”

“With the children in mind Kraft experts created the cheese food Velveeta.” Kraft proclaimed proudly, explaining that “ It was extra rich in valuable precious  milk minerals, calcium and in muscle-building protein and a good source of vitamin A…and as digestible as milk.”

“It takes more than a gallon of whole milk to make a single pound of cheese,” they boasted “a fact to remember for planning thrifty meals.”

Just What the Doctor Ordered

vintage ad 1934 child and food

“Seldom has a food product been so honored as Velveeta,” Kraft humbly explained upon receiving the coveted Seal of Acceptance by the Committee on Foods of the American Medical Association.
“Money cannot buy it.! Influence cannot obtain it! Only foods which pass the most searching investigation receive it”
Vintage ad 1934

And if mother still wasn’t convinced of the value of their product, Kraft suggested “Your own doctor will gladly tell you more about the benefits of Velveeta.”

And no one was more trustworthy than your family doctor.

In 1931 Velveeta was awarded the coveted seal of approval from the American Medical Association.

“To build healthy children, doctors approve this famous food,” Blanche read in an  article in Women’s Home Companion.

“What a joy to learn that today child specialists advise this dairy food to give children a splendid start to lasting health. Velveeta is rich in complete high quality protein, body building material for growing children and body repair material for adults.”

Sumptuous Dishes and They’re Thrifty

Vintage ad 1937 man speech bubble

Vintage ad 1937

Velveeta was a treat for the budget as well as the family.

During those budget conscious times, Kraft encouraged the eating of other dairy products for the whole family  as economical alternatives to more expensive main dishes like meat.

“Need Budget help?”  Kraft inquired. “Velveeta gives thrifty grand eating main dishes. Reserve at least one dinner a week,” they recommended, “for a cheese main dish.”

Vintage Velveeta advertisements

Vintage Velveeta advertisements featuring tempting recipes

To help m’lady with her budget  meal planning  Velveeta supplied an endless assortment of recipes that always involved serving a cheese sauce over an assortment of food. Any and all food would benefit  from smothering it with  creamy sauce “as smooth as satin, golden as a buttercup rich tasting , cheese flavor and fine food value.”

So Blanche put her faith in that golden rich cheese flavor food   and found a gold mine of thrift and nutrition.

Faith was full of vitality thanks to Velveeta.

© Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream, 2013. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

You Might Also Enjoy

Viva Velveeta



Velveeta for Victory in WWII

$
0
0
vintage WWII ad soldier and photo of nachos velveeta

(L) Vintage ad WWII Nash Kelvinator 1944

The cheesepocalypse is upon us and we are approaching ground zero!

Shell shocked Americans are going through a meltdown over the shortage of velveeta endangering the very lifeblood of their Superbowl nachos.

Jonesing for their liquid gold, it’s all out war as a deprived public frantically fumble in search of alternative recipes in time for the big game.

Time out!

We might want to hit the pause button and rewind to a time when food shortages, sacrifices and disruptions were a part of everyday life and not just an inconvenience for the Superbowl.

food Velveeta WWII war workers eating

“If you’re packing daily lunch for one of Americas defense workers be sure to note that Velveeta was rich in muscle building protein and milk calcium.”
(L) Vintage Photo Sealtest Booklet 1943 (R) Vintage ad Velveeta cheese 1944

During WWII Velveeta along with meat, sugar, dairy  and coffee had gone off to war.

And when it was available Velveeta was not a mere snack, food but a vital source of sound nutrition.

The depression had introduced Velveeta as a thrifty convenient food source, but it was during the shortages and rationing of WWII  that helped catapult this gooey cheese into the  hearts of Americans.

Food Fights For Freedom

WWII Food Fights For Freedom vintage ads

Two 1943 Vintage ads from Armour and Company offering suggestions to how to share precious food and conserve the vital food supply. “All of us must do all we can to protect the food supply and keep our home front healthy and strong. You have a responsibility in your own home. By careful buying, by efficient, thrifty use of your ration points, you can help make sure there will be enough meat and other necessary foods for everyone.”

Each of us on the home-front, was a vital part of the war effort. It was everyone’s job to conserve, avoid waste, play square and starve the black markets.

“Food fights for freedom” was the motto and American food  would be a big factor in winning the war

“Today food is one of Americas most important weapons. It’s the fuel of our fighting men and our fighting allies. It helps keep our home front healthy and strong. So all of us must do all we can to protect the food supply.”

vintage ad wwii soldiers unloading food supplies

“Twice as much food is going to the fighting fronts this year….because there are twice as many men to feed.”
“Even at that, we civilians here at home are still getting 3 out of every 4 plates of food we produce. And the men in our Armed forces are the best fed fighters in the world.”
vintage ad Crosley Corp. 1944

Uncle Sam had a big job to do to feeding our boys in the armed forces and supplying our Allies too.

