Here's What People Ate To Survive During WWII

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Weird History

Weird History

2 жыл бұрын

Americans who stayed home during WWII were asked to make sacrifices to support troops overseas. People changed jobs, took on new responsibilities at home, and even changed their diets. Food rationing was a must. The military got the best meat, coffee, and nonperishables, while everyone else tightened their belts and made do. Instead of grumbling about it, people got creative.
#WWII #FoodHistory #WeirdHistory

Пікірлер: 8 100
@WeirdHistory
@WeirdHistory 2 жыл бұрын
What WWII dish sounds the best to you?
@youtubelabeledmeapredator826
@youtubelabeledmeapredator826 2 жыл бұрын
Whipped cream part!!! Lol tomorrow I gotta go get more stuff for Thanksgiving & whipped cream is 7th on the list
@pdox23
@pdox23 2 жыл бұрын
Bubble and Squeak is highly recommended.
@AluneTheShaman
@AluneTheShaman 2 жыл бұрын
Im a extremely picky person so i doubt I’ll eat it
@AnotherOak
@AnotherOak 2 жыл бұрын
we never had any of that.
@eoincoll384
@eoincoll384 2 жыл бұрын
Potato sour cream
@lindavalentine2717
@lindavalentine2717 2 жыл бұрын
I was a little girl during WWII. Fruit was something we never got. The corner Grocery store gave me an orange once. He said he had gotten a small amount of fruit and was giving a piece of fruit to the children that came in with parents that were regular shoppers there. I still remember getting that orange. I was thrilled! I must have been a precious moment to me because 80 years later, I still remember him handing me that orange.
@LovinLife877
@LovinLife877 2 жыл бұрын
What a wonderful story! Thank you for sharing this memory with all of us, I love to hear about the challenging moments in history from those who actually lived them. There is such a deep human connection in it. God bless!
@Ilovelife67
@Ilovelife67 2 жыл бұрын
That made me cry.. God bless you 🙏
@izzyabby123ok
@izzyabby123ok 2 жыл бұрын
@@Ilovelife67 Me too! Maybe I’m getting soft in my old age, but I choked up as well. 😎🇺🇸
@canabox7112
@canabox7112 2 жыл бұрын
That’s an awesome story thanks for sharing
@JadeSatellite
@JadeSatellite 2 жыл бұрын
That's a lovely memory.
@glasslinger
@glasslinger 2 жыл бұрын
Am I the only one that has a sinking feeling that this situation could happen here now if we continue on the stupid path we are currently following?
@suzannakoizumi8605
@suzannakoizumi8605 2 жыл бұрын
Yep. By 2022. Let's go Brandon.
@edwardsbarbara25
@edwardsbarbara25 2 жыл бұрын
@@suzannakoizumi8605 🙄
@juliecramer7768
@juliecramer7768 2 жыл бұрын
It will be worse because there are very few farms. The local Farmers kept people alive
@user-ug6co5kl2l
@user-ug6co5kl2l 2 жыл бұрын
I'm surprised it hasn't happened yet...🤨
@rubens667
@rubens667 2 жыл бұрын
Sadly 😢
@mair18
@mair18 Жыл бұрын
My mom.lived through the war in Greece She always said if you have milk ,bread butter and eggs you have everything. She was always so grateful for everything. She lived to 96 and I learned how to survive from her .❤
@robinluich6626
@robinluich6626 Жыл бұрын
I say the same thing. Milk butter eggs and bread.
@kerryjames6312
@kerryjames6312 Жыл бұрын
My mum was born in 1944 in Greece similar she's 79 now
@patriciastaton6182
@patriciastaton6182 Жыл бұрын
❤ thank you
@saffloweroyl3663
@saffloweroyl3663 Жыл бұрын
And from the "milk, eggs butter and bread" comes today's "French Toast Alert" meaning bad weather was imminent and to go get what you needed before the storm.
@darcyrosewilson
@darcyrosewilson Жыл бұрын
That's still relevant to me to this day. If I have food for dinner, I'm so thankful and I know I have all I need ❤
@lorenrenee1
@lorenrenee1 11 ай бұрын
My father planted fruit orchards wherever he lived. He had clear memories of eating out of trash cans and was determined to always have his own food growing.
@euphoniahale5181
@euphoniahale5181 9 ай бұрын
I remember my grandmother telling me she was so hungry sometimes when she was little she ate from garbage cans.
@ginnyhogan6386
@ginnyhogan6386 4 ай бұрын
My mother made roast tongue for Sunday meals in the 40’s, served with vegetables, potatoes, etc. It was a fabulous meal for the entire family!
@MsBackstager
@MsBackstager 3 ай бұрын
@@euphoniahale5181 Actress Audrey Hepburn, as others in Europe during the war, lived on tulip bulbs to fill themselves up.
@maryshanley329
@maryshanley329 Ай бұрын
My mother was pregnant during WW II, and she told me that she was always hungry.
@maryshanley329
@maryshanley329 Ай бұрын
@@MsBackstager She said she was so petite because she never had enough to eat.
@judyosborne
@judyosborne 2 жыл бұрын
My husband grew up during the depression. His idea of wealth was having food on the table.
@KourttneyL
@KourttneyL 2 жыл бұрын
Mine too. Growing up poor, I have this phobia of not having food even though I work now. Even though I grew up in the 90s lol
@robertlower6212
@robertlower6212 2 жыл бұрын
Absolutely! Roof over our heads and food on the table = wealth and contentment! Anything more is superfluous but a welcome bonus!
@dhanashrimatondkar3008
@dhanashrimatondkar3008 2 жыл бұрын
Same with my dad
@Snufz760
@Snufz760 2 жыл бұрын
It truly is
@davids6533
@davids6533 2 жыл бұрын
@@eduardocardona6608 So few realize this, and it seems like acceptance is more important to some than anything else.
@jeanb5143
@jeanb5143 2 жыл бұрын
My mom grew up in the depression and ate alot of home grown potatoes, carrotts, stringbeans. Also elbow macarroni and home grown stewed tomatoes for the sause. Also a white gravy made of flour, water butter and salt and pepper. Would also have rice pudding and custard. Alot of other things. I was born in 1946 with 4 older siblings and 2 younger siblings and my mother would still cook us the greatest meals with so many of these being meals she ate during the depression. They were delicious. Also soft boiled egg on toast, oatmeal, malted cereal etc and of course cod liver oil every morning. 1 tsp. In the morning to all 6 of us. Those were the good old days. My mom passed away in 2016 at 92 yrs. Old. I miss her so much, she was my best friend. She was the most generous, loving mom ever.
@daniellealex1795
@daniellealex1795 2 жыл бұрын
Sorry for your loss. Thank you for sharing your story. Your dear mum sounds like an amazing woman.
@jeanb5143
@jeanb5143 2 жыл бұрын
@@daniellealex1795 thank you. She is my hero. I miss her everyday. I am now 76 and pretty much bedridden and from the time I wake up and until I fall asleep she is on my mind. I know I will be with her again. I am so blessed that I was chosen to be her daughter and her my mom.
@mariekatherine5238
@mariekatherine5238 2 жыл бұрын
We just lost our Mom at age 101. She came up through the Depression and WWII with our Grandma who passed in 2001 at 103. Both passed on amazing cookery making delicious meals with very little! They also kept alive habits of thrift. Just about everything was repaired and when that was no longer possible, repurposed into something else. Very, very little got thrown out. They had a huge Victory Garden beside the house, the location of which now houses a Firestone tire store! Austerity proved to their advantage considering how both lived to hit 100!
@petersanders5321
@petersanders5321 2 жыл бұрын
@Jean B • I never knew my mother, but you have described what her sisters where and did because of the times. My grandparents, still quite alive, at the time, were born in the 1890's. Papa, himself, was18 yrs old when Arizona was made the 48th state. Alaska and Hawaii had to wait 47 years, until 1959, for statehood. I grew up with history all throughout the home. An autographed copy of Grants Memoirs from the '90s, thousands of marks from the Weimar Republic and lots of newspapers with headlines of Capone, etc. Even had a great-aunt who was a Charleston girl at a speak-easy. Then , there came the Big One, WW11. The rest is history-literally.
@SBoudin
@SBoudin 2 жыл бұрын
She was lucky. And obviously not living in the Netherlands at that time...
@paulwolf7562
@paulwolf7562 Жыл бұрын
My parents both were Depression Era kids. Dad was also a World War 2 Navy veteran. They had hard times, all through till probably the 1950s. One thing they both said, that even if they didn't have much money. They ate well. Dad's family, were dairy farmers, and mom's parents lived not too far away, in a small coal mining town, in what they called a, "patch". Both of my parents sides, had gardens, raised chickens and rabbits, etc. Hunted, fished, and canned vegetables and fruits. My parents continued to have gardens, fruit trees, berry patches and so on, till the early 1980s. Mom could sew just about anything, fix things, dad and her built our house, and it's still there. They tried to make us as self sufficient, as possible. Hopefully, they did?
