Definitely the iconic red and white, ring-binder Betty Crocker Cookbook from the 1950's .My mom used it a lot, especially for baking. You could tell what a family's favorite dishes were from whichever pages were splattered with various drops and smears. I've got that one and also found one in pristine condition, looked like it had never been used(I'm sure we've all got plenty of cookbooks like that)
@murieleylers6388 Жыл бұрын
I agree, I have my mom's, and a reprint put out in the 70s or so(?), and the next version, which isn't quite as good.
@AvivaHadas Жыл бұрын
Are you a quilter?
@willowthegood9035 Жыл бұрын
I had that cookbook (bound, not ring binder. Picked up another copy in an antique store.
@rhondawest6838 Жыл бұрын
I've got my mom's version, that's falling apart, and another one from the 80's I picked up second hand. I still make recipes from it that I don't even make alterations to (like with most recipes 😉)
@supergimp2000 Жыл бұрын
Yup. Me too. Every mom on the block had that book in their kitchen.
@laceygirl706 Жыл бұрын
My mom has a copy of Better Homes & Gardens Cook Book. She got it new from her mother when she married my dad in the early 60s. She gave me a brand new copy when I got married in 94. I never had any kids, but I’ve carried on the tradition by gifting them to my friends kids as they set up their homes. Very educational.
@jwilson9066 Жыл бұрын
My father gifted his new bride with a Better Homes & Gardens cookbook for Christmas 1960, one month into the marriage. Mother was crushed but realized she needed the encouragement. She used it as long as I can remember. Grandma, her mother in law, was a very skilled cook, a master which all of us pale in comparison. She did not use cookbooks, it was all in her head. Never wrote it down unless she wanted you to make it for when got older. We called her our living cookbook. Eastern European influenced cooking mostly. That side of the family loved their food. Obsession really. My maternal grandmother had one cookbook. I have it now. It was published in 1939. The American Home Cookbook. She also had handwritten recipes on scraps of paper, clippings and later, recipe cards. I have those as well. I make a few of hers and my great grandmother's recipes to this day. It was good food, but not the level of the paternal family. They did not understand the food obsession from the other side of my family. They only ate to live, not living to eat. They also were influenced by Eastern European. Also some Irish, Scottish & English. It's all an interesting mix. I love it all.❤
@RedKittieKat Жыл бұрын
I was born in '64 and my Mom and Gran always had a worn copy of Better Homes and Gardens Cookbook. It had a red and white checkered cover. It was a 5 ring binder as well. The sections were divided by file folder shaped dividers. It was a great cookbook. Another one was called the The Old farmer's almanac Colonial cookbook. There were several recipes in there that were made over and over. Especially the Corn Chowder ❤
@babbiification Жыл бұрын
My mom had a bound version and it got so dilapidated she wrote out all her favorite recipes on index cards and put them in a rolodex XD
@sgmarr Жыл бұрын
Did you ever see the Gold Anniversary Binder one? That is the one i look for. One cake in it, "Hungarian Poppyseed Torte with Walnut Frosting", is my goal. Is it in any you have? Which Editions?
@NoZenith Жыл бұрын
This my mom has this! Our sugar cookie recipe that's kind of like snickerdoodles that's a refrigerator method is a modified version from this!
@asloan193 Жыл бұрын
My mom has a Better Homes and Gardens that is probably 50 years old, when I got married I ended up with 2 different editions of that cookbook.
@RedKittieKat Жыл бұрын
@@sgmarr I haven't seen that one .. . What a Gem that would be ❤
@oggyreidmore Жыл бұрын
My grandmother received a copy of the 1948 edition of "The Joy of Cooking" as a wedding gift and has used it since. She has her favorite go to recipes written with a wood burner on thin oak panels and hung on the kitchen wall so they can be consulted to this day, and the original book in the living room bookcase. She's 94 and still cooking!
@kenrickman6697 Жыл бұрын
I’m 43 years old, and growing up it was a mix of Betty Crocker and the Joy of Cooking. There were a few other cookbooks in the house, but those two were probably 95% of what my parents referred to.
@rjnilmandir Жыл бұрын
The Joy of Cooking and The French Chef
@rettaconnelly3913 Жыл бұрын
I don’t remember my great grandmother or grandmother using cookbooks but my mom had a well worn Betty Crocker cookbook from the 1950s. And she loved cutting out recipes from the daily newspaper.