Rationing was the only way the government could see to it that civilians got a fair share of food. Every man, woman and child got a ration book containing coupons with point values for different types of food. The one thing there wasn’t a shortage of was advertising explaining the importance of sacrifice.

“We folks on the home-front are still getting 75% of all the food in America,” explained one war worker in an ad promoting health for victory  “I know it takes a lot of chow for the boys in the service…but who rates it more!” Another thing, I’m all for shipping food to our allies and liberated countries because it saves a lot of lives. Shortages? They’re tough…but my wife’s learned to do with the foods she can get is okay by me.

“That’s the stout-hearted spirit that makes Food Fight For Freedom. There’s enough food in this country for everyone, if we learn to use it properly.”

Shortages and Rationing

vintage WWII ad Elsie the Cow illustration

In this 1943 ad, Elsie the Borden’s cow tries to explain to her husband Elmo the reason for shortages and rationing. Much of the milk Bordens produced went to our armed forces and our allies. And the milk must be used to make other concentrated dairy products like cheese.
Exhibiting good old American optimism, Elsie goes on to say: “Think of the things we have to cheer about. This year may not have been a picnic but it hasn’t been so bad. We’ve had enough to wear and we’ve had enough to eat.”

Cheese was one of the first to be drafted into service because of the government’s huge requirements of cheddar cheese.

Thousands of farmers and dairy hands had gone off to war making it hard to increase production and so there was a shortage. Men in the service drank more milk and ate more cheese than they did in civilian life.

“Great quantities of it were needed for our boys,”  cheese manufacturers like Kraft and Bordens  told us,  “ because cheese was such a grand and  easy way to feed milk nourishment to fighting men.”

In May 1942 sugar was rationed, followed by coffee , processed food, meat and dairy products making it a wartime challenge keeping a home-front family well nourished.

Women’s Double Duty

WWII food rations SWScan01587 - Copy

Home front Housewives deserved a heap of credit .In addition to devoting millions of extra hours to vital new work in factories and volunteer organizations they were doing a grand job in the kitchen…saving food points and not scrimping on nutrition

It was much harder to feed a family during wartime but housewives like Blanche Channing knew it could be done with careful planning and thoughtful shopping.

Before the war, budget conscious Blanche had counted on Velveeta for nutritious economical meals on a budget. Now besides her money, she had to count her ration points and budget her time.

Like most other home front housewives Blanche was doing double duty.

In addition to devoting extra hours to the Red Cross, Civilian Defense  and the USO  she had become a soldier of the kitchen. Her first order from Uncle sam  was to provide her family with foods that build strong bodies, steady nerves, and high morals

WWII Vintage Nutrition propaganda

Uncle Sam needed us strong so it wasn’t long before Health-For-Victory clubs sprang up across the country. Monthly meetings conducted by able home economists of local power companies distributing meal planning guides for point thrifty meals and giving women practical help on health building meals in spite of rationing.
To help folks eat the kind of food that keeps them healthy, Uncle Sam set up 7 basic food groups that everybody needed every day And milk and milk products was one of them.

It was our duty to stay healthy.

Taking on those extra shifts at the war plant and visiting the blood bank regularly was no problem for her husky husband Jim.

“That man of mine hasn’t lost a days work in 7 months,  she boasted. “Eating right and staying healthy pays off in our house even stepped up pace of war work can’t keep my husband down!”

Food Velveeta WWII Defense Plant

A home front soldier like Jim deserved something special when he got home! And Blanche saw that he got it!

The Channings may finally have been able to afford a juicy steak but there were no steaks to be had. Alternatives to those mouth-watering roasts that Jim hankered for had to be found.

It was the home front housewives  duty to be flexible and clever, to plan balanced menus that spread rationed foods thin. The trick was to make ration shrunk meals seem bountiful and appetizing and magazine articles were abuzz with ways to gussy up those plain meals.

Kraft along with nearly every major food company pitched in printing wartime pamphlets suggesting how their product could help the homemaker skimp on precious food like meat, sugar and fat and coffee

Ladies listen, A food shortage is no excuse for dull meals- not while Kraft cheeses are around

Despite there being a cheese shortage, eagle-eyed  Blanche could still find Velveeta on her grocers shelves from time to time. She was certain the processed cheese food would brighten up rationed meals!