@margaritavelazquez8437
@margaritavelazquez8437 Жыл бұрын
God bless each and every family for their sacrifices. Thank you!!!
@bookmagicroe9553
@bookmagicroe9553 Жыл бұрын
@Paul: so many Americans don't know how to garden, sew, preserve food, cook from scratch these days. I wonder how we'd do in a major crisis. My husband and I can do all these things, but we are in our 70s and 80s.
@debbiegilbert1961
@debbiegilbert1961 Жыл бұрын
Same here with my grandparents
@yankee2666
@yankee2666 Жыл бұрын
You might like the novel, Jordy, Bounce, and Lilli. ...The story of a couple of little kids and their cat, growing up together in the post-war 1950s. I loved it.
@mustangsally5051
@mustangsally5051 11 ай бұрын
@@bookmagicroe9553 no worry..there are a lot of young people making gardens, having their chickens for eggs...and if we live close to farmers..that's a big plus!!
@Yuki-dn7dp
@Yuki-dn7dp Жыл бұрын
The best part of this video is reading all the stories in the comments. Thank you everyone for sharing!
@TheCheeseBaron
@TheCheeseBaron 2 жыл бұрын
My grandma grew up in Japan during WW2. The Imperial Army took peoples food for the war effort. She experienced almost 10 years of near starvation. Once, she had to buy a handful of little sparrow birds to eat. She also ate what she could find on the beach. Later in life when she came to the USA she was a food hoarder with 2 freezers in the garage, and closets in the house packed full of food. Even when it went bad she didn't want us to get rid of it, she needed the security of knowing it was there.
@mikee2
@mikee2 2 жыл бұрын
At lot of people of that age, the depression era, do that. My dad lived during the depression and he hoarded and saved everything. I remember when I was building a house and using a nail gun. He would gather up the spent nails and I asked him why.......you never know when you'll need them. You can't reuse nail gun nails, but that's the way they were. Nothing goes to waste.
@cnukem
@cnukem 2 жыл бұрын
My grandparents also.
@marlenegold280
@marlenegold280 2 жыл бұрын
I get the fear of running out of food.
@danicegewiss862
@danicegewiss862 2 жыл бұрын
My mom hoarded food. I remember us having 2 full sized freezers overflowing with food, cupboards overflowing with canned and boxed goods, all because she grew up during the Great in Depression. I buy enough and then just a little more for my little family.
@delorestaylor8114
@delorestaylor8114 2 жыл бұрын
@@danicegewiss862 Cold and hungry are good teachers.
@Darkflowerchyld718
@Darkflowerchyld718 2 жыл бұрын
And now I understand my grandma and her strange meals. I thought they were just weird American Jewish food.. Nope, her meals were carryovers from her childhood. Thanks for the nostalgia. Miss you Grannie Annie 💙
@RM-fo9qh
@RM-fo9qh 2 жыл бұрын
What were some of her meals that she made?
@janedoeski9196
@janedoeski9196 2 жыл бұрын
I had a granny Annie too!! Ukrainian sooo yea alot of this is familiar to me
@kathymyers7279
@kathymyers7279 2 жыл бұрын
Just got the very same revelation! Especially the cows tounge!
@tamararutland-mills9530
@tamararutland-mills9530 2 жыл бұрын
Yes! I miss my Jewish grandma too. Her latkes were very filling, and we would have them about once a week. Very economical.
@missbleach8767
@missbleach8767 2 жыл бұрын
@@janedoeski9196 🥜
@sarahcowan1489
@sarahcowan1489 9 ай бұрын
My father grew up during the war in a boarding school in Scotland. My mother on a small farm just outside of Liverpool. My dad told me he was given a small jar of marmalade which was to last him the entire month. They emigrated to Canada in the late 50's and when the recession happened in the early 70's I remember them giving up coffee, cigarettes, etc just to make ends meet. They built a garden with fruit trees in every house we lived in. Our summers were spent picking fruit and vegetables and taking them home to can. We had a root cellar and by the end of October it was filled to the brim with that bounty for the year. They had 8 children and fostered 2 more. Somehow we managed and even thrived. They instilled in me a love of working with my hands and taking nothing for granted. Forever grateful ❤️❤️
@georgiamorrow8233
@georgiamorrow8233 Жыл бұрын
I take care of my 92 year old mother with Alzheimer’s. Her favorite story is of food shopping with her mother and the owner giving her a candy bar. She says it was the first time she ever tasted a chocolate candy bar and was given something of such “value”! 92 years old and it’s her favorite story!
@GeorgiaGeorgette
@GeorgiaGeorgette Жыл бұрын
Love her heart.
@Julie-si3hi
@Julie-si3hi Жыл бұрын
Oh how precious x
@oldsoul4762
@oldsoul4762 Жыл бұрын
Aww. Thank you for sharing that. 💜
@kw7709
@kw7709 Жыл бұрын
How beautiful. Thank you for sharing this. 🍫🥰
@margaretmary-dj1ps
@margaretmary-dj1ps 3 ай бұрын
Bless you !
@jessieblossom3874
@jessieblossom3874 2 жыл бұрын
These days, we as Americans don't truly realize just how spoiled we are when it comes to food compared to 80 years ago.
@sycoticpsycho
@sycoticpsycho 2 жыл бұрын
And how much of that food is killing us.
@martinjenkins6467
@martinjenkins6467 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah I can't imagine how they made it on those rations. Dad told me The UK came close to starving with The U boat blocades.
@prosolokid7796
@prosolokid7796 2 жыл бұрын
Atleast they knew what they were eating then lol
@jessieblossom3874
@jessieblossom3874 2 жыл бұрын
@@sycoticpsycho it's called gluttony. And not all of us practice it. It's why I don't support Mukbang videos.
@jessieblossom3874
@jessieblossom3874 2 жыл бұрын
@@prosolokid7796 And I know what I am eating now. As a Vegan I eat a healthy and wonderful diet. I don't mess with fast food or Door Dash. I cook all my own food.
@donnahoffman3639
@donnahoffman3639 2 жыл бұрын
My grandmother's boys went to WWII. When I was young she would say " waste not want not" and had a garden and canned until her 80's. Humility and grace. Courage and temperance.
@genkiferal7178
@genkiferal7178 2 жыл бұрын
There are some studies that show you can live longer if you've gone through a period of calorie restriction. Both Okinawans and some Ashkenazi Jews who lived through WW2 had to cut way back on food and both often live past 100 years old.
@kristingallo2158
@kristingallo2158 Жыл бұрын
My grandma said that too. Used to tick me off.
@randalllaue4042
@randalllaue4042 Жыл бұрын
Who are you talking about? Your uncle’s?...
@genkiferal7178
@genkiferal7178 Жыл бұрын
@@randalllaue4042 and possibly her father.
@twatquat3322
@twatquat3322 Жыл бұрын
🙂❤
@BetteStewart
@BetteStewart Жыл бұрын
My mother told me about this situation. But, she really explained how much people "helped" each other in every which way. There was so much sharing, kindness and giving. Families took in relatives; sometimes borders. My mother always gave back after WWll by sharing her canned fruits/vegs - baked goods and outgrown clothes. She was quite active in her children's life. My father was all of this too (he was gainfully employed during the Depression and the War). Note: my mother was the youngest of 12 children, all of whom became successful after the War.
@karenk2409
@karenk2409 Жыл бұрын
You had a wonderful family and a good neighborhood, consider your family blessed. Often, maybe most often, people become predatory in these situations.
@ccburro1
@ccburro1 3 күн бұрын
Unless one lived on/owned a farm during WW2, I can’t imagine feeding a family with 12 kids. Also, until I saw this video, I didn’t realize how much American family’s “did without” then (and this following on the Great Depression. Especially compared to the over abundance of present day.
@IamtheLunchlady
@IamtheLunchlady Жыл бұрын
My grandma and grandpa got married in 1946 and had at their wedding reception sandwiches, and a tray of Italian cookies. That was the wedding meal for everyone. Brooklyn, NY. She said things were simpler then and everyone enjoyed what they had.
@Marcel_Audubon
@Marcel_Audubon 9 ай бұрын
... or pretended to
@calypsosmama2935
@calypsosmama2935 22 күн бұрын
They laughingly called those weddings "football weddings" because of the way the sandwiches on Italian rolls were tossed to guests. Very popular type of wedding in those days. My parents talked fondly about them.
@dead_or_alive2649
@dead_or_alive2649 2 жыл бұрын
My grandmother was visiting my first apartment and I told her I hadn’t gone shopping for the week so there wasn’t anything really to eat. She sent me to run some errands and when I returned she had a four course meal ready. She didn’t drive so there was no way she went to a grocery store. She would just laugh and say “the alternative isn’t acceptable”.... They don’t make them like her anymore!