@hew2356 Жыл бұрын
For my family, the 1950's version of the Betty Crocker cookbook and local cookbooks from fundraisers(such as 4-H) made up the majority of the recipes we used. My mother and grandmother taught me to cook from those, which fortunately had thorough instructions. Those cookies look delightful.
@seanrwhalen Жыл бұрын
I use the zest of one lemon in my snickerdoodle recipe and just omit the cinnamon. Roll in sugar and bake. I called them lemondoodles as a kid!
@christinaschuette4215 Жыл бұрын
My grandmother gave my mom a "Woman's Home Companion Cookbook" after she married my dad ... she then passed it down to me when I was married ... my dad was the actual cook in our household - cooking from scratch most of the time , learning by watching his Polish mother cook ... Smacznego ❤️
@AkbarZeb-p6f17 күн бұрын
These were my favorite cookies as a kid. Grandma's were always the best!
@tricityladytn Жыл бұрын
The 1953 edition of the Better Homes & Gardens cookbook was like the family bible. My mom still has it, although many of the pages are discolored, crumbling, or falling out. It is well worn and has served our family well!
@lisaboban Жыл бұрын
"Cookies don't have to be complicated." Right there with you, Jules.
@therealthornblossom3740 Жыл бұрын
In my family it was the Culinary Arts Institute Encyclopedic Cookbook by Ruth Berolzheimer. My great grandmother, grandmother (and her youngest sister), and my mother (and all her sisters) had this cookbook. I learned how to cook from it My favorite cookbook is the I Hate To Cook Book by Peg Bracken. I have three copies and I often read it for fun (Peg Bracken has a wicked sense of humor), and the majority of the recipes are keepers
@houngandave6 ай бұрын
i've got a copy of the encyclopedic cookbook - really nice. i haven't seen it since i moved, though. the family cookbook, though is the settlement cookbook - such a selection of recipes and advice.
@znachkiznachki5352 Жыл бұрын
US - The 1950 Betty Crocker cookbook.(Second printing of the first edition.) The one with the red and white cover. The original is much loved and used, falling apart, but carefully looked after. Many years ago, before ebay and all the other ways to find copies, my brother painstakingly made 4 sets of photocopies of the entire cookbook so that each of us kids had a copy. My mom also had a copy of the 1960s one, and my sister had a 1970s one. Fascinating to see the changes in recipes, and changes in ingredients in recipes.
@TheDiosdebaca Жыл бұрын
Joy of Cooking, or as my grandmother referred to it as "Irma". She had a depression-era copy that was sadly lost to the world, but it gave instructions on cleaning and dressing everything from squirrel to possum and preparing cakes and main dishes.
@robviousobviously5757 Жыл бұрын
Besides the Betty Crocker cookbook, my grandmother's small town church cookbook was the go to in our house..
@beckyh224 Жыл бұрын
Better Homes and Garden. Mom gave me one when I married and it's pretty much all I've used for 52 years!
@scruppydoo Жыл бұрын
My family has our own cookbook that has recipes past down throughout the generations. We have some that date back to my great great great grandmothers time. Every couple years some of my family get together to add new recipes to it and update it. My mom currently has our families copy. When she passes away, it will be mine since I’m the baker and cook of her generation. I think that is the book that has influenced my childhood the most. Many cakes, cookies and meals have been made from it growing up.
@gigidodson Жыл бұрын
Betty Crocker . My Granny had it, my mom had it, and i gave it to my kids when they moved out.
@stevemonkey6666 Жыл бұрын
My childhood is defined by my grandmother's cooking. She was a Hungarian Jewish lady and she got everything out of her head....
@itatane Жыл бұрын
My grandparents make most of their stuff from memory, along with a sheaf of handwritten recipes copied from various sources. Mom and Dad used several different cookbooks, Betty Crocker, Better Homes and Gardens, plus a couple obscure ones that were lost to thieves years ago after my father passed. (They broke into our storage and didn't find anything they considered valuable, so they just left Dad's couple hundred books scattered about in the pouring rain.) The one that my brother was able to save was the Nero Wolfe Cookbook, by Rex Stout. The 40 minute scrambled eggs are delicious, but a nightmare to make. (Double boiler and whisking while glued to the stove, anyone?)
@Cheesius Жыл бұрын
My mom learned to cook from - and taught us to cook from - a 1950's gold-colored Fannie Farmer cookbook. I still go back to those recipes when I want a bit of nostalgia as most of Mom's cooking was based on it.