 Victory Velveeta

Food Velveeta WWII vegetables ads illutration housewife 40s

Mrs Housewife has learned about food alternatives, how to stretch ration points and pack a lunch with plenty of pick up.
Time must be rationed by Americas Double duty woman
(L) Vintage ad 1942 (R) Vintage Velveeta ad 1944

V for victory Velveeta suggested plenty of ways to keep the mealtime eye and taste appeal and satisfy cravings and appetites while holding down the costs. T

Their colorful  ads all offered “plenty of luscious nourishing dishes to surprise the folks on days when meat is off the list. Put the joy of eating into rationed meals with cheese soufflés, omlettes rarebits sauces with cheese”

Because it was important to prepare balanced meals and keep America’s stamina up, Blanche could count on protein rich Velveeta to offer up wholesome hurry up snacks for kids and He-Man sandwiches for Jim’s  lunch box.

food velveeta 46 SWScan00970

“If you’re packing a daily lunch for one of America’s defense workers, one Velveeta advised,” be sure to note that Velveeta was rich in muscle-building protein, in milk calcium and vitamin A and G. “

“School lunches should have these protective food elements. So slice Velveeta or spread its golden goodness thick for those important away from home meals”

Waste Not Want Not -Velveeta to the Rescue

WWII Food Fights For Freedom Velveeta don't waste it save it

If you will save as little as a spoonful of food a day you will help shorten this war. Unless we stop the needless, careless waste in our homes, American won’t have enough food to go around!

In these vital times when food was so precious Blanche would never dream of wasting a spoonful of food or letting leftovers spoil in her refrigerator or her  pantry shelf. Every bit of food that came into her home was carefully used.

Admonished to not waste food, Velveeta promised to give new life to leftovers -any dish could be turned from plain to fancy with a gloppy cheese sauce

“Here’s way to squeeze extra nutrition out of your food points, make leftovers new and important and give your family better eating. Dress up your second day foods with Velveeta”

vintage ads food WWII

“Of course Kraft cheeses are rationed!” explained one ad.”The government wants everyone to get their fair share of these fine nourishing foods. So step up and insist on your share…put the joy of eating into rationed meals with Velveeta souffles, omlettes, rarebits and sauces with cheese”

Velveeta a “wonderful “buys” for your points and pennies” became the perfect dish for war-time nutrition, providing fine protein and concentrated nourishment.

© Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream, 2014. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

You Might Also Enjoy

Viva Velveeta

Viva Velveeta- Dishes for the Depression

 

 


Mac & Cheese and the Pursuit of Happiness

$
0
0
vintage illustration Thomas Jefferson serving spaghetti

Vintage illustration from Budweiser Beer Ad 1948 “Great Contributions to Good Taste” Thomas Jefferson was an enthusiast for macaroni

George Washington may be the father of our country but it is Thomas Jefferson who is often credited with being the father of macaroni and cheese.

No small wonder that the brilliant mind who promised us life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness made it manifest in the creation of the ultimate comfort food.

But it may be a bit an exaggeration.

Though he was a connoisseur of fine food and drink it is doubtful that mac and cheese originated with him. That our third president was an enthusiast of macaroni there is no doubt.

Yankee Doodle Dandy

Jefferson fell in love with pasta while traveling in Italy.

In 1784 Thomas Jefferson was called to Paris to replace Benjamin Franklin as the new Republic’s Minister to France. At the time macaroni was a very fashionable food in Paris.

While touring Northern Italy in the spring of 1787 this Yankee doodle dandy  developed an enthusiasm for macaroni or what we now call  spaghetti. Along with purchasing a mould for making macaroni, he had crates of pasta shipped back  to the US.

Frustrated  with the mould, he eventually designed his own macaroni or pasta maker, the plans of which rest in the  The Library of Congress.

Elected President on Feb 17 1801, macaroni was a must at the table at the White House of our third president.

In documents from  the Library of Congress, one guest reports dining on a “pie of macaroni” at the White House, an early version of macaroni and cheese.

Jefferson was most likely not the first to introduce macaroni (with or without cheese) to America  nor did he invent the recipe as it was already in wide use in Europe. He did however popularize it in America by serving it frequently to his dinner guests  during his presidency

We can be sure his mac and cheese was no gloppy Velveeta affair but likely used the  Parmesan cheese  produced in the small village of Rozzano near Milan that he became enamored of.

Great Contributions to Good Taste

vintage illustration Thomas Jefferson serving spaghetti

Vintage Ad Budweiser Beer 1948 “Great Contributions to Good Taste”
What was eaten as macaroni is what we call spaghetti

His well-known love of macaroni was immortalized in a 1948 ad from Budweiser Beer in its campaign of “Great Contributions to Good Taste.”

