Which of these Middle-Class foods do you still crave today?
@SassyyjuicyMaria3 ай бұрын
Ratatouille & Boulabaisse
@marvinheemeyer66602 ай бұрын
I remember back in the 90's Hambrger Helper had "Chicken Helper" and Chicken Tetrazini was one of the varieties. I used to love it. So now as an adult with culinary skills, it's time to bring back a childhood favorite, from scratch.
@JackSprat2012 ай бұрын
I still crave most of these dishes, especially the tetrazzinis--but I never recall that rabbit dishes were popular, and I never even heard of that "Hawaiian" horror. Someone said liverwurst should be eaten on rye or pumpernickel which I will not disagree with, but back then the most common was white bread, smeared with mayo and topped with a slice of onion. The soft mouth feel was important, so Wonder Bread ok, a sourdough would be an abomination. To the palates of the time I think the fat in the mayo enhanced the creaminess of the liver, while mellowing its assertive flavor--the vinegary sharpness of mustard I think was unnecessary and only needed now to counteract the flavors of rye or pumpernickel. I still have occasional fond memories of baloney and swiss, or olive loaf, or head cheese--but passing nostalgia, mainly. Roast goose seems either Victorian, or Mitteleuropa to me, not '70s. I love chicken a la king, sloppy joes, eggs and corned beef hash, Salisbury steak, etc. but I guess these became popular well before the '70s even if no one eats them now. I think you forget both the cheese and beef fondues still popular in the '70s, although I guess they also date to maybe the '60s or even late '50s.
@JohnReed-uc2wk2 ай бұрын
Tetrazinnia, Liverwurst sandwiches - add limburger, corn fritters, potato risoles, steak Diane, several others of these are all on my favorite list
@candicelewis30012 ай бұрын
Borst
@aliyamoon803 ай бұрын
My mom's favorite dish was turkey tetrazzini. I made it for her for her 80th birthday. It was so rich that we couldn't eat more than a small portion. That was her last birthday. I made Broccoli Green Rice Casserole and Boston cream pie for her. She was so happy to enjoy her favorite dishes on her last birthday.
@libertylady19522 ай бұрын
Bless you for taking such good care of her.
@jeanhartelyАй бұрын
It sounds like you gave your Mom a wonderful birthday. What a lovely memory for you!
@MoonlightSonata214Ай бұрын
Our Mom always made turkey tetrazzini with the leftover Thanksgiving turkey! I can still taste it and now that you've mentioned it, I will look up her recipe and make some! 😋🥰
@LeftyScaevolaАй бұрын
Yep, good old Turkey tetrachloride as I call it. An easily scalable casserole.
@TheAtkeyАй бұрын
I just lost my mom this year, I wish I could remember what we ate on her last birthday. She was such a good cook and she loved to eat(though you wouldn't know it with how skinny she was) I don't think I could name her favorite dish she liked everything but chicken was her favorite meat.
@Norbrookc2 ай бұрын
As someone whose teen years were in the 70's, I can say that about 90% of these dishes never were a part of any family's table I ever saw or heard about.
@dalebaxter59202 ай бұрын
I was expecting things like tuna casserole or chicken and dumplings. Not rabbit or frog legs.
@debbielockhart77622 ай бұрын
Me too. Born in 70 and we weren't earing most of this stuff. I've never heard of some of them (like that celery thing,, or that revolting looking sardine salad).
@beefstew4698Ай бұрын
I was a kid and never had them either
@jesstyre5849Ай бұрын
Ditto. This is some kind of alternate universe. We never had any of these dishes.
@charlesandrews2360Ай бұрын
None of this was on our Midwestern dinner table in the 70's. Mom made meatloaf, baked chicken, beef stroganoff, corned beef and cabbage, scalloped potatoes with ham, occasionally breakfast for dinner, frozen fish sticks and Kraft Mac n Cheese,and lots of Chef Boyardee, Mary Kitchen, Hormel, and Campbell soups. Spaghetti at Grandma's on Sunday.
@BoogiePaisleyАй бұрын
I'm 60 years old and I've never heard of at least 75% of these dishes.
@JustanotherconsumerАй бұрын
I’m cooking my way through the Joy of Cooking and I’ve done a few of these.
@dalechilton887821 күн бұрын
i know im 54 me too
@inkey27 күн бұрын
I'm 70 me too
@Zelda_ThornАй бұрын
the way i GASPED at that mayo spread on the liverwurst sandwich
@StephenAsbury-s5b8 күн бұрын
My favorite sandwich 😊
@stephenlucas51302 ай бұрын
I grew up poor in the South. Lots of pinto beans, cornbread, fried potatoes. Still in my 60s some of my favorite foods.
