T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3156.1 | toast the president | FROSTY::JORDAN | | Fri Jul 26 1991 12:01 | 4 |
| you were toasting to the president with a glass a milk, it's the
song the play when they introduce a president, and if
i rembember correctly it was Eisenhauer (spl.)
|
3156.2 | Re .0 | BOOVX2::MANDILE | Lynne - a.k.a. Her Royal Highness | Fri Jul 26 1991 14:13 | 4 |
| Chipped beef on toast, YUM! Why do you think this
is expensive to make today?
HRH
|
3156.3 | | ICS::ANDERSON_M | | Fri Jul 26 1991 14:42 | 9 |
| I remember my mother buying the 'chipped' beef (dried) in a jar.
In our supermarket the 'jar' is about $2.89 - $3.49 - depending
which supermarket I am in. I would have to buy a couple of jars
for the recipe - could get to be expensive.
...and a can of salmon for the loaf. Ouch - over $5.00 a can!
|
3156.4 | Bosco and Romper Room, too | ELWOOD::CHRISTIE | | Fri Jul 26 1991 17:07 | 14 |
| Two cans of salmon at BJ's was only a little over $7.00. Good
deal. \
This nostalgia is making me hungry. I've got to dig out the
recipe for Yum-yums. They are a cakey square with a brown sugar
meringue on top. Terrific warm.
Big Brother Bob Emery was not as good as Boom Town. At least
Rex Trailer never said he hated kids while on the air as did
B.E.!!
Lid
|
3156.5 | | ICS::ANDERSON_M | | Fri Jul 26 1991 17:17 | 15 |
| I remember (when I was a Brownie...no comments please) that we had
campfires where we made the REAL smores. Real good - real messy.
I always _hated_ one grandmothers gravy (turkey) because she put
giblets in there I didn't know what the heck GIBLETS were.
Loved here creamed onions though - and excellent stuffing.
My mom used to make a good creamed tuna and pea casserole - I can't
seem to duplicate it. And my other grandmother made the best
gooseberry pie (she picked them off the tree on her farm in Oregon).
I used to get cookies from an aunt (purple box...chocolate chip ?)
that were so good. I don't think they make them anymore.
|
3156.6 | I still can't reproduce them | UPBEAT::JFERGUSON | Judy Ferguson-SPS Business Support | Mon Jul 29 1991 11:27 | 8 |
| Breakfast at my grandmother's house...buttermilk biscuits...hot from the
oven...every morning and evening...light, high and fluffy. They were the
breakfast mainstay along with lots of butter and honey (or if you *really*
liked it -- sorghum syrup). My grandmother would also let us have
fresh peaches and sweetened whipped cream for breakfast, too. Mama
would never have allowed that!
|
3156.7 | a munch down memory lane | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Mon Jul 29 1991 16:19 | 30 |
| oh, do I remember....
Nana's pot roast with homemade noodles. The noodles were cooked in the pot
roast gravy and were a fattening, fatty, delicious treat.
Mom's ground up, left-over potroast, sandwich spread. How can I describe this?
Mom pushed the cold, left-over pot roast through a meat grinder, added mayo,
mini-diced sweet pickles. This was spread on toasted whole wheat bread with
additonal mayo, lettuce, and tomato. Also works with roast beef, but we
seldom could afford a "roast".
Nana's hot fruited dumplings for winter desserts. Bring two cans of pitted
dark sweet cherries (with juice), a can of sliced peaches (with syrup)
mixed together to a simmer on the stove. Drop in small bisquick mix dumplings
(recipe on box of bisquick) - a teaspoon size dumpling to start grows much
larger - cover pot and simmer until the dumplings are puffy and one isn't
"doughy" when you cut into it. Serve warm with sweetened heavy cream. No,
not diet food.
Mom's venison roast. Barded with slices of bacon and roasted to a nice med.
rare. Rubbed with baked garlic prior to roasting. Served with potatos roasted
in the bottom of the pan, this was the best. Dad brought home the venison
and mom cooked it.
for that matter, Mom's pan fried (now we say, saute) dove - again, Dad shot it,
mom cooked it. These were delicious little birds. Also pheasant when we
could find it out there in the desert.