@janicecraig2364 Жыл бұрын
My wedding gift from 1986: Nellie Lyle Pattison’s Canadian Cookbook. Plus we inherited the 1947 book from my husband’s mother’s after she died. Enjoy those old recipes thanks for bringing them to life.
@GreenWizardBaking Жыл бұрын
My mum had a well loved, dog eared and sticker covered copy of The Margaret Fulton Cookbook. Fulton's recipes were well written and easy enough to follow that I was making dinner for my family at 10 years old! It inspired my love of Pastry and bread, which I made my career at 19.
@KissMyFrog42 Жыл бұрын
Here in Australia, it was the Common Sense Cookbook. It was the classroom textbook in Home Economics classes for decades, and I'm fairly sure that every household in the country had at least one copy. Also, the Margaret Fulton Cookbook was the kitchen bible of the 1960s.
@rsmith2312 Жыл бұрын
I think it may have been a NSW Home Economics book more than other states. My mother, as a teacher in NSW, had this in the kitchen.
@elizabethinnb Жыл бұрын
Going through that cookbook is like a stroll down memory lane. So many of the meals, desserts, and baking came out of that book. I found a copy about 8 years ago and was really surprised at how many of the recipes my Mum made.
@mrath214 Жыл бұрын
My mom learned to cook from Betty Crocker, no complaints from our six boys and one girl siblings.
@lanetpresler423 Жыл бұрын
We had an old Better Homes & Gardens cook book. It was a red & white plaid ring binder book. I know there were many yrs that got printed, 4 or 5 decades if I remember correctly.
@mikeb4375 Жыл бұрын
Just like Glen I have 3 copies of this from the 40's 60's and 80's my favorite era was the 40's.
@bflogal18 Жыл бұрын
Joy of Cooking and Good Housekeeping were the staples in my mom’s kitchen.
@maryjanegibson7743 Жыл бұрын
The cookbook that defines my childhood was my granmother's handwritten one. In the early 70's, she recopied it into a diary book that an insurance agent had given as a premium, with a different category in each month. I have it now, all tattered and battered (literally). Most of the recipes dated from the depression years when she set up housekeeping with more added over the years.
@katherinetutschek4757 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like a gem👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
@Corndog4382 Жыл бұрын
For my family in the western US it was the Better Homes and Gardens cookbook. My grandma has a spiral bound red and white checkerboard cover from the 60’s I believe. When I first moved out of the house to college she got me a copy of the new version. I’ve loved it
@jellyosbahr Жыл бұрын
Coming from an extended vegetarian family (vegetarian for many generations), my mother had a 1986 Sarah Brown vegetarian cookbook. I still have it, and it feels both comforting and dated. Vegetarian food has come a long way, but I’m still enjoying “savoury millet” now and again.
@River_Sparrow Жыл бұрын
For me growing up, it was the Better Homes and Gardens New Cookbook. My mom gave me my own copy when I got married. ❤
@scugog6184 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in the 70s and 80s so the joy of cooking was always in our collection
@virginiaf.5764 Жыл бұрын
When my mother used a cookbook, it was the iconic "Joy of Cooking". I have her 1930s tattered falling-apart copy with notes here and there and recipes cut from newspapers stuck in some of the pages. I believe it was the only cookbook she had ... I don't remember any others. But a lot of her cooking was intuitive, delicious middle-eastern dishes, because she was born in Lebanon. She also cut out a lot of recipes from newspapers and magazines. Her food was delicious. Also, we can probably all guess how old we are by the cookbooks are mothers used!
@rodney7136 Жыл бұрын
Born and raised here in the southern part of the United States. Here most of our parents had the Better Homes and Garden red and white binder on the shelf. Besides that, it was Sunday paper, Readers Digest, and believe it or not occasionally the TV Guide. And lets us not forget the recipes cut from labels on cans and boxes of food. Love the show. Made the lemon cookies and they were great. Thanks for all you do. We always look forward to your show.
@TGlooknohands Жыл бұрын
For me, growing up here in Minnesota (AKA "South Canada"), the iconic childhood cookbook was always the Fanny Farmer cookbook series. I have so many great memories of making those peanut butter cookies and cheating by adding chocolate chips to them :D
@1enediyne Жыл бұрын
Hello from North north Minnesota!
@jane-annarmstrong295 Жыл бұрын
I live in Thunder Bay Ontario 40 minute drive to the Minnesota border!