@xSaraxMxNeffxАй бұрын
this! i had this really weird split of lower and upper middle class due to a divorce but on either side the staples were the same. Fried/oven baked taters, cornbread, beans, and chilli.
@jpwantland2960Ай бұрын
Stephen, to you I say, "amen brother". Growing up in San Antonio, Texas in the 1950's, pinto beans, fried potatoes and cornbread was a very common meal for my family several times a week. I'm 71 years old and at least once a month I will make a huge pot of pinto beans. My wife, who is from East Texas makes the cornbread and fried potatoes. She too grew up poor and fried potatoes and cornbread was a staple in her diet as a youth.
@stephenlucas5130Ай бұрын
@@jpwantland2960 I cook my pintos the way my mom thought me. Fried potatoes same way...the cornbread I've changed up a bit. I fry out some bacon, 3/4 of the pack..lol. I then shred up some sharp cheddar cheese and add both to the cornbread. I find myself at times...just eating the cornbread. ...lol. When I was young, it was a piece of cornbread into a glass of milk and then 😋. Thanks for the kind words and you folks have a great week.
@williamgebhart2435Ай бұрын
We even had a pot of pintos on the Thanksgiving table, we had all the usual stuff too we all just liked beans. And don't forget homemade biscuits and jam.
@stephenlucas5130Ай бұрын
@@williamgebhart2435 I've tried for 55 years to replicate my moms biscuits. Never been able to get them right..lol.
@joaopedrobaggio44753 ай бұрын
Seeing how things are going for the American middle-class, more food will vanish from their tables.
@Iceis_Phoenix3 ай бұрын
the food prices here in pgh pa at aldi are gr8 i got a ton of food
@thaisstone51923 ай бұрын
A lot of them could benefit from losing weight.
@tonypreston72783 ай бұрын
Not if you live on a budget and stop buying things you can’t afford
@shelbybuckles12422 ай бұрын
Most of these recipes were out of reach for the poorer people like my family. Rabbits, frogs and others meats were what We lived on. Because they didn't have to be bought.
@Donathon-qx8kq2 ай бұрын
Actually our (US,) economy is fantastic just around 3 years after a generational plague.... really, honestly, it really going to get better...in fact young people will probably have more opportunities than even us Boomers.... it's just going to be different sadly people are terrified of change
@FlowerGemsGirl3 ай бұрын
My mother had a Joy of Cooking cookbook and a Better Homes and Gardens cookbook and a Betty Crocker cookbook. These were my holy grails growing up!
@larrysmith26382 ай бұрын
Those cookbooks are all still in print. They're not ancient texts.
@itsjustme74872 ай бұрын
I have a 60 year old Better Homes and Garden cookbook It's stained, missing the roasting time page and the white bread page. but I still use it.
@FlowerGemsGirl2 ай бұрын
@@itsjustme7487 My mom’s had a hard cover that was falling apart too, but I thought that book was a food bible!!! I could just sit there and read through it and feel like I was watching a cooking show. The ones with pictures from the 60’s and earlier were like magazines of history for me. Great memories. Never got any of the updated newer editions, just kept the classic ones.
@ChickenMcThicckenАй бұрын
i have two "better home" cookbooks. foudn them at goodwill. what a find!
@TEDoddАй бұрын
@@larrysmith2638perhaps but they aren't the same. My mother bought me a new copy of Better Homes and Gardens in the late 90s. Hated it, none of my favorites from her older edition were in the new one. I traded with her for the old edition. Still use it regularly. I've compared editions of Joy of Cooking and much prefer the older (50s and 60s) ones. I assume Betty Croker has similar changes.
@j.sony.2 ай бұрын
Don't forget Ambrosia and deviled eggs! Also meatloaf
@karendixon401Ай бұрын
Absolutely.. and Beef Stroganoff, Chicken Cacciatore.. and my mother even tried a Baked Alaska once.. I still remember that feeling when all that ice cream went into the oven! 😂 😂 It was fine. I guess all that meringue shields most of the heat.
@j.sony.Ай бұрын
@@karendixon401 *Also, Tuna casserole!! 😋
@sidneyvandykeii31693 ай бұрын
I didn't eat middle class meals in the 70s and 80s. I ate poor mans meals. I was in my early 30s before i could afford to make middle class meals at home. Thanks to that sacrifice i now own a house.....well, i own 25%, my wife owns 25% and the Bank owns the other 50%.
@Nel33147Ай бұрын
When you have to pay property taxes , you never really own your home. It’s doubly worse when you have a mortgage. I paid off a 30 year mortgage in 12 years. It was a struggle , but the thought of having a 30 ton stone on my back was unbearable. But anyway , all the best to you, and do try to payoff your mortgage as soon as possible.