Ah, this makes me SOOOOO hungry - and I cannot even get most of what we used
to eat when I was a kid....anyone know where I can buy dressed desert dove?
|
3156.8 | - Memories of yesteryear | ICS::ANDERSON_M | | Mon Jul 29 1991 17:45 | 14 |
| Ooooh .7 reminded me of my grandmother's 'red flannel hash'.
I inherited her meat grinder (it's hanging in my pantry) and I would
beg to help her out. She'd mix it up with some salt pork, potatoes
and can't remember what else - don't even remember what kind of meat
she used. Mmmmmm mmmmm mmmm!
Also - she would prepare 'rice' potatoes. My brother and I would take
turns putting the boiled potatoes in the 'ricer'... somehow those
potatoes tasted so much better. I guess we felt like we had made them -
so of course they were the best.
|
3156.9 | makes you feel warm and fuzzy all over | AKOCOA::SCHOFIELD | | Tue Jul 30 1991 11:22 | 14 |
| My Nanna used to make the same thing for Christmas every year: Meatball
lasagna, fried chicken, seafood newberg, and we always had langastino
dip with different crackers (I always ate Better Cheddars). Growing up,
I used to say (sometime in September/October) that I could just TASTE
Christmas!
My Mom has tried to keep the tradition going. When my nieces and nephew
get a bit older, we're going to revive the old Christmas Candy Tree!
When we were kids, my two grandmothers and two aunts used to decorate a
small fake tree with bags of choc. coins, candy canes, santa's, etc.
There was an equal amount for all the kids. It was the HIT of Christmas
when we were young.... ahh, the memories!
beth
|
3156.10 | Beets are the secret ingredient | CIMNET::MASSEY | A Horse & a Flea, and 3 Blind Mice | Tue Jul 30 1991 13:55 | 6 |
| re: .8 "red flannel hash"
My mother-in-law made this from the left-over corned beef and
cabbage dinners. The potatoes and corned beef, together with
beets (hence the red flannel), were groundup and the results
heated in the oven..........lip-smakin good
|
3156.11 | | SNAKKE::HAMILTON | | Thu Aug 01 1991 15:46 | 16 |
| re: .7. I thought my mother was the only one in the world who made
sandwich spread out of gorund pot roast. Whenever I brought it to
school the other kids would beg me to swap with them.
A special treat when it was too late for "heavy" food, a handful of
graham crackers broken up in a dish with milk (today they have
rady-made cereal).
My great-grandmother made Danish meatcakes that no one can duplicate.
She bought pork roast and had it ground, then she added her own ground
beef.
And her Danish cukes were great, too. And the red cabbage.
Karen
|
3156.12 | more nostalgia | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Thu Aug 01 1991 16:17 | 9 |
| Milk toast with warm milk and sugar. (those round crackers)
Poor man's Saturday night dinner: scrambled eggs with cut up hot dogs
mixed in and ketchup on top!
And at grandma's house... every - EVERY meal had to have some form of
starch-- potatos, bread, rice, etc. She thought I was too skinny.
Home made donuts with fresh cider on a cool Fall night.
|
3156.13 | | EMDS::PETERSON | I know.., I said I was leaving. BUT...! | Thu Aug 01 1991 16:39 | 16 |
|
Milk Toast-Mom used to make that when we were home sick-overdone
toast a little butter, salt$pepper, and hot milk.
Scrambled eggs and hotdogs!
Home made donuts!
(are you sure you're not related? :-) )
And the Swedish dishes at Christmas like Kalv Silta(ground jelied
veal), and Sill,
I really miss the homemade jams, and Elderberry Pies!
|
3156.14 | Fond Memories | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Thu Aug 01 1991 22:56 | 12 |
| Well, maybe not related but real close in tastes! You see, my
Christmas memories are of Polish delicacies! All meatless, of course.
We had the sil, too. (Uncle who married into the family was Swedish.)
That's funny-- I didn't know anybody else did scrambled eggs and
hotdogs!
My dad used to make great bread pudding, too. We'd never throw out the
crust from loaves of bread-- just save it up in the fridge 'til it was
time to make the bread pudding.
marcia
|
3156.15 | Christmas and nostalgia go together! | BUOVAX::OLSON | Joanna Olson @BUO 249-4012 | Fri Aug 02 1991 12:34 | 8 |
| Re: .13
> And the Swedish dishes at Christmas like Kalv Silta(ground jelied
> veal), and Sill,
Oh, does that bring back memories! Thanks!