@nancylindsay4255 Жыл бұрын
That ain't cheatin' -- that's cookin'!
@catherinelampman9600 Жыл бұрын
I'm not from Minnesota but I love my copy of Fanny Farmer.
@brucenitschkie80249 ай бұрын
Five roses cookbook. Seemed to be in my whole families cookbook collections
@vonwolfeo Жыл бұрын
I'm from Australia and we grew up eating recipes from the Australian Women's Weekly Cookbook. A true classic, highly recommend picking one up if you haven't already Glen!
@Tinkering902 Жыл бұрын
I bet a glaze of that lemon juice mixed with icing sugar would be awesome on these
@joannesmith2484 Жыл бұрын
I got a new copy of The Joy of Cooking as a bridal shower gift in the early 1980's. That was the "big" book at that time. At the same shower I also received my great aunt's 1965 edition of the Fannie Farmer Cookbook, which is my most treasured cooking bible. Don't get me wrong, Joy is a fantastic, well-used book, but FF was used by my beloved godmother who was, by far, the best cook in the family. I am honored she gave it to me. She said it was her best cookbook. Both are great classic American cookbooks.
@CynBH Жыл бұрын
"Joy of Cooking" or "Betty Crocker" were in nearly every kitchen I knew. They also updated some recipes with every edition.
@wendymuir7818 Жыл бұрын
"Cookies Don't Have To Be Complicated." Words to live by. 😊
@TheCarlislefarm Жыл бұрын
Nellie Lyle Pattinson's Canadian Cookbook was widely used as a resource in Ontario's 4-H Homemaking projects. As a result, many of us who grew up in rural Ontario and were involved in 4-H were very familiar with the book and the recipes. I received a copy as an award on achievement of 12 projects in PEC. I still have it and use it regularly for some good solid basic fare. Like you Glenn, these are the recipes of my childhood.
@ledzep331 Жыл бұрын
My mother just knows how to cook traditional British food, learned from childhood (She's now in her late 80's and still loves to cook) so didn't really use cook books. There was one exception, and that was the Be-Ro cookbook she often used when baking. First published a hundred years ago, it's still in print today in its 41st edition.
@murlthomas2243 Жыл бұрын
Only cookbook in my mothers house was the Betty Crocker Cookbook published in the 1950’s. I learned to cook from that cookbook. The cookies look good. I love lemon and will have to try the recipe. Thank you.
@margaretretter3665 Жыл бұрын
In New Zealand in the 1960s it was the Edmond's cookbook. There were different editions which changed over the years including the move to using metric measures. My mother also used community cookbooks like the Women's Institute cookbook. In the 70s and 80s it was the Alison Holst kitchen diaries which had seasonal recipes and her other cookbooks which introduced new techniques and ingredients.
@mrodgers3910 Жыл бұрын
Growing up my mom always used the Joy of Cooking and the Sunset Cookbook, but by far the most memorable were Edna Staebler's cookbooks which we discovered in the 80's when I was a teenager. Those books made me fall in love with cookbooks. They are still in my mother's kitchen and I read them over and over when I visit.
@backlash660 Жыл бұрын
Edna’s cook books were schmecking good.
@jlei9284 Жыл бұрын
The Joy of Cooking and The Better Homes and Gardens Cookbook
@PeteLorimer Жыл бұрын
Growing up in Seattle in the 1970s, we had two definitive cookbooks. The Betty Crocker cookbook was the everyday one my mother used. Then there was The Joy of Cooking, which she used when she wanted to do something “fancy”
@maddyf8398 Жыл бұрын
The Joy of Cooking was the big cookbook in the family, but it was my dad, not mom or grandma that did the most cooking and he had recipes in his head from his French Canadian heritage and his year of working at a high class hotel. In the early 1980s, my aunt published a cookbook geared toward easy Cabin cooking and that was the only cookbook used after that day!
@salutations5749 Жыл бұрын
Yes, i feel like JOC is the US version. I bought a copy at the thrift and still will peruse it and use it as a reference when i find things on YT.
@EricWalk Жыл бұрын
Definitely the Joy of Cooking, but the 70s edition...
@alexsadkin1510 Жыл бұрын
My parents used the of Joy of Cooking too! Not sure what edition but I'm guessing 40s or 50s. We loved the apple pie recipe. I also remember it had recipes for cooking squirrel and other less common meats.