@1stfloorguy59Ай бұрын
Property taxes means you never really owned a property that can be taken from you any moment you don't pay on the rent......
@sidneyvandykeii3169Ай бұрын
@1stfloorguy59 Paying Taxes is part of owning a house big dog. Good or Bad it is just the way it is. Or we can go back to being a 3rd world country.
@1stfloorguy59Ай бұрын
@@sidneyvandykeii3169 hey bigger dog it's not owning if it can be taken at anytime you don't pay your yearly rent. Taxes on land should and have been on initial purchase. Now it's a rent. Maybe they can start doing every 6 months of the tax collecting to really feel the freedom of owning land. How about a right to bear arms tax to? You think the government pays a tax to the IRS on any of its own land?
@dalechilton887821 күн бұрын
@@1stfloorguy59 your absolutley right
@tonydevault38442 ай бұрын
Most of these went away because you actually have to cook and create them. Most people no longer cook, they just heat things up
@TheAtkeyАй бұрын
Also the middle-class disappeared.
@cryptowalk1387Ай бұрын
How about, ITS NASY ASF!!!
@chriswallace9113Ай бұрын
@@TheAtkey lol. Somehow simultaneously disappeared and remained the largest socio-economic demographic in the country.
@TheAtkeyАй бұрын
@@chriswallace9113 60% of Americans don't have to funds to cover a unforeseen $1000 expense that is not the middle class experience of past decades. In the 70s which was a stagnant economy the average American was able to put away 12% of their income into savings and retirement today it's less than 6.
@chriswallace9113Ай бұрын
@@TheAtkey The bottom 90% of income earners have never saved at a rate above 10%. Ever. I sure don’t expect them to now with such easy credit and 401Ks, which aren’t savings. People used to save FOR things. Now they get them on credit. People prepare for retirement differently now. I have very little in savings but my 401K and IRA look pretty good, all things considered. I’ll have a nice retirement but, by the stats you use, I don’t save much so can’t possibly be middle class. Not that it matters because socioeconomic status isn’t determined by the rate at which one saves.
@conniewojahn64452 ай бұрын
Nobody wants to cook from scratch anymore, that's why so many tasty foods have disappeared from American tables.
@TEDoddАй бұрын
I cook from scratch 5+ nights a week. Most nights it's only 20-30min. Occasionally an hour. Rarely more than that.
@marthasimons7940Ай бұрын
@@conniewojahn6445 I cook from scratch because I prefer to be healthy which a lot of these foods are not
@lawrencebeck1144Ай бұрын
yep @@TEDodd
@Thomas-yr9ln2 ай бұрын
I was a little boy my mom called potatoes mixed with flour and fried potato pancakes. We grew up poor and I loved potato pancakes.
@itsjustme74872 ай бұрын
My Mom made Polish style pancakes a lot in the 50s and less often in the 60s. She would have a potato pancakes supper every couple of months and invite my brothers but not me.
@LindaJ3433Ай бұрын
Good way to use up leftover mashed potatoes
@speciale5173 ай бұрын
A big staple of the US NAVY shipboard menu turkey tetrazini
@bethdabruzzo71122 ай бұрын
I remember my mom having fondue parties in the 70's.
@Rascal77s2 ай бұрын
The good old days, when Americans could afford food.
@TheMinnie14683 ай бұрын
Well at least someone got Chicken Tetrazzini right. People have literally argued with me that the dish was from Italy 😂
@deekeller9562Ай бұрын
Except they left out the chopped red pimentos from that tiny little jar...
@TheMinnie1468Ай бұрын
@@deekeller9562 You've had it with pimento in it ?
@deekeller9562Ай бұрын
@TheMinnie1468 oh yeah, that's how my Grandma did fancy. My sister and I coveted the little jars for some reason, too. Don't know why, other than that they were little and cute and there was only ever one available. I remember using them to hold those pesky barbie shoes that were forever getting lost.
@TheMinnie1468Ай бұрын
@@deekeller9562 My mom & my Nonno used to do things like that too ! I also used to use those jars for the same thing ,Ba4bie shoes & Dawn doll shoes
@FreewheelerLover3 ай бұрын
I was a teen during the 70s and never had any of these meal items.
@SearTrip3 ай бұрын
Likewise. I think a chatbot made this list.
@LAWandCoach2 ай бұрын
Me too. However my mother did make Turkey Tetrazzini and Chicken Cacciatore (they didn't mention). The rest came from Better Crocker or Better homes and Gardens cookbooks or magazines is where my mother got her recipes. Oh! They left out tuna casserole!
@ampa49892 ай бұрын
I've seen these mentioned in books from the 70s, including Heartburn. I think they were for "fancy" people.