Joanna
|
3156.16 | scrambled eggs and balogna | ASABET::HABER | kudos to working mothers | Fri Aug 02 1991 13:06 | 6 |
| WE used to have scrambled eggs and balogna -- either the wide slices or
the smaller, kosher -style. My kids think that's weird -- one will eat
eggs and the other balogna, but not together!
My mother made this last time we were home --
|
3156.17 | Cause O---- M---- Has a way with B-O-L-O-G-N-A! | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Fri Aug 02 1991 13:28 | 2 |
| Oh yeah. My mom would just fry up bolognie, and sometimes she'd put
onions with it.
|
3156.18 | Yum | EMDS::PETERSON | I know.., I said I was leaving. BUT...! | Fri Aug 02 1991 14:45 | 3 |
|
Fried bologna( 'x' in the middle, 4 slits around the edge) with
Mustard on fresh bread......
|
3156.19 | My 2 most nostalgic | CAPITN::LANE_BE | | Fri Aug 02 1991 19:22 | 8 |
|
When my father cooked breakfast for us as kids: we always wanted fried
corn meal mush swimming in maple syrup.
Lunch at my swedish grandmother's house : Kroppkaka (potato dumplings)
filled with salt pork and served with an ice cold glass of milk.
|
3156.20 | I'm hungry | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Fri Aug 02 1991 21:02 | 17 |
| this subject has fired off some great memories:
Dot Cash's mashed potato salad (sounds wierd, tastes greate);
her batter dipped, fried okra (this way, I'll eat okra);
her batter dipped, fried chicken - hot or cold;
Mrs. Beldanado's beans and fresh flour tortillas (never has a
king eaten food as wonderful as this simple meal - served
with giant glasses of sweet iced tea);
Mrs. Beldanado's coconut layer cake (whenever I smell a coconut
cake, I'm 8 years old again);
Mom's cinnamon-touched german chocolate cake (scratch cake and
coconut-pecan topping);
Mom's glazed walnuts (I wish I could make them!);
|
3156.21 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | They all lie | Mon Aug 05 1991 08:50 | 8 |
| Grandma's tortieres. Best I've ever had.
Grandpa's meatballs and spaghetti sauce.
Mom's gorton.
Dad's meat stuffing (for turkey).
|
3156.22 | Remembering special things of the past | MPO::WHITTALL | All I can do is 8-) 8-) 8-).... | Mon Aug 05 1991 10:33 | 31 |
| The 'Good Old Days'... Brings back some good memories for me..
Sunday morning breakfast would usually by scrambled eggs with
Mushroom soup. It was a concoction my dad thought of, and we
always thought it was great.. Real simple to make to, just
substitute a can of CoM soup for the milk.. We used about
a dozen eggs for one can... Mmmm, still sounds good today...
My mom use to work the night shift as a nurse, so she'd be
sleeping on Saturdays. My dad had another weekend treat..
It'd be his version of goulash... Pound of macaroni, couple
cans of Cream of Mushroom soup (again), couple cans of tomato
soup, some margarine, and a lot of cheese (usually plain old
American). Mix that together... I've served it to my kids,
and they like it... Maybe a tradition is starting... :-)
Home made crueller donuts..
And probably the BEST thing my grandfather ever taught me..
After EVERY dinner (which was usually at noon time) was a
big dish (at least it always looked big) of ice cream, and
pour on top.... REAL Maple Syrup.. To this day, I enjoy
real syrup instead of the colored corn syrup they pass off..
The base note mentioned plain white rice for a dessert..
My mom use to (and still does for special days) make a dessert
called 'Ice Cream Rice'.. Made with rice, milk, plain gelatin,
sugar and heavy cream.. It is delicious... My wife doesn't
care for plain rice, but even she's been known to have seconds..
Csw
|
3156.23 | Poor Mans Pizza | ROYALT::TASSINARI | Bob | Mon Aug 05 1991 15:17 | 20 |
|
When I was a kid this was a favorite!
1 slice of bread topped with
1 slice of cheese topped with
1 slice of tomato sprinkled with
oregano....
This was put into the toaster oven and toasted.
Kinda like pizza.
Variation: Put a slice of balogna on the bread before the cheese.