@JosDLM
@JosDLM 2 жыл бұрын
This the type of grandma I’m trying to be one day 🥺
@bettyc.parker-young1437
@bettyc.parker-young1437 2 жыл бұрын
I can whip you a meal up with nothing! Meal magician! I have done this many times😊👍 Veggie loaf with crackers and oats! I have done this!
@dead_or_alive2649
@dead_or_alive2649 2 жыл бұрын
@@bettyc.parker-young1437 . 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽. It really is a lost skill but apparently you have it! Individuals like you amaze me. 👍🏽👍🏽
@britzel71
@britzel71 2 жыл бұрын
Awh, love this so much. My grandma lived through the Depression as well and she could cook like no one I've ever met. Everything from scratch, literally not how we think of it these days. I miss her so much.
@faithtompkins5169
@faithtompkins5169 2 жыл бұрын
One thing I remember, no one complained! Everyone knew it was for a good reason!
@absatwell8163
@absatwell8163 2 жыл бұрын
This is why my grandmother called me food spoiled. She was born in 1906.
@greatwhitenorthlife2327
@greatwhitenorthlife2327 2 жыл бұрын
That would have been one of the the toughest timelines to have been born in. People born in the early 1900s likely lived through WW1 , Spanish flu, dust bowl, great depression, WW2, Vietnam and Korean Wars.... a lot happened in 80 years time! No wonder they see average modern people as weaklings.
@TheTruthHurts6666
@TheTruthHurts6666 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I immediately think of people who look at their fridge/pantry and say "There's nothing to eat" or "I don't want to cook/I don't want to eat what's in there" and proceeds to order takeout
@buddah8706
@buddah8706 2 жыл бұрын
Holy smokes
@buddah8706
@buddah8706 2 жыл бұрын
One kick ass lady right there
@bohemianwriter1
@bohemianwriter1 2 жыл бұрын
I'm still using one of the recipes from mine.
@annehudson3210
@annehudson3210 Жыл бұрын
I was born in 1935 so was young during the war, we never realized how hard it was for Mothers who did a wonderful job keeping us fed on very little with no grumbles.The difficulties were always kept away from us children.
@melodyandbryanphillips8304
@melodyandbryanphillips8304 7 ай бұрын
Thank you, as I was talking to my grandma about her life born in 34 I couldn’t understand why she didn’t realize how incredible her mom was until I pointed it out,
@francisfischer7620
@francisfischer7620 5 ай бұрын
I'm 70. My grandma grumbled about depression cooking until the day she died. Literally!!
@melodyandbryanphillips8304
@melodyandbryanphillips8304 5 ай бұрын
@@francisfischer7620 😂 Awe! Yeah, it was definitely a time to make do, and not everyone had as much to make do with.my grandma was lucky bc they had their own gardens, and her dad had a little store.
@kansasfarming
@kansasfarming 4 ай бұрын
I was also born in 1935 Kansas
@melodyandbryanphillips8304
@melodyandbryanphillips8304 4 ай бұрын
@@kansasfarming oh wow, AND you can use the internet😮 my grandma never learned how to use new technologies of any kind. That’s Amazing you can! She just passed away 2 weeks ago 😭 I miss her so much. Hopefully u stay around a lot longer bc the wisdom from your generation is very much needed. She is my husbands grandma, and became mine, I didn’t meet her until she was already almost 80. I was in my early 20’s. She completely changed my life, and my family’s for the better forever. One thing she impressed upon me is U r never to old to make a difference.
@jamesvoigt7275
@jamesvoigt7275 2 ай бұрын
I was three when WW2 ended. I remember that telephone call that made our parents so giddy, they danced us children around the kitchen in their arms. We grew our own vegetables and had chickens for meat and eggs. My play clothes at that time were made from chicken feed sacks. Food was always held in great appreciation in our home, and our mother taught us to be good cooks. (I am Virginia, not Jim.)
@mercyhope1477
@mercyhope1477 2 жыл бұрын
I had to do a double take when I saw the picture of the soldiers walking along side the tank. The second man in is my father!
@heatherkeegan689
@heatherkeegan689 2 жыл бұрын
How wonderful
@lindacreber4373
@lindacreber4373 2 жыл бұрын
Or WOW so proud 🙏🙏🙏
@denicecassell9541
@denicecassell9541 2 жыл бұрын
That is amazing!
@teresasugden466
@teresasugden466 2 жыл бұрын
Amazing!
@kmhtigger
@kmhtigger 2 жыл бұрын
Wow
@roberthurley6860
@roberthurley6860 2 жыл бұрын
My grandmother lived with us (my parents, me and my 2 brothers) in the 1960s and if I complained that the meat at dinner was tough she would say it's tougher when there's none.
@30lindam
@30lindam 2 жыл бұрын
Lol!
@moniquemosley2122
@moniquemosley2122 2 жыл бұрын
🤣
@staceykersting705
@staceykersting705 2 жыл бұрын
Lentils are a great alternative.
@marymashburn412
@marymashburn412 2 жыл бұрын
@@moniquemosley2122 jhhsife
@bettymiller6629
@bettymiller6629 2 жыл бұрын
I surely agree with grannie .they were grateful for whatever they had. Today we as a society really take too much for granted .At least most.
@monicaiverson6991
@monicaiverson6991 Жыл бұрын
My grandmother used to make wedding mints. Everyone still wanted those at their wedding back then! Since she couldn’t afford butter, milk or cream, she would mix mashed potatoes, mint flavoring and powdered sugar! They were actually quite good!
@crystal7743
@crystal7743 9 ай бұрын
Do you have the recipe? Sounds interesting 😮
@sheilacampbell2521
@sheilacampbell2521 9 ай бұрын
​@@crystal7743 it's the same as potato candy, there are recipes online. It's pretty basic mashed potatoes, confectioners sugar, mix well roll into a couple balls, refrigerate, roll out spread peanut butter, roll up refrigerate until firm cut into slices.
@suek7086
@suek7086 3 ай бұрын
Potato candy is delicious.
@sabrinamassie5606
@sabrinamassie5606 Жыл бұрын
My grandmother was raising her kids when the Great Depression and WWII hit ... She taught me a LOT ... and the main thing is to be prepared ... period.
@janaeinhornova6009
@janaeinhornova6009 Жыл бұрын
Very true
@svollin9876
@svollin9876 2 жыл бұрын
My grandma canned fruit and vegetables, had a stocked freezer and pantry, and always fed company that stopped by. She did this to the day she died. Her form of caring for others was to feed them. She had to go to work in a factory when the guys went off to war. She didn't talk much about that time but her frugality was directly linked to that timeframe. She always said to save your change for a rainy day because that day would come. God bless her sweet soul.
@lynnsmith4
@lynnsmith4 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, so many of our Grandmothers showed their love in this way. God bless all of their beautiful sweet souls.
@staceykersting705
@staceykersting705 2 жыл бұрын
Grandma had electricity? U must be so young! At grandma's house, they ate almost exclusively what they could grow in the yard. They got permission to grow in the vacant lot next door, too. My grandma sold a big wagon of produce in town most weeks of the year, too. They also had a few laying hens. Ate tons of potatoes, beets, carrots, cabbage, onions...
@lynnsmith4
@lynnsmith4 2 жыл бұрын
@@staceykersting705 That was when she was older. All the times I remember she had electricity. But, when mom and her brothers and sisters were young, my grandmother didn't have electricity or running water.
@MrCJ-qz9dl
@MrCJ-qz9dl 2 жыл бұрын
My grandmother in North Carolina was the same. I always brag on how she always had food from her garden, canned or frozen. So that when we came to visit, there was always more than enough delicious food. She canned pickles and veggies. She had frozen soups, pies, and other dishes. She also worked as a maid while she maintained her own household duties without all the updated appliances people have today. Yet she was always prepared and was never in a rush. They don't make women like that anymore. 😪
@canislupis3129
@canislupis3129 2 жыл бұрын
Sounds exactly like my family. They were not allowed to waste any food. That meant left overs was a sure staple. It was crazy what they did to try and elevate flavor and the perception of the eaters. One thing I haven’t heard here: SPAM. Was this not around ww2? When we were kids it was our meat many nights, and my mom mom crispy thin slices that were liked by all of us.
@gailrichardson8534
@gailrichardson8534 2 жыл бұрын
I can remember my mother serving things like "creamed peas" on toast for lunch or supper. Simply canned peas in a white sauce. Very cheap but filling. I remember dishes made with cows tongue as well. This was in the 40s..and both of my parents had grown up during the Great Depression..so my mother was very good at budgeting and cutting corners. I'm 78 years old and still have one of her old cookbooks with some of her favorite recipes from those years.