@lostmoose99942 ай бұрын
Lots of it is 1st generation immigrants dishes from Europe.
@fiorellafenati53952 ай бұрын
@@LAWandCoach bsolutely false and unlikely that this tetrazzini style stuff comes from Italy, a bit like Alfredo: they don't exist, they are probably Americans or Italian Americans who invent a scary cuisine and then say it's Italian, Italian cuisine is much healthier and lighter of that horrible food!
Ай бұрын
I miss the loving mom who made them more😢❤
@karrynlflax5387Ай бұрын
I know what you mean. 😪
@susanspencer126715 күн бұрын
Isn't that the truth?! 💔
@faegrrrl2 ай бұрын
My modest family managed to eat a lot of potatoes, soup, cubed steak, casseroles, SO MANY casseroles. Chicken, tuna, just-eat-it casserole.
@angieketcher591726 күн бұрын
That's the way we ate.
@johnp13916 күн бұрын
EXACTLY!!! NONE of this stuff!
@sueblankenship94413 ай бұрын
Ratatouille was the first recipe I watched Julia Child make on The French Chef. I still make it occasionally.
@butterflygirl33593 ай бұрын
My German grandmother used to make us liverwurst sandwiches in the 1970’s. My brother still eats them! 🤮
@JaroartxАй бұрын
Liverwurst sandwiches forever
@christineceriani15 күн бұрын
Liverwurst and swiss on rye with mustard. Along with an ice cold root beer. Nothing like it!
@smorgasbroad11322 ай бұрын
Liversausage, Braunschweiger, Liverwurst, whichever you call it--is best on Rye bread or Pumpernickel. Not white bread. *I'm making this edit to my comment, in that I should have said: "I've eaten it on white bread and brown breads, I just think I like it best on the brown." No offense to anyone, or to white bread. I eat that a lot. 🙂
@lindachadwick73582 ай бұрын
I learned to like Braunschweiger on soft white bread with butter or margarine. My mom liked to have it occasionally and we kids would have it too also in the late 60’s and early 70’s.
@robertsteele4742 ай бұрын
Mayo?
@smorgasbroad11322 ай бұрын
@@robertsteele474 Sure. I've eaten it with mayo but only a thin spread. Mayo can overpower the Liversausage. IMO.
@christophermitchell79252 ай бұрын
I prefer it on crackers
@mikegosselin2391Ай бұрын
Toast is the way to go!😋😋
@godivaferguson28023 ай бұрын
Steak Diane is still a staple in my house. Easy and fancy looking!
@bobhogue62782 ай бұрын
Green peppercorns?
@ronslayton52702 ай бұрын
Toasted rye bread, lay the liverwurst down, then red onion slices, then spicy brown mustard, and finish with a dollop of horseradish.
@Pops-km8xt2 ай бұрын
Never mayo. Gag Edit. And a cup of strong coffee
@kirkstinson7316Ай бұрын
Add a slice of Swiss and a few strips of bacon for me
@southerncaltattooedbiker36432 ай бұрын
I love Oyster Stew my Father used to make at least once a week He was a great cook and I miss Him so much. He passed away Labor Day Weekend in 2016 He had both of his knees replaced and the last one got a blood clot He went to the hospital and they put Him on Blood Thinners and they wanted Him to stay but my Step Mother didn't want to be bothered with going to see him. The Dr said that he would have been ok if he had just stayed in the hospital. We found out that He passed away in Facebook and she remarried with in 6 months my Father left a Farm with Black Angus Cattle and her and her drug addict son sold everything they could her son burned the barn down with his Harley Davidson in side it and his guns we live in Avondale, AZ the only good thing she can't sell the Farm, land, House because it goes to Me and my siblings !!
@heribertohernandezsoltero92773 ай бұрын
I just love American dishes. Cheers from México
@tinyacres28272 ай бұрын
I love Mexican dishes! Cheers from US!
@itsjustme74872 ай бұрын
I LOVE Chicken with Mole sauce.
@heribertohernandezsoltero92772 ай бұрын
@@itsjustme7487 😋😋😋
@RoseWeiss-q1t2 ай бұрын
I grew up in the South in the 50's. We had corn fritters frequently at dinner, cooked by both my mother and my grandmother, so they have been around a while! I continued the tradition by making several types of fritters for my family - corn, zucchini, tuna. All are delicious.
@virginiaoflaherty29832 ай бұрын
I dont remember eating any of these recipes but I do remember upping my cooking game in the 1970's.
@ladyd83392 ай бұрын
I loved liverwurst! So creamy! Great sandwiches, Especially with sliced tomatoes! Turkey tetrazzini was popular after Thanskgiving! Heard of all those dishes but very few were cooked in my home in the seventies!