@TraceyAllen Жыл бұрын
The lady that watched me as a very small boy used the JOC. I have my own copy now that is 20 years old and has become my favorite. More of a text book with great techniques for beginners.
@tonycosta3302 Жыл бұрын
That is the first cookbook my wife and I bought after getting married. It still sits on our shelf in the kitchen and is used all the time.
@mrscottanderson1 Жыл бұрын
My mom loved her Betty Crocker cookbooks. My grandmother rarely used cookbooks, only family recipes handed down
@itcouldbeanyone Жыл бұрын
The Edmonds Cookbook here in New Zealand was my childhood staple, many family secret recipes were found in the pages of that cookbook
@tjs114 Жыл бұрын
The cook book I remember most from childhood was the Better Homes and Gardens New Cook Book. I imagine the one my mom had was probably a wedding present, so circa 1960. That was the only 'real' cook book she ever used, but her recipe box - remember those little metal boxes full of 3 in x 5 in recipe cards - was packed with handwritten recipes from her mother, aunts and my dad's mother and aunts.
@Nana-nx1xn Жыл бұрын
Growing up Mom had 2 cookbooks she used. 1950's "Dormeyer Mix-Well Cookbook". (Dormeyer was the brand name of the mixer she had), and "The American Everyday Cookbook" Random House, NY 1955. By Agnes Murphy Food Editor, NY Post. Then from work she used "General Hospital" from employee's recipes. I received my first cookbook for my 8th birthday. "Betty Crocker's New for Boys and Girls Cookbook". 1st printing 1965 by General Mills, Minneapolis, MN. My second cookbooks is a set printed in1975, but I got it in 1978 after I married. "The Doubleday Cookbook" Complete Contemporary Cooking Vol 1 & 2. I used Vol 2 the most. All of these recipes books have seen better days, a couple are falling apart, but all very much loved through the decades.
@deanstrickland6993 Жыл бұрын
So, from my neck of the woods, it is, hands down, the First United Church’s “Bentley Cookbook”. It was the foundation stone of my mother’s cooking and baking repertoire. I’m not sure how far back the first edition went, perhaps prior to the war and certainly confederation, but my mother’s was around 1960. I keep it close by to connect me with my mother and the many happy memories it and she gave to my life. Lovely video and recipe, as always. Thank you!
@sloopy5191 Жыл бұрын
My Mom used Five Roses, and that's the cookbook I started my cooking journey on...from the age of 12, I was the breadmaker of the family. I still use that book today.
@ChrisB-nx4gw Жыл бұрын
My mom didn't usually use a cookbook, but when she did it was the Betty Crocker cook book. Still remember the red and white cover and the broken spine.
@lindak8664 Жыл бұрын
“The proper way is the way that’s comfortable for you”. Never a truer statement. The right way is always the way that works. The Margaret Fulton cookbook was the bible in my house growing up. That thing was huge and about 5cm thick. It weighed a ton. There were some fabulous recipes in there.
@catherinelampman9600 Жыл бұрын
My mother always had a copy of Better Homes and Gardens Cookbook in her kitchen. She taught me to cook from it and when I got married she gifted a copy of the cookbook. Even though the cookbook is now old and worn I still use it. My husband's gran always used an old cookbook from the Jewel T Stove Company circa 1900 and a cookbook from the National Grange. The year my husband and I got married Gran gave me a copy of the National Grange Bicentennial Year Cookbook and is still use that too. Both these cookbooks are great and full of taste recipes.
@wmschooley1234 Жыл бұрын
Glen: Almost all of the meals my grandma made were from the Better Homes and Gardens Cookbook. And then she transitioned to the Better Homes and Gardens New Cookbook. I inherited the first and one of my sister’s got the New cookbook. Still use my copy and have lots of good “down on the farm” memories when I use it. Respectfully, W.S.
@VeretenoVids Жыл бұрын
Definitely Betty Crocker and Better Homes. I think I saw them in all my friends' homes when I was growing up in the Midwest in the 70s and 80s. A lot of my favorite childhood cookies come from Betty Crocker. Mom still uses her well loved an annotated version.
@--Zenwebgoddess-- Жыл бұрын
The Joy of Cooking was the go to book in our home.
@exploralora Жыл бұрын
My dad - the family cook- had two versions of the Joy of cooking and I greatly enjoyed checking out the differences, which was mainly switching out lard and butter for margarine.