- Bob
|
3156.24 | Now I'm really hungry | ASIC::MYERS | | Tue Aug 06 1991 10:58 | 11 |
| My mouth is watering at the thought of:
Nana's pot roast/brisket. So tender you didn't need a knife, the best
I've ever had.
Mom's blintzes, topped with sour cream and sugar/cinnamon.
Dad's potato salad, cole slaw and spare ribs (we'd fight over who'd get
the last one).
Susan
|
3156.25 | Creamed tuna on toast ! YUM | AUNTB::SIMON | IN YOUR DREAMS..... | Tue Aug 06 1991 11:30 | 5 |
| When things were really busy a quick & easy my mom fixed us was
1 can CoM , 1 can tuna mixed together add little water heat.
spread over toast, cover with asparagras spears & grated cheese.
Yum..
|
3156.26 | A Southerner's fond food memories | SCAACT::RESENDE | Digital is not thriving on chaos. | Thu Aug 08 1991 01:20 | 52 |
| Cooking wasn't one of my mom's strong points, so I don't have a whole lot
of food memories from childhood. But my wife's renditions of her childhood
favorites make my mouth water sometimes. She was raised in the South, and
her mother cooked Southern through and through.
They had a homemade bread every evening, usually either buttermilk biscuits
or cornbread, but sometimes rolls. Pat was an adult before she ever tasted
a canned biscuit!
There was a garden every summer, and Pat's mother canned and froze enough
vegetables to last the family all winter. In the summer it wasn't unusual
for them to sit down to a meal consisting purely of harvest from the
garden: fresh limas, creamed corn, cukes and sliced tomatoes, crowder
peas, green beans, squash, collards, mustard and turnip greens, boiled
cabbage -- who needed meat?? Unlike many children, Pat grew up loving
vegetables, and she believes it was because her mom cooked only fresh
veggies, and seasoned them so they were really good.
For meats, fried chicken was a favorite, and was served about every week.
Also, those little thin pork chops, fried crisp with mashed potatoes and
gravy. Another frequent favorite was chicken 'n dumplings, but the
dumplings were the flat, non-leavened type instead of the puffy, Bisquick
kind. Pot roast was another, though they didn't have it that often. One of
Pat's childhood favorites that I had never heard of was "Backbone 'n
Spareribs." Apparently, they were just boiled with seasonings, though Pat
failed to get the procedure from her mother before she died.
A breakfast favorite in their family was fried country ham, with redeye
gravy to ladle over homemade biscuits. Pat's grandmother, on the other
hand, used to get un-pasteurized cream from a local dairy farm to ladle
over piping hot biscuits for breakfast. Her grandmother also bought
homemade sausage from a local farmer, and Pat says she has never tasted
anything that even came close to that sausage.
For desserts, banana pudding was a weekly event, and fresh fruit cobblers
appeared on the table quite often. Cakes were reserved for birthdays and
special occasions, but pies were everyday fare. And, like just about
everything else she made, Pat's mother made her pies from scratch -- none
of that frozen crust or canned pie filling for her!
On the down side, the preferred seasoning was salt pork, and it was used
liberally. Much Southern cuisine back then was fried, and the diet was
generally high enough in fat to horrify most nutritionists today. They had
a lot of rice and mashed potatoes, always with gravy. It was a totally
unhealthy diet, though they certainly didn't know it at the time. It's
sort of sad to see that kind of wonderful food go by the wayside because
we've learned it's bad for us -- I guess it's a case of ignorance truly
being bliss! Our family certainly doesn't eat that way today, but I'd put
that food up against *ANY* of the healthy stuff being pushed today for pure
taste. Ah, the price of progress...
Steve
|
3156.27 | memories | CSCOAC::GEIGER_A | Stepped in what?!? | Thu Aug 08 1991 11:22 | 19 |
| AHHHHH - I am my mother's child. Born and raised in the south, and
even though I've been seasoned with convenience and a little health
consious, there are a few die - hard habits that I bear of hers.
When cooking, I use whole milk (we use skim on cereals), real
butter (low-fat margarine on toast), all purpose flour (no self
rising), real whipping cream (no cool-whip).
The microwave is used only for reheating leftovers, or thawing
something if I'm in a pinch.
Dinner used to consist of : 1 meat, 3 veges, bread (either loaf bread,
biscuits, or corn bread), desert, and good old sweat tea.