@debbie189
@debbie189 2 жыл бұрын
My mom did cream peas with chip beef in a jar, I ate bread in milk sometimes for ceral in the 50s
@greyeaglem
@greyeaglem 2 жыл бұрын
@@debbie189 My grandpa would break up a piece of bread in a glass, pour milk over it and eat it with a spoon before going to bed every night of his life. He called it 'soppy'.
@greyeaglem
@greyeaglem 2 жыл бұрын
Whoever made this video is apparently unaware that tongue is considered a delicacy, as in delicatessens used to always have it on hand, and it wasn't exactly cheap.
@Snuzzled
@Snuzzled 2 жыл бұрын
@@greyeaglem Yup. Beef tongue is actually delicious if cooked properly: low and slow. Beef tongue tacos are absolutely delicious.
@donnagoring250
@donnagoring250 2 жыл бұрын
I loved that dish! Remember having that recipe that dish in the early to late 50 s, and Mom would put some chipped dried sliced beef along with it! You are so right, it was delicious! Ever thought about starting a blog on those recipes, with others? Now would be a great time with this Covid and the inflammation.
@LaReinaOfMakeup
@LaReinaOfMakeup Жыл бұрын
Who else used to watch Claras channel ❤ Great Depression cooking…. Such great ideas for today too!
@gardenlady2041
@gardenlady2041 Жыл бұрын
Yep and Phyllis Stokes. She is gone now too but her son does periodic videos, sometimes with his children. It's worth a look.
@Rockhound6165
@Rockhound6165 Жыл бұрын
Remember this when you read stories about someone shooting and killing a McDonald's worker because their fries were cold.
@rickkinki4624
@rickkinki4624 2 жыл бұрын
My mother used to tell us how she would heat a can of sweetened condensed milk, causing it to caramelize. This would provide a sugar substitute that she could use to bake cookies and cakes.
@beckywaytoomuch
@beckywaytoomuch 2 жыл бұрын
That is a great tip!
@lisaandothers
@lisaandothers 2 жыл бұрын
I use this method in order to make caramel sauce for banoffe and other deserts
@user-jd3qe4mv3h
@user-jd3qe4mv3h 2 жыл бұрын
Creme brûlée 😋
@SenseandEdibility
@SenseandEdibility 2 жыл бұрын
Dulce de leche!
@curissajones3960
@curissajones3960 2 жыл бұрын
My family still does that. We call it 'dulce de leche'. I never thought to use it as a substitute, we use it as a dessert topping. A little drizzle goes a LONG way
@darylhudson659
@darylhudson659 Жыл бұрын
My grandparents born from 1870 to 1899 all went through the Great depression as all their children. My dad and my uncle were in world War II Army. My mother born in 1927 told me that sometimes they would only have potatoes to eat for a week. I remember when I was young having to use the outhouse and drink from the well. I've eaten snow ice cream and because grandmother could not afford a chocolate bar she gave me cocoa powder mixed with white sugar in a bowl that I ate with a spoon dry. I remember getting milk delivered in glass bottles onto our doorstep even into the 60s when I was young. If everyone would start planting vegetables everywhere there is a space we would be a lot healthier than buying that junk from Walmart etc. I remember if you got a tomato it was red, ripe and delicious. Nowadays they are basically orangey red with no flavor compared to what I ate when I was young.
@pamtyree6634
@pamtyree6634 Жыл бұрын
Our back yard soil is very poor and rain is scarce and our water supply is full of chlorine and amonia, amongst other chem. But one year it did rain !!!! And I grew greem beans, corn, tomatoes and had a huge pumpkin patch. Our apricot tree even put out a bumper crop. How happy I was! Roasted corn on the cob, fresh veggies, apricot pies and pumpkin recipes gallore!
@darylhudson659
@darylhudson659 Жыл бұрын
@@pamtyree6634 did you know that corn was a modern-day invention through breeding it was never corn like that in the past and even in the Bible when it talks about corn it's not talkin about the plant corn is talkin actually about grains. Corn isn't good for you and especially if you didn't grow it yourself for the simple fact that they spray it down with glyphosate which is a nasty chemicals that leads to Parkinson's. What a lot of people don't realize is that while they think they don't spray the peanuts with glyphosate but what happens is they grow the peanuts on the same ground as they grow the cotton and they spray the cotton down with it it is soaked into the ground and then of course peanuts develop underground and so they get this glyphosate. I've learned a lot more than I ever have about health since I've been listening to Dr. Eric Berg here on KZbin and some others. Check it out if you'd like.
@acex8124
@acex8124 Жыл бұрын
My mother made snow cream for us, when I was a child. I loved it. She was a child when the war broke out. We are citizens of the U.S. of A. She put milk, sugar and vanilla extract in it. Do you know if they had and used the same ingredients? This is Mrs. Ace X, in Florida.
@darylhudson659
@darylhudson659 Жыл бұрын
@@acex8124 yes, and when they finally were able to acquire an old wooden bucket with metal container and gears with crank homemade ice cream maker oh boy...lol
@lynnestamey7272
@lynnestamey7272 Жыл бұрын
I was a teenager in the late 60s in Duncanville TX. We had milk delivery from Bordens. He would even bring in the milk and put it in the refrigerator!
@jwbjpb1338
@jwbjpb1338 Жыл бұрын
My mother told me they ate cornbread and gravy for dinner many nights. That was all they could afford and were glad to have that to eat. Red beans and rice were something they also ate when the family had enough money.
@collette9008
@collette9008 Жыл бұрын
My mother was born 1924. This brings her back to me and all the stories of her own experiences during WW2 . One was that when she and friends were going out to dance, they would take turns drawing a black line down the back of each other's legs to look like they were wearing silk stockings because all silk in USA was used for parachutes. Thankyou , I really enjoyed this, and am sharing with my daughter 💕.
@SoilToSoul
@SoilToSoul Жыл бұрын
I really like this memory ❤ I remember you saying it before. I've seen many videos like this one, they are very interesting. And Hi Mom! Lol
@banana9106
@banana9106 Жыл бұрын
In the UK we used to also use gravy browning to colour the legs.
@SoonersMommy
@SoonersMommy 3 ай бұрын
My mom was born in 1927, my dad was born in 1922, and I agree these videos bring back stories from my parents. I wish I had paid more attention. We may need their innovativeness in he coming years.
@JanetMalone-kj9tq
@JanetMalone-kj9tq 22 күн бұрын
My mother told me the same
@justinakers3196
@justinakers3196 2 жыл бұрын
I never realize just how much the civilians had to sacrifice during the war. They truly were the greatest generation
@youareright4917
@youareright4917 2 жыл бұрын
General Patton after the war said, "We fought the wrong enemy!" I personally think Edison was one of the greatest inventors in the late 1800s when America really became the richest and most powerful in the world.
@steppy3736
@steppy3736 2 жыл бұрын
@@youareright4917 Edison was the biggest thief ever.
@youareright4917
@youareright4917 2 жыл бұрын
@@steppy3736 Edison invented the world's first.. 1. Stock ticker machine.. 2. Duplex telegraph.. 3. the first quadruplex telegraph.. 4. the worlds first Science Lab for Inventions.. and you think he stole all of those great inventions? FROM WHO???
@steppy3736
@steppy3736 2 жыл бұрын
@@youareright4917 he didn't invent anything. He just patented things first.
@sandraolson1022
@sandraolson1022 2 жыл бұрын
If only people today had the willingness to sacrifice that people had in those days.
@Suiberis
@Suiberis 2 жыл бұрын
I have an account from an old teacher of mine who lived through the Japanese occupation of Singapore when the British retreated. He grew up eating a thin rice gruel with dried anchovies and salted vegetables. Twice a year, on New Years and his birthday, he got a whole hard boiled egg to himself due to how destitute his family had become in the post war years after the Japanese occupation. Really puts in perspective how fortunate we are!
@WhimsyWendy
@WhimsyWendy 2 жыл бұрын
I should appreciate hard boiled eggs more. We take things for granted when that thing is plentiful.
@ikkelimburg3552
@ikkelimburg3552 Жыл бұрын
From the Netherlands: in the last winter people even ate tullips, wallpaper glue, etc. (Hunger winter 44-45). Some dishes I remember my gran making: pavlova (beating egg white to death, it kept on expanding and was a luxury), potatoe pancakes, union soup, leek pie and the ‘mock mayonaise’ (consisting mashed potatoe, vinegar and herbs). My grandparents lived naar the Belgian border and most of the ‘make do’ cooking inspiration came from Belgians (who had experienced WW1 and thus very experienced in ‘mock’ dishes with a few ingrediënts).
@cha0ticT.
@cha0ticT. Жыл бұрын
Wallpaper glue?!? My word..