“Most of us know that Thomas Jefferson expressed Americas idea of freedom by writing the Declaration of Independence but few know that he guided our forefathers to better living by also writing an excellent cookbook,” begins the copy in this ad.

“From Naples he got a mould to form spaghetti and introduced what today is one of our most important and popular foods. He did the marketing for the White House and presided genially over its inviting table. Jefferson earnestly believed that good food and drink temperately enjoyed each day with good friends were essential to a worthwhile lifetime.”

Connoisseur that Jefferson was, it’s doubtful he hoisted a Bud  but preferred fine wines.

His letters from 1803 reveal a purchase of Nebbiola wine- “200 hundred bottles and 3 barrels” were shipped to Monticello along with a request for “50 pounds of Naples Macaroni.”

While in Italy he developed a taste for the Nebbiolo wine of Piedmont. Nebbolio is the grape upon which Italy’s 2 greatest and priciest red wines Barolo and Barbaresco are based.

Before his journey to France in 1784 Jefferson, like most at the time, was a consumer of Madeira and port. While abroad he developed a taste for the lighter wines of France and Italy.

Nebbolia, was a sparkling wine of Piedmont which he described as “about as sweet as the silky madeira, as astringent on the palate as Bordeaux and as brisk as champagne.”

Just right for a dish of mac and cheese!

Copyright (©) 2014 Sally Edelstein All Rights Reserved

You Might Also Enjoy

Viva Velveeta


Crisco and Kosher Kitchen Culture

$
0
0
vintage illustrations housewives cooking Crisco 1915

Vintage advertisement Crisco 1915

 Once upon a time to a transfixed nation, trans fats were not the troublesome substance we now view them as but were the very symbol of scientific progress.

If the FDA has their way about it, bad-for-you- hydrogenated oils, i.e. trans fats, will soon be banned from the American diet.

Hard to Swallow

It may be hard to digest but there was a time when vegetable shortening made from hydrogenated oil  like Crisco was a smart, wholesome choice. Labor saving and economical this cooking fat was a wonder for the harried, health conscious  housewife.

Nowhere was the transformative power of trans fats felt more than in the Jewish household.

Miracle in the Kitchen

The introduction in 1911 of Crisco-the king of hydrogenated oils- was a  life altering  game changer for kosher housewives, for whom strict dietary laws forbade the mixture of dairy and meat at the same meal.

All vegetable shortening Crisco proudly promoted itself as a Kosher food, one that behaved like creamy butter but could be used freely with meat.

As if it were the appearance of the messiah, Crisco boldly announced “it was the miracle for which the Jews have waited 4,000 years for.”

Crisco’s entry into Kosher Kitchen culture would make kosher cooking easier for generations

For observant Jewish immigrants like my Great Grandmother, it was nothing short of a miracle.

She along with millions would be transfixed by trans fats.

 Food Beliefs

2 vintage illustrations mother and children and scientists

Vintage advertisements 1918

At the beginning of the last century, my Great Grandmother Rebekah like most folks at the time believed certain foods were good and others dangerous but there was no proven scientific basis to it.

There was no concern about high protein, low carb foods because food itself hadn’t even been classified as such.

You knew you had  a healthy child if she was chubby, pink and fleshy.

By the time of the Great War, food was entering a modern scientific age and with it developed new products new attitudes and new rules towards eating, and cooking.

But in an Orthodox Jewish household like my Great Grandmothers, the only important rule- one that was non negotiable was the time-honored rule of Kashruth,  keeping kosher.

We Answer to a Higher Authority

vintage illustration housewife cooling pie in window

Returning home from school late one cold winter afternoon in 1917, my then teenage grandmother  Sadie found her mother standing at the coal cook stove in the spotless, onion scented kitchen, rendering chicken fat (schmaltz) in the “fleyshik” (meat) frying pan, and frying cheese blintzes in the milkhik (dairy) pan, never ever confusing one cast iron pan for the other.

The heat of the kitchen warmed Sadie’s chilled bones as she peeled off layer after woolen layer of winter clothing.

The rambling house in Williamsburg Brooklyn was alive with the odors of burning carrots, frying onions, cooking cabbage and fermenting sauerkraut. Without even looking up from the stove, Rebekah handed Sadie a piece of challah, schmeered with schmaltz, – a nosh before dinner.

Food is Love

“Love and bread make the cheeks red,” Rebekah would often say.

Her hand would touch her heart to indicate the source of the food- herself. Food really was love in Great Grandma’s home, a bestowal of the purest affection.

Hungrily biting into the fresh bread, Sadie was bursting at the seams to tell her mother what she had learned in her Home Economics class.