@sunshinerainbow28182 ай бұрын
I remember when I was about 8 years old, I was spending the night at a friends house and her mom served us frogs legs. At the time, she made us think they were chicken. Once we tried them, we cleaned our plates. After dinner, she told us what we had eaten. My friend got sick, but I liked them so I told her mom I can’t wait to eat them again!
@mikenewell5683Ай бұрын
I was about 8 when we had a family dinner at my grandparents farm. We kids were told we were eating fish from their pond that they had caught. Turned out it we had eaten mountain oysters (young bull testicles).
@angieketcher591726 күн бұрын
My aunt made me frog legs n I didn't know what they were until after n I loved them.
@Old_Sailor85Ай бұрын
I was born in 1960... Other than the liverwurst/braunschweiger, I never had any of this stuff. No idea where they get this was "middle-class" food.
@johnp13916 күн бұрын
EXACTLY!!!!
@lindajacquot53912 ай бұрын
Growing up in the 1970s, sharing cooking duties with my sister, we may have heard of many of these fancy dishes, but made very few of them. Most nights were some version of hamburger or ham, usually in Hamburger Helper. Occasionally we would make oyster stew for our father. Given the higher prices of meat in the '70s, a budget of $25 a week for food, and two inexperienced young cooks in the kitchen, we were lucky not to burn the tuna noodle casserole.
@GeorgeMinton-jb8kyАй бұрын
In the 70's I could get a whole bag of groceries for $25. Now it is well over $100 for what I got then.
@kman15112 ай бұрын
some of that crap is gone for a reason.
@ITcanB3 ай бұрын
That Herring Salad was a fright 😳
@RedClover19873 ай бұрын
Beets are vile
@charlie15673 ай бұрын
White and Red Hering Salad is a classic dish of the traditional German kitchen . You find it in every supermarket. The white salad is prepared with onions, apples some herbs and the red version adds beets for colour. Potatoes are not added though (that is the Eastern European tradition). We would eat this salad with rustic / artisan bread or fried potatoes. The earthy flavour of the beets is not that present because the Hering”s dominant flavour overshadows it. In fact if prepared with a light mayonnaise, it is quite healthy as the components contain so much iron, minerals, good fish omega oils etc. With fresh apple pieces it also has a nice crunch to it. So taste wise you get many different flavours: the slightly salty , soft texture and fish taste, the slightly acid and fruity and sometimes even sweet taste of crunchy apples, some sharpness from the the onions and the more firm texture with the cooked beets. If you ever come to Europe, give it a try. Well prepared it literally activates so many different taste sensors, it is in my humble opinion surprisingly good (though maybe not the best looking ...) 😊
@williamfogwell67992 ай бұрын
Still having it occasionally
@JustanotherconsumerАй бұрын
I make something similar for a Julbord, a traditional Swedish Christmas feast. My kids are half-Japanese (distantly, my wife’s family has been here for a long time) so they get some dips of Japan and I figure I might as well add some of my own heritage as well.
@arispett5046Ай бұрын
That was just plain disgusting.
@patriciasmith70742 ай бұрын
My husband’s mother would make oyster stew for him with canned oysters since we lived in the middle of the country, he liked it.
@marylist12363 ай бұрын
Liverwurst & Braunschweiger were how I learned to like liver. For some reason, Christmas Eve, in pre- Vatican II , was a day of fast & abstinence, so no meat
@robertsteele4742 ай бұрын
I still don't like beef liver and onions, but I love Liverwurst, Braunschweiger, and Chicken Liver.
@marylist12362 ай бұрын
@@robertsteele474 I love chicken livers too. I live where there's a Lee's Famous Recipe Chicken restaurant, and they have fried chicken livers, and I order them from time to time
@robertsteele4742 ай бұрын
@@marylist1236 A local sandwich shop used to make chopped chicken liver sandwiches. Rye bread, Chopped chicken liver, Sour cream, Cucumber slices, Red onion, and Dill.
@marylist12362 ай бұрын
@@robertsteele474 That sounds delicious. I live in Kalamazoo, Michigan, where do you live ? I ask, because that sounds like it's straight out of a delicatessen
@robertsteele4742 ай бұрын
Fried beef liver is still far from a favorite though.
@Royal-Tee73 ай бұрын
RIP Liverwurst sandwiches. You will NOT be missed.
@sandralouth31032 ай бұрын
I like it on dark rye with thin sliced and pickled red onions, stone ground mustard and a nice good beer.
@phillipstephens45222 ай бұрын
Is it the wurst liver?
@shelbybuckles12422 ай бұрын
We call to braunsswager
@bethdabruzzo71122 ай бұрын
I ate a liverwurst sandwich every Saturday while watching Land of the Lost.