@everdinestenger1548
@everdinestenger1548 Жыл бұрын
And dust cake, the floor sweepings of bakeries or even grass
@nadyarossi5102
@nadyarossi5102 Жыл бұрын
I remember reading about this after listening to an interview with Audrey Hepburn, who nearly starved to death during the German occupation.
@zeviono4562
@zeviono4562 Жыл бұрын
Yes, my stepfather was about 12 at the time. He lived in a flat in Amsterdam with his mother. He remembered practically starving, his mom collected grass to eat at one stage. I have 4hrs of tapes he made talking about his life back then. He watched an attack by the RAF on a gestapo prison once. Flew right down his street...
@iwilfix9407
@iwilfix9407 10 ай бұрын
@@cha0ticT. Wallpaper paste was made from flour and water. the paper was soaked and scraped.
@trishaporte
@trishaporte 29 күн бұрын
Mom born in ‘22 told of family living in CA would send a big box of oranges from their trees to her family in the mid-west during the depression and WWII. They continued to gather for Thanksgiving, most of which would save back rationed items so that when they came together they could make deserts. The men would have gone hunting or an uncle who had a farm would bring a turkey. The ladies would make pies /cakes and side dishes….once they came together, so would their celebration to give thanks!
@interestedobserver-gk3ih
@interestedobserver-gk3ih 2 жыл бұрын
While the US had food rationing like the rest of the world it was not as severe as it was in the UK and Europe because of our vast amount of arable land and the lack of bomb damage. Food rationing was not only limited to the types of food available also the amount allowed per meal. So while we rationed we didn't suffer like other countries. What is truly humbling was how people endured this without any major complaint and pulled together to win the war despite rationing, shortages, bombings, and losing loved ones. They truly were the greatest generation.
@gordonbennett5638
@gordonbennett5638 2 жыл бұрын
UK food rationing ended in 1954. Not only did they endure the war stoically, but for nearly 10 years afterwards.
@alisonsmith4801
@alisonsmith4801 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah Britain sent food to our friends in Europe while suffering severe hardship ourselves, of course nowadays since " Brexit" the anger and venting towards us in Britain from our friends in Europe has been writ large and I say this as a remainer.
@jaycorby
@jaycorby 2 жыл бұрын
@@alisonsmith4801 How soon they forget. Continental Europeans have had their 'bacon saved' by the Americans several times during the previous century. My own maternal grandfather took 2 German machine gun bullets during the last major offensive in WWI ( Meuse-Argonne ). We have rarely asked anything in return, but have surely received many 'kicks in the teeth' from our so called European allies. Sad indeed!
@alisonsmith4801
@alisonsmith4801 2 жыл бұрын
@@jaycorby My own Great Grandfather signed up in 1914, losing his life at Arras in 1917 and is buried in France, a North Eastern lad buried far from home, doing his bit for " King and Country ". We British are regularly told we where just a small part of the second world war, insignificant I read somewhere, well if enduring nightly bombing and severe rationing then still maintaining enough moral to defend our country in both the air and at sea and stop an unstoppable enemy from invading us and help change the outcome for the entire world ... I wouldn't call that insignificant but sheer bloody mindness.
@jaycorby
@jaycorby 2 жыл бұрын
@@alisonsmith4801 Britain can hold its head high! I have considerable English heritage in my pedigree, and I can say with pride that it is unthinkable that my 'people' would have ever surrendered to the Nazis. The only 'beef' I have with John Bull is the way they treated my Irish ancestors, but that even has its positive side...they wound up over here!
@jennymontague851
@jennymontague851 2 жыл бұрын
I remember my Grandmother cooking up some weird concoctions, but mostly, we did ok as my GF raised his own beef. He started with just a couple of young cows. That meant we always had milk, cheese and butter. Both my Mom and grandparents raised gardens and canned. The small town they lived in turned a warehouse into a sort of canning factory where people had all they equipment needed to can; they just brought their own vegetables and meat. There was a large river that ran at the southern end of town, so fish were bountiful as well. Given a choice, I'll take a little town like that to a big city any day.
@JishinimaTidehoshi
@JishinimaTidehoshi Жыл бұрын
Big cities are dying, so you're right.
@kasie680
@kasie680 Жыл бұрын
Didn’t you have to give half of all home killed stock to the govt? And a lot of the canned stuff??
@IMSiegfried
@IMSiegfried Жыл бұрын
I can't handle the gossip because everyone knows everyone else in small towns ;-)
@kasie680
@kasie680 Жыл бұрын
@@Jack_Russell_Brown sorry I was thinking of UK 🇬🇧 I just figured it was everywhere
@djquinn11
@djquinn11 Жыл бұрын
@@kasie680 : Which half?
@francisslyker3669
@francisslyker3669 Жыл бұрын
We had a large enough "victory garden" at my grandmothers that a local farmer plowed it with a horse. We had an abundance of vegetables. We dried corn. Mother canned all sorts of fruit and vegetables. Grandma grew two kinds of pears, several kinds of apples and sour cherries. We had little meat. Oleo replaced butter. Mother cooked with bacon fat. She also made laundry soap out of any salvaged fat. My garden was two feet square. I grew radishes!
@ManyaP64
@ManyaP64 Жыл бұрын
It doesn’t hurt to at least learn some of the principles of being economic in the kitchen when cooking. We saw how hard it was and still is to get certain ingredients during lockdown or how expensive it has become to get basics like eggs 🥚. I had ordered powdered milks and eggs in February of 2020 not realizing how hard it was going to be to get some of these items fresh over the following months. Learning how to cook meals using inexpensive ingredients such as beans, rice and flour is important for all of us. Even making six figures, I learned from my mom (she was a teenager at the end of WWII) how to conserve and shop at dollar stores. Very little goes to waste in my home and I cook as much as possible.
@andrea4246
@andrea4246 Жыл бұрын
Young people are not ready for this!
@nilianstroy
@nilianstroy Жыл бұрын
@@andrea4246 according to you...
@mrsmcdonald9363
@mrsmcdonald9363 Жыл бұрын
@@andrea4246 Some are, some aren't. It depends on whether they were taught how to cook, garden, raise animals, preserve food and barter. We've never had the room to raise animals, but my kids learned all the rest.
@ladyprepper7987
@ladyprepper7987 Жыл бұрын
@@andrea4246 and most older people aren't ready either. There is not a living generation who has first hand knowledge of how to survive on little. We've all been spoiled
@californianorma876
@californianorma876 Жыл бұрын
healthier too
@shivakat2297
@shivakat2297 2 жыл бұрын
Saving and using those S&H green stamps was fun to our family. Mama used to get a strip of those everytime she got groceries. That was back in the day when laundry powder boxes had a drinking glass in them.
@barbaragatto2549
@barbaragatto2549 2 жыл бұрын
And towels!
@sueclark5763
@sueclark5763 2 жыл бұрын
And "Golden Wheat" pattern dinnerware! We had the whole set of dinnerware and both the juice/milk size glasses. Here's your bit of trivia, it was "Dus" laundry detergent! I saw a set of the dinnerware a few months back at our local thrift store, but decided against buying bit, the trim on the dishes was actual gold, so I couldn't use them in the microwave...
@sadjaxx
@sadjaxx 2 жыл бұрын
I remember pasting Green Stamps and saving coupons from some kinds of cigarette packs. I was born in '58
@coleparker
@coleparker 2 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1953. S&H green stamps as well as blue chip stamps continued up into the 60s. My mother used to save them. Also Chesterfield cigarettes had stamps as well.
@randalllaue4042
@randalllaue4042 2 жыл бұрын
I still have framed print that my grandmother saved books for. There is the number of books needed on back.
@rebarnes2215
@rebarnes2215 2 жыл бұрын
My parents lived through the Great Depression & WWII. Dad never talked much about those times, but Mom did. She was thankful she lived in a small farming village in the Midwest, because her family had room for a vegetable garden, they could raise chickens, and her brother could hunt & fish. Her brother also got a job building roads & bridges because of the WPA program begun by FDR's administration, & Mom got a job at a sewing project, so that provided a little income to buy things they couldn't raise or grow. For her parent's 20th wedding anniversary, relatives & friends gave them a gift of 20 silver dollars. That $20.00 lasted them a year. Old clothes were never just thrown away. If they couldn't be mended, then thread was carefully removed from the hems & reused. If the fabric couldn't be sewn into something else, it could be used to make quilts. Everything was reused & recycled (long before "recycling" became a thing). Mom made today's recyclers look like amateurs. Dad did, too. He kept any piece of wood or dab of paint from his carpenter jobs if he thought he might be able to use it later. He made me a book holder in 1981 with a base made from a piece of oak over 100 years old that he & his father salvaged from an old house they tore down sometime in the 1930's.