Domestic Science

Vintage illustration ad woman

A true American girl of tomorrow, 18-year-old Sadie was among the first girls in her school to take a class in the new field of Home Economics.

In 1918, it was the ambition of every Brooklyn girl after graduating from public school to attend the prestigious Girls High School, the very model of a 20th century school building, where she could enjoy the advantages of advanced education.

And no subject was as cutting edge as Domestic Science.

The no-nonsense class was run with the efficiency expected of a future household engineer. Donning her crisp, sanitary white apron and starched white cap, Sadie quickly absorbed the most current information explaining the new and efficient ways to think about diet, digestion and hygiene.

vintage photo 2 women baking cakes

Vintage advertisement Royal Baking Powder 1917

Her Home Economics teacher, Miss Hattie Patton was a stern looking woman, with salt and pepper  hair pulled tightly in a bun, her features as sharp and angular as the wooden ruler she wielded.

Wearing pince nez and an immaculate white smock, the domestic dominatrix, would explain to the class how men of  science had devised rules of nutrition which would not only prevent illness but encourage a long life.

“Girls today,” she emphasized, “are taking hold of the feeding job with intelligence.”

Cooking, like mothering, could no longer depend on instinct, but on scientifically determined exact formulas.

Sadie learned that although it was  a German Scientist who had come up with the new idea of classifying foods into proteins, carbohydrates, fats, minerals and water, the “new nutrients,” it was, naturally, American know-how and industry that was putting it to good use.

Science to the Rescue

1918 science food housewife

(L) Vintage Ad Armour Lard 1915 (R) Vintage illustration food laboratories

“You don’t have to trust guesswork anymore. Science has selected for you,” her teacher informed  them proudly. And you didn’t have to take just anyone’s say so. The sanitary testing kitchens of both manufacturers and government were all working overtime to put their knowledge at m’lady’s disposal.

“Who could provide more authoritative judgment about a food product than the esteemed directors of Home economics in the many corporate manufacturers of fine food?”

Science was constantly coming up with new and better products for the American dinner table; new ways to lighten the load of the housewife.

Scientific Discovery

vintage illustration housewife ad Crisco 1918

Preparing doughnuts for the doughboys using patriotic Crisco No wheat flour, no sugar, neither butter nor lard
Vintage ad for Crisco 1918

And so it was that one day Miss Patton explained  a recent scientific discovery the  miracle of Crisco.

Progressive housewives Miss Patton explained  were ridding their kitchens of old-fashioned lard and expensive butter for new wholesome factory fresh Crisco. Which would also be the only fat used in the schools cooking class. Many HS having Domestic Science departments use Crisco

“It seems strange to many that there can be anything better than butter or cooking or of greater use than lard,” she continued, and “the advent of Crisco  has been a shock to the older generation born in an age less progressive era than our own.”

Crisco was clean pure and wholesome. Nothing artificial about it, it was concocted in a lab by trained scientists.

“There is nothing more important to the American housewife than the preparation of wholesome delicate and dainty foods for her family,” Miss Patton  stated firmly.

“Indeed the purity and wholesomeness of foods have become subjects of national interest. More and more people now realize that by intelligent eating not only can they avoid such common ailments as headache and indigestion but can do much to make good health their normal condition ( A future of Type II diabetes and clogged arteries would come decades later )

Fully endorsed by doctors and renowned dietitians Crisco was a product that would make for more digestible food.

Crisco she further explained,  had taken the place of butter and lard in a number of hospitals where purity and digestibility are of vital importance.

Crisco is being used in an increasing number of better class hotels, clubs restaurants dining cars and ocean liners.

A Country at War

Vintage WWI ad for Crisco 1918

Food Will Win the War- Don’t Waste it !
Vintage WWI ad for Crisco 1918

Not only was it economical and  digestible it was patriotic.

Now that we were at war patriotic housewives were asked to conserve food. We were  admonished to save wheat, use less sugar, and  use no butter. Use of Crisco would contribute to the war effort.

All the girls marveled at this new product not only economical it was…Uncle Sam approved!

Crisco is Kosher

Miss Patton held on to the most tantalizing tidbit for last.

Crisco was kosher.

This rich wholesome cream of nutritious food oils was rabbinically certified!

Smiling, Miss Patton  read from The Story of Crisco a copy of which was given to each student.

“Rabbi Margolies of N.Y said that the Hebrew race has been waiting 4,000 years for Crisco. Crisco can be used with both milkhik and fleyshik milk and flesh foods. Special Kosher packages bearing the seals of Rabbi Margolies of N.Y. and Rabbi Lifsitz of Cincinnati are sold to the Jews.”