@rheahayes3149 Жыл бұрын
A serendipitous moment just now on KZbin, discovering your channel Glen. Appreciate & Love OLD Cookbook Recipes because there’s often a History behind recipes/ingredients. The 1929 stock market crash leading to the Great Depression, WW1 & WW2 with food shortages, therefore you had to be innovative & creative with ingredient substitutions as Food Rationing was implemented. Thank you Glen for this wonderful channel as I already feel like part of your Family, having only watched this first episode🥰🇨🇦 Great TV Series that you may enjoy…Type: TV series Wartime Farm/KZbin. Series is 9 x 1 hour episodes. God Bless You & your family Glen.🙏❤️
@willowthegood9035 Жыл бұрын
For me, 1950 Betty Crocker Cookbook. I picked up copy in an antique shop. As a child, I read that cookbook from cover to cover.
@jodipatmore9669 Жыл бұрын
The Betty Crocker was my mom’s favorite. She gave me the 5 ring-binder copy as a wedding gift in 1985. I still make the sausage stuffing for thanksgiving, my children’s favorite, and there are some classic cookie recipes, my favorite is Pumpkin Cookies.
@richardperritt Жыл бұрын
I'll hop on the Five Roses cookbook bandwagon. To re-use your hyperbole, also a staple of every Canadian household. I use to watch my Grandmother and Mother cook and bake in the kitchen and I still use their techniques even though I know there are others. Extremely fond memories of those times. When my Grandmother passed, my Mother gave me my Grandmother's copy of the Five Roses cookbook. It resides in my kitchen to this day and, if I have anything to say about it, until the day I die.
@ClearlyPixelated Жыл бұрын
Millennial here, the Better Homes and Gardens New Cookbook (the red checked one in a ring binder) was my influential cookbook growing up!
@maryderleth7860 Жыл бұрын
I have my mom's, grandmother's, and my own Betty Crocker cookbooks. I love going back and using the older ones much more than the newer one (that is 40 years old lol).
@mamanexpat9300 Жыл бұрын
Growing up in France, "Je sais cuisiner" by Ginette Mathiot was the book my mother was always referring to. She is now in her 80s and she still cooks from it. It was THE book that all young women setting up home would get. Even my sister ,who left home at the end of the 90s, got herself one.
@juliebigge Жыл бұрын
I Agree, the Betty Crocker Cookbook was in my grandmother's pantry along with their Christmas Cookie Cookbook and The Better Homes and Gardens Cookbooks. She also had the "freebie" brand cookbooks by Quaker, Hershey's and Eagle Brand. I still use the Campbells cookbook
@laurenhill2291 Жыл бұрын
Both my grandmother, mother and now me always fall back to the Better Homes and Gardens cookbook. It has many versions (mine is the Pink Brest Cancer addition) but it always is our go-to for many recipes or a start when we are searching out a new recipe. It is one of those cook books that is perfect for anyone moving out on their own.
@spacegoatable Жыл бұрын
One of my favorite cookies I make is a lemon cookie. Took a basic sugar cookie I liked and browned the butter - but with the lemon peel in it then replace the water lost with the juice of the lemon. Makes a fantastic cookie!
@Alexis597259 ай бұрын
The main cookbook that we used was my mothers childhood book, and that had been gotten at a 2nd hand thrift. The cover had fallen off before I was born, but she kept it on the shelf. It was purple/maroon with gold embossed letters that were worn away. I still have that book, but not the cover, and my 3 daughters grew up making many recipes from it.❤
@PandaBear8709 Жыл бұрын
I grew up learning to cook from my Mom's 1978 Better Homes and Garden's Complete Step-By-Step Cookbook.
@brianmurphy4702 Жыл бұрын
From the US... my mother had close to zero knowledge of cooking when sha married my dad during WWII. I came along shortly thereafter. My mother from that day thereon and acquired a Betty Crocker Cookbook and it became her cooking buddy for the rest of her life. Most of my growing up years enjoyed meals and goodies from that book. It is also one of the main sources for recipes still ... although for the last 12 years or so it has dwindled for me as I count more and more on the internet for ideas from great sites such as yours. Thanks for your and Julie's entertaining contribution to the cyber-kitchen.