@mastrblastr3010
@mastrblastr3010 Жыл бұрын
FDR was evil bad socialist Neil Ronald Reagan Neil free market economics
@iseegoodandbad6758
@iseegoodandbad6758 Жыл бұрын
In New York people ate frozen food, olive oil and kraft dinners as early as the 1930s. Clearly they lived in the lap of luxury compared with everyone else. Now they are the suffering ones eating offal and cabbage. Look who's laughing now!!!
@christineperez7562
@christineperez7562 Жыл бұрын
My grandparents never felt poor she send she always ate well.
@wendelleg2002
@wendelleg2002 Жыл бұрын
My grandparents lost their farm during the Great Depression, but everywhere they lived after that Grandma kept a vegetable garden, up to the 1970s when I was a child. Her favorite "coffee" was Postum too! During WWII, my mom described making their own margarine blocks with a yellow food dye pill that was blended in, ration food stamps, how stockings were a luxury and ladies painted on leg makeup instead. Her family always cooked at home and used every last scrap of leftovers - for soups, casseroles, etc. When I was a child we saved old clothes and linens to tear into dust rags & cleaning rags whenever possible. It was just common to reuse, recycle and eat leftovers in the Midwest in the 50s and 60s where I grew up.
@Garethstruelove
@Garethstruelove Жыл бұрын
My Mom & Dad too. Dad was a Marine Corps pilot in the South Pacific. Mom worked for the department of the navy.
@audreyannelanfranchi6642
@audreyannelanfranchi6642 Жыл бұрын
M’y Mom lived in France when the Germans took over… She ALWAYS had a fear of not having food. This is why my home always had extra! My Dad grew up in the Midwest, he appreciated all that we had, but he often reminded us not to tease Mom about hoarding food, that we needed to be grateful that we never felt true hunger
@SkunkMonkey991
@SkunkMonkey991 Жыл бұрын
My Dad was US Army Retired. My Mom was from Germany. She said towards the end of the war, getting a rotten potato was a treat. She said at 1 point she ate wall paper to survive. There was zero food wasted when I was growing up, we ate lots of leftovers.
@dianajones7999
@dianajones7999 10 ай бұрын
Wow !
@camlacasse3760
@camlacasse3760 4 ай бұрын
I have a German friend who told me they would have to polish stone to get a bowl of broth a day. She said they had no shoes, what they had they would cut the front off so there was room for their feet for another year. She is now 83 and as fit as a fiddle. When she turned 50 she decided to start exercising which she went on to teach. We cruise together at times and she gets up early to be at the gym at 5:30 a.m. (and in bed by 10 p.m.).
@kati1017
@kati1017 2 жыл бұрын
Precious souls all pulling together to help. Dear mommies doing their best to be creative with what they had. Melts my heart... I appreciate all that they did!
@oliviamartini9700
@oliviamartini9700 2 жыл бұрын
...thanks in great part to the hoarders who bought out everything and sold it on the black market!
@alisonsmith4801
@alisonsmith4801 2 жыл бұрын
@@oliviamartini9700 The length of the 2nd world war in the UK was a lot longer than in the US added to that Britain was bombed continuously with huge home losses, rationing was strict yet no one starved, hoarding was subject to being fined and in some cases jailed, by the end of the war, no one in Britain had anything to hoard, just like the rest of Europe.
@oliviamartini9700
@oliviamartini9700 2 жыл бұрын
@@alisonsmith4801 I am aware of this. We Canadians (along with Australians and South Africans) fought alongside the Brits from day one, and also sent "Bundles for Britain" for years to help out. It would have been very different if the States had joined BOTH wars much earlier. But my point was that there are always assholes who exploit and exacerbate the suffering, like the ones who bought all the toilet paper and hand sanitizer last year and resold them for quadruple the price. (And yes, the black market was strong throughout)
@alisonsmith4801
@alisonsmith4801 2 жыл бұрын
@@oliviamartini9700 Never let it be forgotten the sacrifice of our Commonwealth brothers and sisters, we never will in the UK, but we bore the brunt of a relentless war with rations that North America never came near to endure, yet at the end of rationing they found Britons where healthier than they had ever been, and your correct as someone who works for a huge chain of a British supermarket I've witnessed during the start of the Pandemic the stupidity of us supposedly " Keep calm and carry on " Britons and it's a bloody myth, greed and selfishness ruled every where, bloody good job we had had more resilience and commitment in 39 to 41 than we had falling to piece's over toilet roll, pasta and rice in 2020.
@MrEricLieber
@MrEricLieber 2 жыл бұрын
Something tells me we're going to need to adopt this again soon.
@donnahoffman3639
@donnahoffman3639 2 жыл бұрын
Eric right now today we definitly are
@cherylwatkins588
@cherylwatkins588 2 жыл бұрын
I've felt the necessity to start growing our own vegetables and praying I have a successful time with them
@irunamuk
@irunamuk 2 жыл бұрын
This comment held it’s own unfortunately
@paulritchie5868
@paulritchie5868 2 жыл бұрын
We won’t,the Russians will..
@cherokeepurple4480
@cherokeepurple4480 2 жыл бұрын
@@paulritchie5868 Wow, have you been keeping track of gas and food prices? How much a barrel of oil has gone up? When oil goes up, everything goes up.
@lschrandt
@lschrandt Жыл бұрын
I grew up with grandparents and even my own parents who went through the depression and rationing. There are MANY recipes I still make today that came from my great grandmother’s kitchen(s). I’ve been grateful and thankful for these recipes over the past 60 years. I’ve been in a “bad” place financially and even when not challenged I continue with many of them. 🙏🏼😇🙏🏼🥰
@larryng
@larryng Жыл бұрын
Make a KZbin channel with these recipes. Many would want to watch and learn.
@dvf4550
@dvf4550 Жыл бұрын
I came here to say the same thing!
@robertshelton9881
@robertshelton9881 Жыл бұрын
I remember WW2 rationing. We made small sacrifices, like margarine instead of butter. In those days the dairy lobby didn't allow margarine to be dyed yellow, so it was pasty white. It sometimes came in a plastic package with a little bud of yellow dye that you could work with your fingers outside the package to dye the margarine. Another memory of those days was the German POWs who came to our Texas village to pick cotton. I heard that they were very glad to be out of the war.
@geofjones9
@geofjones9 10 ай бұрын
We moved to Wisconsin from Illinois in 1965. Only white oleo was available, with the pack of coloring. The dairy industry was so strong that this was a law. We commuted to Illinois on weekends, bringing back enough colored oleo that the car almost dragged. We bootlegged that stuff for years. Now I won't touch oleo, insist on butter.
@MichaelWDupre
@MichaelWDupre 2 жыл бұрын
My grandmother told me of using mayonnaise in baking recipes as a substitute for eggs and oil. I've tried it today and honestly, it's pretty good, and makes for a moist chocolate cake. Oddly enough, sawdust is still being used in food products to this day. Any time you see "cellulose" in an ingredient list, it's indigestible fiber from plant cell walls, which can include wood from trees, and pulp from grasses and algae.
@giovannicervantes2053
@giovannicervantes2053 2 жыл бұрын
I heard of a chocolate mayonnaise cake and that I heard that it's really really good it makes the chocolate Tangy in the cake moist but there's also another version of strange chocolate cake with chocolate sauerkraut cake where it feels like coconut instead of tasting like sauerkraut reason why is because you have to dilute the sauerkraut
@chansinabee
@chansinabee 2 жыл бұрын
Fun fact: mayo is made by emulsifying eggs and oil, plus an acid and together creates mayonnaise.
@MichaelWDupre
@MichaelWDupre 2 жыл бұрын
@@giovannicervantes2053 Duke's mayonnaise has a good recipe for chocolate cake using their mayo.
@peepaw_of_9
@peepaw_of_9 2 жыл бұрын
@@giovannicervantes2053 Portillo's makes and sells a chocolate cake made with mayonnaise.
@OhJodi69
@OhJodi69 2 жыл бұрын
Mayonaise cake is really good........but often people mistakenly use Miracle Whip, which gives it a weird tangy taste.
@JB-mm5ff
@JB-mm5ff 2 жыл бұрын
"Finish everything on your plate. There are people starving in China." - Grandma
@maggiesmith856
@maggiesmith856 2 жыл бұрын
Box it up and send it to them" - Me.
@sedekiman
@sedekiman 2 жыл бұрын
@@maggiesmith856 Name one!
@dharmaslife
@dharmaslife 2 жыл бұрын
Eat your rice think of all those poor kids in America eating canned spinach
@laurimcclish212
@laurimcclish212 2 жыл бұрын
In the 60's...it was, "there are children starving in Bangladesh."