Whether baking challah or pastries Jewish housewives could avail themselves of Crisco

So the modern woman is glad to stop cooking with expensive butter and lard and step up and let science show them how.

Sadie couldn’t wait to share this with her mother.

Kosher Kitchen Kulture

vintage illustration Mother serving daighter dinner

Sitting at the oilcloth covered kitchen table nibbling on the rich, greasy, bread, Sadie excitedly explained to her mother how scientists had devised new rules of nutrition and  were now telling folks what was good for them to eat based on the foods recently discover chemical make up. Not only that, she emphasized,  it took special products, special equipment, and special knowledge to do the job of feeding a family right.

Gingerly, she pointed out to her mother, that many of her traditional kosher recipes, measured by these modern scientific cooking, fell short.

Sadie read aloud from her schoolbook: “To the modern wide awake twentieth century woman, efficiency in household matters is quite as much a problem as efficiency in business is to captains of industry.”

 “The progressive homemaker, my teacher says, walks right up to science and says :”You tell me how.”

Stirring the tzimis, on the stove Rebecca didn’t need this tsoris from her own daughter, no less.

She needed a scientist to tell her about food, like she needed “a hole in the head”.

Rebecca had already walked up to her own higher authority, the laws of Kashruth, the ancient Jewish Dietary laws and asked them to show her how.

 Separate But Equal

1918 book Jewish Cookery

Jewish Cookery (L) Vintage Cookbook (R) Vintage illustration Housewife

 Kashruth- keeping kosher, was an elaborate system of rules that dictated the kinds of foods  that were permissible to eat  and even the way the foods are prepared.

Only fish with fins and scales can be eaten and only animals that chew their cud and have cloven hooves are allowed. Animals have to be killed in a certain way, so the blood drains out. Dairy dishes must be kept a respectable distance from meat dishes and never the two can mix.

This was a divine commandment that was given to Jews on Mt Sinai, she reminded Sadie, from learned rabbis,  “not from some know-it-all domestic scientist.”

“You expect me to follow these rules!” Great Grandma said increduously. “Hoo- Ha! Proteins shmoteins- the only ‘food groups’ you should care about is whether a food is Milkhik ( dairy), Fleyshik,(meat) Pareve,( neutral) or treif (not permitted).”

“You want order, precision, efficiency, try keeping a kosher home,” she scolded Sadie, “then you’ll see what rules are all about. You cook your meat in a vegetable pot and you can forget about it, the meat becomes practically milkhik!’ … separate dishes, separate pots, utensils. So tell me, who is more efficient than a Jew?”

But Sadie knew one items would interest her mother and saved it for last.

Crisco and the Jewish Housewife

Vintage ad for Crisco 1915

Vintage ad for Crisco 1915

 

Gently she slid a booklet across the table in her mothers direction. Entitled Crisco Recipes for the Jewish Housewife it was printed in both English and Yiddish.

Crisco was whole new food neither butter or lard it was pure vegetable oil Sadie explained tp her doubtful mother.

Crisco promised there was absolutely no animal matter in it as shown by the fact it is guaranteed under the National Pure Food Law. If it contained fat it would come under the Government Meat Inspection law.

1918 illustration Jewish symbols and woman cooking

Crisco is absolutely kosher, that is in keeping with the Mosaic Dietary laws.

“New preparations of old foods are continually coming before the public but Crisco is an absolutely new heretofore unknown food product,” Sadie read out loud.

“To illustrate its importance the American head of the Jewish religion, after a thorough examination of Crisco, certifies that Crisco is absolutely kosher, that is in keeping with the Mosaic Dietary laws. The most orthodox have adopted it and it is used by Jews who for years have paid forty cents a pound for chicken fat, rather than use products have been considered unclean.”

But a new product would alter that 4,000 year old practice. With Crisco kosher cooking would be made easier.

Game Changer

She continued reading from the Crisco Cookbook, “it conforms to the strict dietary laws of Jews and is what is known in the Hebrew language as a ‘parva’ or neutral food. Crisco could be used with both milk and meat.”

Great Grandma looked up from her cooking, and never looked back!

The  mason jar filled with schmatz -pure rendered chicken fat- so long a fixture in the icebox ready to mix into chopped liver or frying or spread hot on bread, would be nudged aside for a can of wholesome, white Crisco.

The familiar blue and white package would have a place of honor for generations.

© Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream, 2014. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

You Might Also Enjoy

Transformative Power of Trans Fats


The Occidental Oriental

$
0
0
Food Chun King  ad housewife 1950s holding cans

Vintage Ad Chun King American Chinese Food 1957

My Mom was one smart cookie…fortune cookie that is.