(To the last noter, I tried canned biscuits once in college, never
again. I'll do without if I can't make them homemade).
The good ole days!!
Angie
|
3156.28 | Apple Time!! | CSLALL::KEAVENEY | | Thu Aug 08 1991 16:22 | 12 |
| And for those chilly autumn Sunday afternoons (after the pot roast)...
Mrs. Chandler Apple Rolls ... hot out of the oven, dripping with brown
sugar and topped with as much fresh whipped cream as you could fit on
it!!!!
And, of course, rainy Saturday afternoons .... pea soup and "johnny
cake" (corn bread) for lunch!!! And Beans and Franks for dinner!!!!
Meg
|
3156.29 | I'm very hungry now! | CUPTAY::FARINA | | Fri Aug 23 1991 18:55 | 47 |
| This is a little old now, but I'm just getting around to reading it!
Talk about memories!
I thought we were the only people in the world who ate creamed tuna -
people look at me like I'm crazy if I mention it. We used to have
creamed tuna (medium white sauce with white meat tuna) regularly. We'd
have mashed potatoes, make a well in them on our plates, spoon peas
into the well, then cover it all with creamed tuna! I loved it!
Creamed tuna volcanoes.
My mother wasn't (isn't) a terrific cook, but the things she did well
are the things I can't duplicate! Her beef stew is the best I every
had. So is her corn chowder. She makes a roast chicken and I don't
know what she does to the skin, but we all fight over it (still!).
My Nana always had beef ready to make meatballs - spiced and mixed.
She'd make hamburgers with it if we dropped in unexpectedly. Then
tomato sauce instead of catsup - and of course, mozzarella instead of
American cheese on a cheeseburger. Her Italian dressing was the best I
ever had. No one even tries to duplicate it any more, because it's
always a disappointment. The greatest compliment you can give my Dad
is to tell him that it smells like Nana's house used to smell when he's
cooking.
BTW, those donuts with the apple cider have to be cake donuts, not the
yeast donuts! It just won't do. Preferably plain, with cinnamon sugar
donuts an acceptable alternative.
My Dad made English muffin pizzas with slices of tomato, mozzarella,
crumbled oregano and a drizzle of olive oil. Yum!
We were raised Catholic, so the creamed tuna was always the Ash
Wednesday meal, and frequently the Friday dinner. Also fish sticks and
French fries, with baked beans on the side. And Saturdays we had
hamburger patties (occasionally hot dogs), french fries, and baked
beans (and we had to watch Lawrence Welk while we ate it, whether we
wanted to or not!). And broken up graham crackers with sugar and milk
were frequently Sunday dinner, since we had the big meal at 2:00. Or
sometimes slabs of Italian bread with peanut butter and a cup of hot
;chocolate.
Ah, the good old days! Hungry as all this has made me, at least I
don't have to watch Lawrence Welk any more and I now know that green
vegetables don't have to be olive green when cooked (that's how Mom
cooked them!).
Susan
|
3156.30 | *** POP! *** (Welk's Bubbles) | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Mon Aug 26 1991 11:02 | 5 |
| Yeah but... Did you have to watch your mom and dad DANCE to the
Lawrence Welk show???? I used to think they were so CORNY! The real
reason why I hated Lawrence in those days, though, was that it was a
signal-- immediately after the show I had to go take my bath and then
(gasp) go to bed!
|
3156.31 | Actually I like the Royal Canadiens | EMDS::PETERSON | | Tue Aug 27 1991 09:56 | 5 |
|
I can top that. One mild New Years Eve, my parents 'popped' the
T.V. dancing to Guy Lombardo! We were outside watching them dance
when they did some polka style hop, and phhht... the T.V.went.
|
3156.32 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Mon Jun 14 1993 16:31 | 13 |
| RE: .11 by SNAKKE::HAMILTON
>My great-grandmother made Danish meatcakes that no one can duplicate.
>She bought pork roast and had it ground, then she added her own ground
>beef.
Frikadella. I make these with half pork and half veal ground together
three times with onion ground in as well and a little cream soda. Then
you dip them in some egg and bread crumbs and fry them in a skillet.
I got the recipe out of the Time-Life "Foods of the World" Scandinavian
cookbook, I think.
|