@Royal-Tee72 ай бұрын
@@shelbybuckles1242 That’s what my dad called it
@rjc72892 ай бұрын
So many dishes from my youth I haven't had in ages, not the least of which are fried bologna sandwiches on toasted bread w/ Gulden's mustard. I also loved ants on a log, which my mom packed in my lunch during my school days, which were celery sticks stuffed with peanut butter and small raisins dotted across the top.
@gamerman72762 ай бұрын
If I'm ever on Death Row for cannibalism my last meal will be Steak Diane with a side of Celery Victor.
@nyslmt3 ай бұрын
I still am a liverwurst sandwich person, and hadn't thought about corn fritters for years....
@candicelewis30012 ай бұрын
I'm with ya!❤
@GeorgeMinton-jb8kyАй бұрын
Come on Klaus no southerner would ever have Liverwurst on the table. It might be good but if it is not chicken, ham, or beef likely I would have missed that dish. Shrimp and fish were also good.
@higglety230Ай бұрын
I was a child of the seventies. I've never heard of most of these. My mother did make fried potato cakes (she never called them rissoles) and turkey tetrazzini was a staple of cafeterias in the 70s, 80s, and 90s. I've had steamed pudding and boullabaisse, but not in the 70s, and never made it at home. I'm sure you can find all these things in 1970s cookbooks, but I don't know if you can call them classics.
@libertarian43232 күн бұрын
I grew up middle class in the 70s, and I've never heard of most of these, let alone ate them! Middleclass people couldn't afford frogs legs, rabbit, and the other stuff this guy is prattling on about. Try again, with more hot dogs and hamburger, and less frog legs and rabbit!
@EuSeiT3 ай бұрын
Frog legs are DELICIOUS!
@GeorgeMinton-jb8kyАй бұрын
You want some frog legs. I saw a KZbin video where the guy put a small mouse fly on the end of his fishing pole line. He would dance the fly in front of bullfrogs and catch them for dinner. I guess it beats wading in the pond with a gig to get them. it worked. Now I just have to find the mouse fly. it even has a string tale. Can't you just buy chicken at the store?
@martyconroy3786Ай бұрын
Tastes like chicken
@lindak86643 ай бұрын
Stick pineapple in it and it becomes Hawaiian. People are simple creatures 🤷🏼♀️ We still eat corn fritters, Steak Diane, and half the other recipes you mentioned.
@clarsach293 ай бұрын
As a British person the title of this video makes sense to me, but I always thought the USA prided itself on NOT having a class system?
@Dindasayswhynot3 ай бұрын
It's not a class system like UK has. It's an economic designation. No one thought all that much about it 'til the media began yammering on about it in a political sense.
@GoremejyАй бұрын
2:20 I can you EXACTLY why this dish fell off. Who in the hell thought mandarin oranges and olives belong in the same dish? Who hurt them?
@Randy_ButternubsАй бұрын
I'm happy that I'm not the only one!!😂😂😂
@squareff25518 күн бұрын
😂
@yvonneclem3512 ай бұрын
No aspic molds or jello salad molds?
@billythekid3234Ай бұрын
i only tasted a few of these in the 70;s Who here had at least 3 of these meals in the 70's thank you!
@pigoff1233 ай бұрын
I make chicken tettrezina without mushrooms. Yum.😊
@courtneypuzzo25023 ай бұрын
I remember eating some of these in the 90s when I was growing up I turn 40 in March 2025
@TCB19753 ай бұрын
Love liverwurst.
@royst.george73282 ай бұрын
I was born in the early 1960s. By the end of the decade and into the mid 1970s, we ate every one of these foods. Often, because we LIKED them, and I still do!
@yotefan8286Ай бұрын
You really ate everyone of these? Never heard of most.
@madamrockford25082 ай бұрын
I was a teen thru much of the 70s, & more than half was thru, I never heard of any of these.
@johnp13916 күн бұрын
EXACTLY
@bennwj2 ай бұрын
You can still buy liverwurst at any grocery store deli. Oyster Stew is still very popular here in Eastern North Carolina. Rabbit stew (and rabbit cooked in any way you cook chicken) is also very popular with people who hunt, and you can buy rabbit in grocery stores in many places of the country. Same thing with goose, but it’s very expensive in stores. Frog legs are also still popular in many places….especially the south.
@GeorgeMinton-jb8kyАй бұрын
Did you know that over 5% of the Union Army were Germans that immigrated from Germany? Most of them lived above the Mason Dixon line. I guess that is why us southerners missed out on the liverwurst.