@patriciaward9362 Жыл бұрын
The Better Homes and Gardens Cookbook was the one for sure! I have my 1976 version from when I was first married. I have my Mom's 1947 version that she used when I was growing up. Then I purchased an even older 1938 version at one of my library's book sales. It is very interesting to see which recipes stand the test of time and appear in all of the cookbooks and also how the ingredients in those recipes changed. I still use mine to make apple pie and macaroni and cheese. And I agree that you can tell which recipes are well loved by the pages with the stains on them! I also have my Mom's cookbook called Economy in Cooking from 1934 published by the Grand Union Tea Company. It has her maiden name and address in it along with her age of 18 and the year 1936. Another cookbook of hers is Operation Vittles from January 1949. It says it was compiled by The American Women in Blockaded Berlin, published by Deutscher Verlag. A lot of the recipes are prefaced with little anecdotes. I have two, both first editions, one much more worn with written notes on the cover and on some of the recipes and another newer one I must have found at a book sale.
@RachelleHinrichs Жыл бұрын
I grew up with recipes from the Better Homes and Gardens cookbook my mother had. Later I received an earlier edition that was my Grandmother's. My mom also used local community cookbooks - one I remember was from the local JayCees in our town. I am now using the BHG cookbook, as well as our own church cookbook we helped publish, and the cookbook my mother made for us. Now that my kids are nearly grown, I have been considering making our own family cookbook.
@rowanrobbins Жыл бұрын
We had the big Betty Crocker ring binder cookbook as well as a smaller, spiral-bound Betty Crocker book for busy moms. That one used more ready made products like canned soup,etc. She also used the Mirro cookbook. It had a hard cover and the company also made pots, pans and other kitchen equipment. I still use those. My grandmother used a very old Polish booklet that was falling apart. She only glanced at it to refresh her memory. Those Polish recipes were mostly not written down.
@jensbischoff8218 Жыл бұрын
Here in Germany that would be Dr. Oetkers Schulkochbuch, first published in 1911. My mother had the 1952 edition (softcover) in use, and it is well worn. My sister picked up a reprint of that edition, because "it's explaining better than current edition" (it is, after all, a cooking school cookbook) and has different recipes. My 2008 edition (hardcover) was a present from a colleague. Dr. Oetker was a pharmacist, patented a baking powder in 1903. His company still exists and produces baking ingredients, dessert mixes, frozen pizza and the like. The original editions of the Schulkochbuch (up to 1930s) have been written by home economics teacher Emilie Henneking.
@lassepaulsen8312 Жыл бұрын
Exactly, and to add to this: Dr Oetker “Backen macht Freude” the dedicated baking book for all things cake and cookies, which defined the Christmas baking.
@jensbischoff8218 Жыл бұрын
@@lassepaulsen8312 Mom didn't have the "Backen macht Freude", or at least I haven't seen it. Thank you for the reminder to get a copy, probably also a matching reprint edition...
@leannsanford906 Жыл бұрын
Growing up, we cooked from my mom's edition, and the first Christmas after I moved out, she gifted me the same edition she found at a thrift store. I have both now, but I still refer to the dog-eared edition of my youth ❤️
@TheJamesOPhillips Жыл бұрын
My Mom's Betty Crocker cookbook from the 1960's. She got it as a high school graduation gift in 1969 - she took a lot of home economics classes, so I believe my Grandmother bought it for her.
@elainepeters8771 Жыл бұрын
My grandmother used "Woman's Home Companion Cook Book", the pre WW2 version pre-fridgeration version. My MIL use "The American Woman's Cook Book". I used "Here's Fun with Cooking" when I was little and I used "The Pillsbury Cookbook" and "Betty Crocker's New Cookbook" in my own home 😊 Now I have a fun collection of old cookbooks including one from Canada, published in 1887, "The Home Cook Book". I bought it because, as a fan of Anne of Green Gables, this would be a cookbook available to Anne when she was first married ❤️
@itzel1735 Жыл бұрын
Nice looking cookie. Soft, lemony, small batch. 😘 My Saskatchewan grandma left notes in a well worn Five Roses Flour ‘A Guide to Good Cooking’ from the Lake of the Woods Milling Company. But most of the cooking she did, by the time I came to visit, was by rote. Bread, buns, homemade noodles for soup, perogies, cookies. My B.C. grandmother, born 1912 in England, owned Mrs Beeton’s “All-About Cookery”. No date, but ‘friend of countless homes for more than half a century’, and ‘especially since the War’ references. My mom tried new things mostly from newspaper clippings, and then traditional recipes from a second edition Ukrainian Catholic Woman’s League Cook Book from Yorktown, SK Circe 1970 ish.