When my mid-century Mom wanted to go exotic..she’d go Oriental and thanks to Chun King canned chow mein it was cantoneasy !

Like many mid-century housewives, when she wanted to add some exotic glamor appeal to our family meals, a trip to the Orient was as nearby as her electric can opener.

Oriental Express

vintage illustrations Food Chinese  American family

Go Chinese tonight for a quick change of pace with real glamor appeal

Confucius say: When family tire of tuna noodle casserole, bore with hum drum meatloaf wake up family taste buds with trip to exotic Orient right in comfort of your suburban split level.

Serving Oriental was a real walkee on the wild side according to this Chun King ad:

Food chinese Chun King ad vintage 1950s

Vintage ad Chun King 1957

“For something to surprise…to thrill your family or guests, switch your thinking completely.”
“Forget about little twists in ordinary, everyday kinds of foods. Put yourself in an Oriental mood.”
“Here’s your new idea….Chun King Chicken Chow Mein. Wake your family up with a complete menu change and its only about 30 cents per person.”

Best part was- no rickshaw needed for this taste treat!

La Choy Makes Chinese Food Swing American

vintage chinese food ad  la choy 1955

Vintage La Choy ad 1955

The granddaddy of American Chinese Food was La Choy who promised You could perform oriental magic with their Dinner in a package for a real Cantonese feast!

vintage illustration chinese chef

Vintage la Choy American Chinese Food ad 1955

La Choy founded in 1922 beat Chun King by over 2 decades. The company had capitalized on the growing fascination America had with the Orient including an entirely new cuisine.

vintage Food La Choy ad

Vintage La Choy ad 1953 For those daring you could prepare your own Chow Mein using La Choy ingredients

Chef La Choy say: Speciar occasion You no wolly!

Food Chinese la Choy ads illustration chinese chefs

” Your Turn for bridge lunch? Serve la Choy Chop Suey! As a pleasant change from the usual party dishes give the girls savory La Choy Cop Suey. It’s bound to be a crowd pleaser!”

Chow Mein Challenged

illustration chinese chef vintage

Vintage ad 1955

In advertisements we would never see today, these American Chinese food companies ran ad campaigns that were sorely in need of Steven Colberts now shuttered satirical Ching Chong Ding Dong Foundation of Sensitivity to Orientals or Whatever.

Egg Foo Yung On Their Face

Chock full of Asian stereotypes and pidgin English, the ads barely raised an eyebrow.

That’s how the fortune cookie crumbles, a nonplussed, non pc public shrugged!

No Speekee Engrish

vintage illustration chinese chef

Vintage ad 1948

Mid century Americans had a real ten for the exotic as long as it was on their terms. Next to hot dogs and coca cola nothing was more American than a plate of chow mein or a bowl of chop suey.

In the great American melting wok nothing was more red white and blue than a divider pak can of Chun King Chow Mein, the American Chinese food company founded by the son of Italian immigrants

The post war pioneer of foreign ethnic food Jeno Paulucci ( of Jenos pizza roll fame) founded Chun King in 1947.

With Six You Get Egg Roll

vintae illustration couple in chinese restuarant

Vintage Saturday Evening Post Cover 1/12/52 Illustration by Alajalov .”Here are 3 grades of chopstickers” the copy explaining the cover art begins. “The female tyro is about to knit one wad of chow mein and purl 2. The sailor considers himself quite a man with chopsticks and lets hope they don’t slip and toss against the lady’s face. As for that chap who was practically born with chopsticks in his mouth, he is thinking Do I ask the guy if he can drink tea with chopsticks or just let the bush leaguer get away with this?”

 

At the time, going oriental meant eating out in a Chinese restaurant. In those days American homemakers only contact with mysterious East might be a thrilling trip to Chinatown.

Going out for Chinese food, sophisticated young moderns could eat such an exotic dinner secure in the belief that they were getting something excitingly foreign yet completely familiar. Seated in the dark red banquette, fumbling with chopsticks they could choose strange-sounding delectables-  one from column A  two from column B.

photo 1950s couple in chinese restaurant

Like much of our so-called foreign cookery at the time, Chinese food would not have been recognizable in the country of its assumed origin. Along with a lack of availability of popular Chinese ingredients here in the US they also needed to adapt the food to make it palatable to Americans.

Chop Suey for the Suburbs

vintage illustration family in kitchen

“Solving that problems of getting variety in your family meals- savory Chinese Chop Suey is one good answer. Try it on the head of the house tonight then be prepared for compliments by the male!”

After WWII post war Americans were primed to chow down on chop suey in the comforts of their own homes and Jeno Paulucci saw the possibility of a huge market of convenience foods.