@basil7292
@basil7292 2 жыл бұрын
@@laurimcclish212 Hah, the genocide their own government was funding then
@lisagunnison2856
@lisagunnison2856 Жыл бұрын
My grandmother lived in the country with her parents and siblings. She was born in 1914. They always had a large garden full of green beans, cucumbers, tomatoes, a grape arbor and strawberries, corn and 2 plum trees. They made sourdough to make bread, pies, rolls. I know they had chickens, ducks and a pond had catfish. My mom was born in 1939, I was born in 1959 and it has stayed basically the same. Honestly, they worked jobs and kept their place in fine shape. The house is over 125 years old, it has a summer kitchen bc no air conditioning when I was growing up. Used coal in the furnace. Boy the world has changed!
@nancycurtis488
@nancycurtis488 Ай бұрын
My daddy, who was born in June of 1918 in southern Illinois, the youngest of 6 children. told me one of his very best Christmases was when he received two gifts one Christmas morning…one was a jackknife and the other was an orange. He was 78 in 1996 when he died from lung cancer but he always remembered that jackknife and orange from when he was 11 or 12. I miss my daddy.
@dreamcrone
@dreamcrone 2 жыл бұрын
My dad continued to eat some of these things, but he couldn’t stand to eat beans any more. He said he ate 10 lifetimes worth of beans in a five year period. Lard and sugar sandwiches were a real treat. Sh!t on a shingle was another hit. He once ate laundry starch to stop the hunger pains. He teased us with a story of saving up to buy a box of cracker jacks with his sister. One got to chew it and the other got to swallow. They had 8 hungry kids in bed on Friday nights and his parents would splurge and cook and eat a steak. He said the smell was torture and their tummy’s would growl! I cannot stand to waste food to this day❤️ May you all have the food you need and remember how blessed we are!
@cotyrichardson7271
@cotyrichardson7271 2 жыл бұрын
i truly hope this is a true story because it really touched me. you are right. we are too blessed. makes me want to re-evaluate the way i just take things for granted. Thank you
@unicornhollowhomestead
@unicornhollowhomestead 2 жыл бұрын
I remember being hungry enough to eat toothpaste when I was young.
@dreamcrone
@dreamcrone 2 жыл бұрын
@@unicornhollowhomestead I’m so sorry. We need to take care of children better.
@downontheriver1959
@downontheriver1959 2 жыл бұрын
Sounds good. Soggy cracker jacks but probably better than french fries.
@eckankar7756
@eckankar7756 2 жыл бұрын
We lived in the country. Bullets were rare so every shot had to count but my brother and dad would go hunting and what ever they got we ate and were grateful for it. We would grow vegetable, lots of cabbage as it would keep for months in a crawl space dug under the house. My grandmother would scoop fresh snow adding some sugar and flavoring and it was our 'ice cream' treat. Bread crumbs were saved to thicken soups or eat as cereal. We had chickens so plenty of eggs. My grandmother would tie strings across the kitchen when she'd make noodles. She'd cut them into slices and hang them over the strings to dry. She'd make loads of them and we'd keep them in old pillow cases to have for a meal over the weeks till it was time to make more.
@josephrobertvanderhoff8281
@josephrobertvanderhoff8281 2 жыл бұрын
I live in Amsterdam ..My grandfather told me many horrors of the fall of the Nederlands . During WW2 . And how a Canadian Troop saved his life , Thank you Canada for being there . Love to All Canadians .
@maggiesmith856
@maggiesmith856 2 жыл бұрын
A Canadian veteran who took part in the liberation of the Netherlands told me this story. He and his tank crew were billeted with a married couple, who had fields of corn growing. So he said "I'll swamp our rations for corn." They asked why he wanted it. "To eat, of course " "But ... that's cattle feed !" He and his men borrowed the wife's big pot, picked, shucked and boiled a big heap of corn, and ate it, while their hosts sat there with their mouths open. I always wondered if the couple started eating it themselves. If they did, they probably buried the cobs after dark, so the neighbours wouldn't find out.
@betsyhope3266
@betsyhope3266 2 жыл бұрын
I have a 96 year old friend who was with the Canadian army in Holland. He has fond memories of the people there and is invited every 5 years by your country in appreciation for what they did.
@princesssprinklesthecat4192
@princesssprinklesthecat4192 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah I love canaidia
@marylyn5965
@marylyn5965 2 жыл бұрын
My grandfather was in the Canadian military. He fought in Holland in WWII. He drove tanks. He also stayed a few years after the war to help the people of The Netherlands. He never would talk about what he experienced. My boyfriend's grandparents are from Holland. They had to eat grass to survive because there was no food. Eventually they emigrated to Canada. Their descendants, including my boyfriend, to this day will not eat corn. It's animal feed to them. Even the tender peaches and cream they don't like.
@FurnitureFan
@FurnitureFan 2 жыл бұрын
@@marylyn5965 That's interesting because for the last few generations, Irish people wouldn't offer fish or seafood to visitors. My grandparents called it "famine food".
@7389
@7389 Жыл бұрын
There is ALWAYS something to be grateful for.
@OleGeezerCirca1941
@OleGeezerCirca1941 2 жыл бұрын
My family was lucky, because my grandparents had a farm before WW 2. Meat like chicken, duck, or pork was always available, as were eggs, milk and butter. Beef was another story. Cows', beef or dairy, had to be registered with the government who had to be notified when the animal was disposed of by sale, slaughter, death or mysterious disappearance. To avoid profiteering by black market sales the government tracked to where and how was the cow disposed of. During one winter my grandparents took Josie an old and now dry milking cow and slaughtered her on a Friday night. The meat was cut, wrapped and distributed to family members. Since it was a weekend government offices were closed so the loss of a cow who "slipped on ice, broke a leg, and had to be humanely dispatched" was reported on the following Monday. Since the family was large enough to account for the amount of meat produced and the circumstances of the situation seemed reasonable.
@martinjenkins6467
@martinjenkins6467 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah mum & dad used to tell me about the rules on the farm during the war. Pretty bad when your ordered about on your own private Farm. But I suppose everyone had to be a commie to beat Hitler.
@OleGeezerCirca1941
@OleGeezerCirca1941 2 жыл бұрын
@@martinjenkins6467 Thanks for the comment. Fortunately farm food helped to ease the taste of having to eat Spam and/or canned salmon or other non-point foods. 😊👍
@ddpg9976
@ddpg9976 2 жыл бұрын
Cow meat is disgusting. Iykyk
@OleGeezerCirca1941
@OleGeezerCirca1941 2 жыл бұрын
@@ddpg9976 Did you know beef is "cow meat"? 🤢 2U
@ddpg9976
@ddpg9976 2 жыл бұрын
@@OleGeezerCirca1941 you should look it up and see what is considered “cow” meat and what type is sold as “beef”
@terrywhite6249
@terrywhite6249 2 жыл бұрын
My grandfather was a steel worker in the US, so he didn't have to go fight. But on Sundays, he went out hunting to provide meat for his family and usually came home with a few squirrels, rabbits and/or raccoons. He kept doing it after WW II ended since it was a cheap way to provide food, but one day in the late 1940s my grandmother put her foot down that she wasn't skinning and cooking one more squirrel and they were going to the butcher to get actual meat.
@edster8416
@edster8416 2 жыл бұрын
Was it safe that time eating squirrels or raccoons ? Aren’t they prone to diseases like rabies? I mean yeah u have to make do with hunger but what are the chances getting infected😅
@GodzillaofTokyo
@GodzillaofTokyo 2 жыл бұрын
@@edster8416 you can usually tell when they are sick. If you know the animal's typical behavior you can tell when it's off. The one usually associated with being immune to rabies is bats, but they are still carriers and people dont reeally hunt them here. I would definitely not eat an opossum though. They eat a lot of little nusiance stuff and are carriers for a lot of things.
@richiethev4623
@richiethev4623 2 жыл бұрын
@@edster8416 Watch the show on netflix called "Meat Eater" and you will see their are still a large amount of people who still are eating squirrels, raccoons and even nitro rat's. These people live here in the United States.. -Mercy(sorry for the name confusion I am on my dad's phone at the moment)
@jacquelinecallejas1390
@jacquelinecallejas1390 2 жыл бұрын
I had squirrel once. A friend of a friend had a nut orchard over run with squirrels so he hunted them and gave a bunch to my friend who cooked them in a stew. A little tough but taste was OK. I've also had rabbit at Colonial Williamsburg. I would NOT eat raccoons though. Their diet is to crazy for me to want to do that. The squirrels OTOH were eating nuts and the rabbits vegetables so that is fine.
@hmpz36911
@hmpz36911 2 жыл бұрын
Gross, lol
@JoshJorg44
@JoshJorg44 Жыл бұрын
Cow Tongue is actually one of my favorite cuts. once you cook it a long time until tender, you peel the rubber part off and its the best meat ever! and makes great Tacos!
@mevb
@mevb Жыл бұрын
In Sweden, what is nicknamed "Spit soup" is cherry soup, which is a dessert soup consisting of cherry, sugar, vanilla bean, water, corn starch and lemon juice. Similiary to the barley soup, you had to spit the seeds of the cherries that were in the soup, hence the nickname.