@ellefson1 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in New Orleans in the 1970s and 1980s and I remember every household having River Road Recipes.
@doughmestic-bliss Жыл бұрын
I've been on the hunt for recipes using lemon lately so these cookies sound ideal. Mum didn't do a lot of baking when I was young but when we did the book that was used most often was an Australian Women's Weekly cookbook. There was one called Beautiful Biscuits that I remember begging my mum to buy for me from a hospital gift shop of all places, she eventually relented and I made many a nice treat from that book over the years.
@abadatha Жыл бұрын
Weirdly, I would say that I didn't grow up influenced by a cook book. My grandma had boxes and boxes of recipe cards or recipes she cut from boxes or news papers over the years. That said, I do have a lot of church and Odd Fellows community cookbooks from my mom's parents and grandparents.
@kateburk2168 Жыл бұрын
Me, too! My aunt would also glean recipes from friends. If she tasted & liked it, she'd ask for a copy. My mother had only one large heavy volume. It contained only vegetarian recipes. (I am the oldest of 5 and the only one that doesn't consume meat.)
@gayleedwards3101 Жыл бұрын
Interesting question! I really can't remember my mom using any cookbook regularly and that might explain why I loved dorm food in college... When I married in 1975, I bought Betty Crocker's 1974 edition and also from Betty Crocker, the Cooking for Two and All-Time Favorites smaller books of the same era. I still love them.
@marybretired Жыл бұрын
For me it’s The American Woman’s Cookbook. A thick green book. My copy is dated 1942 and I recently had it rebound. I grew up on a farm, an early boomer, the youngest of a depression era family. Great war time substitutes section and excellent basic recipes. In my early cooking years I treasured it for its charts on time and temperature for cooking various cuts of meat with options for starting with frozen and its charts for prepping and cooking vegetables. It still has my go to pie crust, lemon pudding, fudge & penuche recipes.
@katydid8229 Жыл бұрын
Better Homes and Gardens Cookbook is the one my mom always used. She owned a Joy of Cooking that she used for holidays, but day to day was the Better Homes cookbook.
@naomi-allisonsloane3008 Жыл бұрын
Here in the UK: starting with Mrs Beeton’s household management from Victorian times, we then had the Good Housekeeping cookbook from the 1950s, before the rise of TV cooks - after that Delia Smith’s Complete Cookery Course became the go to cookbook from the 1970s and it has been through several imprints. I own my mother’s 1966 Good Housekeeping, my Great Grandmother’s Mrs Beetons from 1905 and my own Delia Smith from 1990. As well as a whole heap of others!
@bonnieballew7762 Жыл бұрын
We had a 1947 Fanny Farmer cookbook. I loved it because it would give you a main recipe then under it it would give you other things you could do with it with a few changes.
@TheLballou Жыл бұрын
Two. Joy of Cooking by Irma Rombauer and Betty Crocker. My mom was a sucker for the community and church cookbooks, and I still have a few of those.
@melicate13 Жыл бұрын
Mom used the Betty Crocker New Picture Cookbook on the rings, blue, pink, white version. (1961-ish? edition). I used a lot of the information when I was learning to cook and bake, we worked on fractions, multiplying and reducing recipes, and measuring while cooking meals. And I use the guidelines on how to put meals together when I first moved out on my own. I found a copy of it at a yard sale (she still has hers) and I frequently use it as a springboard for ideas when I'm messing around in the kitchen.
@eyeofbass9 ай бұрын
I love this channel. The cooking AND the education. Love the presentation style. Thank you. 🙏
@sarahhaddon1890 Жыл бұрын
Lots of family/friend shared recipes, but also the whole Best of Bridge collection!
@user-justbeingme Жыл бұрын
Betty Crocker's Cookbook was my family's go-to.
@dianeb95 Жыл бұрын
I’ve made a similar recipe that also calls for a light lemon glaze that you brush on the warm cookie. Then I sprinkle with coarse decorative sugar. Just found your channel yesterday & am enjoying your content! Thanks! Betty Crocker is the book I grew up with, but if you’re ever looking for a pesto recipe, I found the best one in the The Good Housekeeping cookbook, a wedding gift in 1987.
@virginiaf.5764 Жыл бұрын
I was thinking they'd be good with a simple lemon juice and confectioners sugar icing drizzled on top ... a glaze would be yummy too.