@karendixon401Ай бұрын
My father was the only one who made and ate Oyster Stew in our house and rabbit only once since I was so upset at 5-6 yrs.. but had they not told me it looked like chicken.
@jeffm682 ай бұрын
I grew up in the 70s and never had ANY of these dishes. Probably because we were dirt poor. Acorn squash was a luxury (that's what I was told anyway; I hated it). Canned tuna casserole was a feast. We ate out once a month. Hamburger and onions was a favorite. Tetra-whatta?
@coderspy3 ай бұрын
I still make oyster stew.
@martybee67013 ай бұрын
Borscht very popular in Poland who are quite accustomed to adding Vodka to it !
@godivaferguson28023 ай бұрын
My Ukrainian relatives make borscht too.
@vlrissolo3 ай бұрын
I think steamed pudding is made with suet not sweat😂
@Dindasayswhynot3 ай бұрын
😮😂😅 good catch. EEEEW. LOL
@Someone-kg8qf2 ай бұрын
1:10 every Thanksgiving aftermath would feature a huge pan of turkey tetrazzini, covered in cheese and french fried onions. We would buy an extra can of the French fried onions for the tetrazzini. Absolutely freaking delicious.
@Someone-kg8qf2 ай бұрын
I was raised by Germans and I absolutely adore liverwurst. I don't care what anyone says.
@robertpettit66192 ай бұрын
My wife and I have chicken and turkey tetrazini all the time, freeze the leftovers and have it again later in the week.
@karenkershaw63242 ай бұрын
Tuna Mornay was another one we ate. Beef Stroganoff was always a treat. My mother used to make her own sour cream.
@sandralouth31032 ай бұрын
Swedish meatballs too...with either rice or mashed potatoes.
@karenkershaw63242 ай бұрын
@@sandralouth3103 Yes, I remember them.
@JustanotherconsumerАй бұрын
My mother definitely made the stroganoff. It was… OK.
@SuV333583 ай бұрын
Oooo! Liverwurst lotsa mayo on white bread....nothing else . It's an indulgence for me, and liverwurst is on my grocery now 😊 Everytime I watch these things I end up wanting so much more on my grocery list
@robertagabor912827 күн бұрын
I like liverwurst on Rye.
@robertagabor912827 күн бұрын
and how about chopped chicken livers on rye.
@metwelve12Ай бұрын
I grew up in the Deep South in the 60’s and 70’s. We were middle class and ate mostly liver and onions, fried potatoes and eggs, navy beans and corn bread, steak and french fries, various hamburger or chicken casseroles, chili in the winter, fried catfish, fried chicken, and roast beef. In the summer Dad grilled hamburgers, hot dogs, steak, and any fish we caught at the lake. The first time I had Ratatouille was in the ‘80’s. I had a freeze dried turkey tetrazzini backpacking meal a couple of times in the late ‘70’s. Sometimes Dad would go exotic. I’ve eaten pork brains and egg scrambles, steak and kidney pie, head cheese. He was always experimenting with unusual foods so I’m sure I’ve missed some of his less successful dishes. Side dishes were mostly greens, green beans, spinach, corn, potatoes, and stewed tomatoes and butter beans. Dessert in the summer was peaches, baked peaches, peach cobbler, and homemade peach ice cream. Year round, it was ice cream, ice milk (hate it to this day), bread pudding, custard pie, baked apples. Breakfast was bacon and eggs with toast and jelly/honey mixed with butter, or cereal. We drank gallons of chocolate milk and sweet tea. These are the foods I remember. I’m sure I’ve missed some. Oh, we had simple salads and when Mom felt fancy, a pineapple ring with a dollop of salad dressing with a Maraschino cherry on top resting on a lettuce leaf. Always had a dress-up formal Sunday dinner in the afternoon usually fried chicken or roast beef, sometimes ham. Simple meals made with fresh food from the garden, lake, and farmers market. Dad didn’t hunt so wild game was sporadic. Mom didn’t know how to cook it anyway. Happy days.
@stevenjames15032 ай бұрын
Except for liverworst none of this resembles a 70s dish.
@adriennetochter68732 ай бұрын
Steamed pudding, often with sweat and butter added😂. Gotta love that auto reader!
@maggiesmith856Ай бұрын
I don't sweat would taste good.
@donnawilson559Ай бұрын
@@maggiesmith856 I think they meant suet but the auto-reader pronounced it sweat.
@hollybrooke3222 ай бұрын
Most of these are still made in my family. We also had oyster stew for dinner every Christmas Eve.
@sweetpea2839Ай бұрын
Mine also!
@prussian57702 ай бұрын
My grandma and mother were good cooks.
@sheribrogden92472 ай бұрын
I hated liverliverwurst. Dreadful!