With borrowed money and the purchase of 25 pounds of bean sprouts, he began production in a converted WWII Quonset hut in Duluth Minnesota.

“And if you’re thinking that no chow mein fixed at home can come up to the fine Cantonese restaurant kind, then you don’t know a thing about the Chun King Divider-Pak way,” boasted the early ads.

Ciao Mein

Food Chinese Canton Easy

Vintage American Chines Food Ads 1950′s

Authenticity was not the point. Ease and convenience with a heavy dose of familiarity

Ignoring Ancient Chinese Secret, Pauluucci, came up with his own chop suey recipe by canning his sprouts and adding bits of celery, pimentos and an authentic Italian herb mixture suggested by his Italian mother.

Years later at a ceremonial dinner for National Italian American Foundation in 1976 President Gerald Ford remarking on the success of Chun King ,the royalty of American Oriental food,commented : “What could be more American than a business built on a good Italian recipe for chop suey?”

Surprise the Occidental is Oriental

vintage food chung king ad

Vintage Chun King American Chinese Food Ad 1950s

The thought of Chinese food in your own home was thrilling

‘In fine Oriental restaurants and now at home-you feel the romance of food.” began one ad.
” The most romantic place in town to eat is where the food is Oriental. And tonight at home you can enjoy foods as delicious as those in fine Cantonese restaurants. Give your family a Chun King meal.

“Now, right in your own home- and with very little work- you can treat your family to a complete oriental meal,” they gush incredulously. “An exotic authentic meal such as you could only have enjoyed at a fine Oriental restaurant.”

vintage illustration chun king divider pack

“Because of Chun Kings exclusive Divider Pack, the interesting flavors contrasting textures and bright colors that make Oriental foods so distinctive are protected for you. Combine the contents of both cans heat for 15 minutes and your chow mein is ready.”

“You can do it because some store near you has Chun Kings delicious American Oriental foods..

Me So Busy You So Lucky

Food Chun King cantonese frozen dinner illustration chinese chef

Vintage Chun King Ad 1957

 

Of course with the pace of modern life speeding up you could be just too darn tired to open the divider pack cans, Chun King came to the harried housewife’s rescue with their frozen entrees making dinner snap!

Have a Cantoneasy Kitchen Holiday

Food Chun King Frozen Food vintage ads

Vintage ads Chun King Frozen Dinners 1957

Hop in your Rickshaw and head to your latest supermarket and stock up on Chun King Frozen Foods

“A Complete Oriental meal all  ready to pop in the oven! Just like a fine Cantonese restaurant…an Oriental meal with no work for you”
“One picture is worth 1000 words say Chinese proverb. Doesn’t this new Chun King Cantonese Dinner look good?”

Spoon Fed Stereotypes

To end the exotic oriental meal, Mom always served us Jell-O.

Unlike poor Chinese baby in Jello commercial who tried using chopsticks to eat the jello his “mother bling him” we used “great western invention” the spoon, confirming that racist stereotypes can be spoon fed too!

 

© Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream, 2014. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

 

 

 


Passover Tears

$
0
0

food Liptons soup SWScan05443 - Copy

Like Johnson & Johnson’s Baby Shampoo, Lipton’s Onion Soup Mix produced no tears.

That dehydrated marvel of mid-century cookery was a staple in my Mothers repertoire. Mom joined the legion of happy homemakers who were overjoyed at the development of dehydrated soup cooking.

Besides being the backbone of the classic California Onion Dip, that pride and joy of every self respectable suburban hostess, my mother prepared her Passover Brisket using that Onion Soup Mix from a recipe supplied by Lipton’s published in Ladies Home Journal and endorsed by the Nassau Community Temple Sisterhood Cookbook.

Why spend hours peeling, chopping, slicing and dicing and sauteing reducing the onions down to a turn, when Liptons had come to m’lady’s rescue. Add water and voila…. onion stock!

So it was with modern pride that my Mother prepared her holiday brisket in that E-Z fashion.

I on the other hand, being just as contemporary, sniff at the notion of using a packet of dried onions, insisting on peeling, chopping, slicing and dicing the real McCoy sauteing them down til they are reduced to a golden hue.

But the copious onions required for the meal, along with the copious tears it produces, now co-mingle with great tears of sadness at the loss of my Mother.

As I prepare the Seder for which she will never again attend, it is lit by the glow of a yartzeit candle, a shining light of tribute and memory to her passing on this day.

So it is a day of tears, that even Lipton’s Onion Soup could not help.

© Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream, 2014. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Sally Edelstein and Envisioning The American Dream with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

 

You Might Also Enjoy

Crisco and Kosher Kitchen Culture

 

 


Viewing all 66 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>