@AtomicSquirrelHunter2 ай бұрын
I grew up on Southern cooking, TexMex, and Cajun.... didn't know about most of this list.
@johnglue17442 ай бұрын
Hahaha I eat some of these things and I never had them in the 70s at all. I remember in college in the early 90s our cafeteria served Tettrazinni once a week. I had a liverwurst sandwich the other day.
@Dh-rp7gg3 ай бұрын
I grew up in a middle class family in the 70's. I've never had any of these. They look and sound disgusting! Most of them I never even heard of before.
@lordminifridge86063 ай бұрын
why is the word "Magic" censored at 2:57?
@57WillysCJ3 ай бұрын
I don't remember middle class people eating much liverwurst. That's more blue collar. A fancier form known as pate maybe. Most of these are the social gathering dishes from immigrant families that were handed down through families. Even chefs took regular dishes and put a different twist but they were not unknown. Most are still made in the Mid West because we stick with family dishes.
@hawkeyepierce673 ай бұрын
Friend, i can assure you that roast goose is still a pretty popular Christmastime dish in Germany.
@Miss_Kisa943 ай бұрын
But would you call it affordable?
@nox5555Ай бұрын
@@Miss_Kisa94 Its cheaper than decent beef cuts. pretty affordable from the supermarket, not that affordable from the butcher.
@Miss_Kisa94Ай бұрын
@@nox5555 yeah you would never find goose in an American supermarket sadly
@tombrewsaugh1399Ай бұрын
I never ate any of these in the 1970's. I don't even remember my mother even talking about making any of these.
@RobertHowe-zv7gs3 ай бұрын
You may still enjoy all of them !
@margritpiepes8242Ай бұрын
Ob heck yes Liverwurst with mustard onions on Rye😋😋
@Deathmageddon2 ай бұрын
2:00 who cut those veggies? Sharpen your freaking knives 😂
@seanparker5712 ай бұрын
And really, I thought we were middle class, but this stuff is just so fancy we never saw most of it - at least in 1970’s Australia….
@rachoc74Ай бұрын
70s in Australia for us was meat and three veg...every night. Occasionally spaghetti , chop suey , shepherds pie, lasagna, mutton and stew
@zxborg9681Ай бұрын
My mom was a chemist, so I always called it Chicken Tetrachloride.
@TCshore1Ай бұрын
I grew up in the 70s Liverwurst is still the stuff of nightmares
@arturhashmi6281Ай бұрын
Potato pancakes are still very popular in Europe in various form
@marthalucas1221Ай бұрын
I still love and cook Borscht with lamb. 💥🙏🏼❤️
@SuV333583 ай бұрын
Some of these are like, huh?
@keyrtanАй бұрын
Why did we stop eating this? Because women entered the workforce and stopped teaching their kids to cook.
@beatrixwhitehall42173 ай бұрын
I ate many of these foods, but in the 1950s .
@karendixon401Ай бұрын
I agree.. I think it was more 50s to 60s.. I remember them into the 60s
@danielkinney81662 ай бұрын
I don't know what part of the country are this stuff but I've never heard of most of them.
@wahid-lg1kk2 ай бұрын
We never ate these things in the 70s. Never even heard of most of these. The chicken 'tetrazini' was a restaraunt meal called something else, forget what..
@patriotwolf28103 ай бұрын
TUNA CASSEROLE...
@pigoff1233 ай бұрын
Liverwurst is nothing like leberwurst in Germany. I lived in Germany from 72 to 96 and my mother was German
@tapestry64553 ай бұрын
NOBODY liked liverwurst except Grandpa!
@rholmst2 ай бұрын
I have oyster stew every Christmas Eve. To me, it’s a family tradition.
@pamelaadam92073 ай бұрын
We dipped the tattie fritters into egg then breadcrumbs before frying
@timacrow3 ай бұрын
Yeah, goose, rabbit, and frogs were all part of the middle class dining experience in the 70s...
@robertsteele4742 ай бұрын
ssuuuure...that's the ticket.
@roostermbakb67272 ай бұрын
I still eat liverwurst to this very day. So good.
@veronicaferguson85483 ай бұрын
I love corn fritters.But savory not sweet.Without the corn.While hot i put some butter and Colby cheese on them
@joseph-ow1hf3 ай бұрын
I'm going to bring a few back to life. Some of them look great like Celery Victor.
@jeffschmelzer15922 ай бұрын
I grew up in 70s. Never even heard of any of these.😅😅😅😅😅😅 Except liverwurst. Still eat.
@timduggan14612 ай бұрын
Liverwurst is DISGUSTING!!! Glad it's gone.
@thomasschumacher53623 ай бұрын
That looked nothing like liverwurst more like bologna