@rockstarJDP
@rockstarJDP 2 жыл бұрын
Reminds me of my grandad - even into his 90's he would reuse a single teabag to make as many cuppas as possible before throwing it away, I think his record was 5 cups, and if one went cold he'd insist on it being reheated in the microwave rather than just make a fresh one 😅
@0michelleki020
@0michelleki020 2 жыл бұрын
I mostly reuse a teabag two times, if i'm lucky 3 times.
@lyanwillems4809
@lyanwillems4809 2 жыл бұрын
am i the only one that uses a teabag like 5 times? the wholee day.. or am i just poor
@rockstarJDP
@rockstarJDP 2 жыл бұрын
@@lyanwillems4809 haha two cups max I find, otherwise its basically just hot water
@thistlemoon1
@thistlemoon1 2 жыл бұрын
I thought this was just normal
@shellshell942
@shellshell942 2 жыл бұрын
My Grandma insists I reuse a teabag to make her teas too! She is 94, probably does 3 cups. My Oma lived in Austria during the war (told story to my Mum), she said they had found bacon in horse droppings. She and her neighbor took it home to share amongst the two families, washed it and cooked it. She said they were lucky to find it, at this time no one had any meat. I can never look at bacon the same 🤢
@warroom17
@warroom17 2 жыл бұрын
my mother lived in war time Japan. One of the things she made for me recently was a steamed bun made from rice flour and minced vegetables. it wasn't particularly the tastiest thing, but it was something she looked forward to eating everyday as a child. I was grateful to taste the experience without the war, because it was one thing she could remember that made her happy despite the horrific memories of living in Japan during those times
@genkiferal7178
@genkiferal7178 2 жыл бұрын
I like rice flour breads and pastries.
@rhondaaustin9211
@rhondaaustin9211 Жыл бұрын
This is a sweet story and great comment! Thanks for sharing! Do you happen to know how to make this steamed bun? Care to share?
@lilyhudson8470
@lilyhudson8470 Жыл бұрын
Now that remind me of, “grave of fireflies”😭😭😭💔💔💔
@j0ellyfish
@j0ellyfish Жыл бұрын
@@lilyhudson8470 Yeah, thank the good ol muricans for that.
@saralynne4353
@saralynne4353 Жыл бұрын
I was fortunate in multiple ways, yes I have many wartime recipes and postwar appliances qnd cutlery. I used to can, until my trailer in Japan got destroyed by my neighbors on a free for all, including some appliances. They all got drafted now they know what it's like.
@sherrykeeney7376
@sherrykeeney7376 Жыл бұрын
My grandparents lived threw the depression & WWII but luckily were on a farm they made potato pancakes I love them - also German dishes like hot lettuce a soupy stuff you put over mashed potatoes- it had a vinegar added to it & actual lettuce topped with sliced hard boiled eggs & crumbles of bacon I love that too haven't had it in many decades - but nowadays when I cook I think how hard it was for .y grandmother (mom mom) to make everything from scratch the hard way no convenience- & I can barely do it "with" modern day convenience
@nellabella
@nellabella Жыл бұрын
Omg, I grew up eating this minus the potatoes… cooked lettuce w a piece of fat back, boiled egg, and vinegar. I had no idea we were poor until I was a teenager.
@margarettickle9659
@margarettickle9659 Жыл бұрын
It was simple recipes with not too many ingredients. I dislike expensive restaurants for that reason. More about decoration and presentation than homemade taste. Kids were much happier back then too. It was a peaceful time where the family did things together.
@nutterbutterpop8193
@nutterbutterpop8193 Жыл бұрын
My great grandmother (90) recently wrote about growing up in the Great Depression, and the war.. her mother volunteered as a plane spotter, luckily they never saw any enemy planes.. one story in her writings had choked me up. Her mother was away I think for work (during wwII) and a war plan had crashed on the corner of their street killing two little children. Being that no one had cellphones or anything of the sort, all my great great grandmother knew, was that a plane had killed two little children on her block, where she had left my great grandmother and her little sister that morning. I can’t imagine the dread of not being able to get in contact in a situation like that..thankfully it wasn’t them, and they were both okay.. on the lighter side though, she described eating clams, fried eels, and her grandmother would make her the best rice pudding she’s ever had to this day! I am so so lucky to have her, and so blessed to have the book she’s written on her life! I can’t wait to see her this Easter. :)
@kathyhester3066
@kathyhester3066 2 жыл бұрын
My Dad's parents had a huge garden that got them through the Depression & then World War II. What they didn't use immediately my Grandma Ola canned. Some people nearby had chickens & my Grandparents traded garden produce for eggs & chickens. Grandma baked all their bread, rolls, pies, etc. Meat was for holidays & coffee was served only every other Sunday. Leftover coffee was either reheated in a saucepan or used to make red eyed gravy. Egg shells, used coffee grounds & any peelings, etc. went into the compost bins for next years fertilizer. Seeds were collected & dried for the next years planting.
@asamanyworlds3772
@asamanyworlds3772 2 жыл бұрын
Nyvgrandma
@ray7419
@ray7419 2 жыл бұрын
I still make red eye gravy with ham eggs and biscuits. Absolutely delicious.
@Vidchemy
@Vidchemy 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the idea. I'll have to look up a "red-eyed gravy" recipe. An overseas friend sends me packets of coffee to try for Christmas, and I enjoy trying them, but am not a coffee drinker. The gravy would eliminate waste.
@olajordan9951
@olajordan9951 2 жыл бұрын
Kathy, my name is Ola! Where did your grandparents live ?
@tinaturnerization
@tinaturnerization 2 жыл бұрын
After watching this, it gives me alot more appreciation for what foods are so easily accessible to us in the grocery stores.. I don't think people realize how precious our food is and the process that goes into producing/distributing food
@gmvalentine626
@gmvalentine626 Жыл бұрын
I have become much more aware of how lucky I am to have so much food available to me and I am truly grateful for it.
@pm2886
@pm2886 Жыл бұрын
Not "realising" is a choice. They know, they just think they'll never need to find food the old fashioned way. A lot of them are going to pay for that hubris in the coming months.
@gloriamaryhaywood2217
@gloriamaryhaywood2217 Жыл бұрын
That had to be a stressful time if you were trying to raise and feed your children with your husband away at war? On top of it all that point-system of rationing food put the clencher on it! Much respect for those moms!😉😎
@joanbelmont5450
@joanbelmont5450 Жыл бұрын
Soon we will all know first hand what it feels to live like this again. Build back better.
@franlooving4203
@franlooving4203 Жыл бұрын
Thanks Tina N. It's funny you say that because I think in my head how greatful I am to farmers since I am not the best at growing vegetables. I am fine with fruit and flowers, but growing enough veg to support my family-I so need more practice. I thank them in my head all the time and wonder how I can say thank you. Silly I know, but I appreciate your comment.
@y_fam_goeglyd
@y_fam_goeglyd 9 ай бұрын
My nana in the early 1970s (she passed away in 73 or 74 iirc. I wasn't in double figures at that point) would make parsley soup. It was, from the dredges of my memory, a sort of potato soup with a lot of homegrown parsley in it. Possibly some leek. Dad said they had a good garden during the war. He continued to grow food well into my teens (and I was a bit of a late arrival. My big sisters were heading for high school when I was in nursery!) My dad's family lived in the countryside (working from age 14 on the railway, though, so he had some hair-raising stories!) and they'd barter with farmers for butter, cheese, sausages etc (Bampa was one of the few people who could charge the old acid batteries that the farmers got all their electricity from. Dad & Uncle Al had a tedious, heavy task to do!). All the children would collect hedgerow goodies for Nana to do her magic with. We did the same in the 70s (the hedgerow thing, no need to barter by then!), and hubby even did it in the 90s into this century to make wine. Nana would also grow stinging nettles in her small garden and make us nettle pop. It was quite like ginger beer. I have no idea if ginger beer, as it is here, is in the USA. It's not alcoholic, it's a "soda" which tastes like ginger - more like ground ginger than stem ginger. If you're pregnant with morning sickness (or tbh, just nauseous. I just attach it to pregnancy because I lived off it for three months with my last baby!), it's absolutely fantastic. I haven't had nettle pop since she passed away, but I still remember it! I've made parsley soup - _a_ parsley soup - and it was as good as I remembered.
@markw999
@markw999 Жыл бұрын
My father and his brothers - aged 10-13 at the beginning of the war - were sent to the edge of town with a .22 to poach deer just before dark. If they got caught, they didn't have hunting licenses to lose. They fed dozens of people.
@GraceDollesin
@GraceDollesin Жыл бұрын
My parents grew up during the WW2. I remember stories my parents told us about food they ate. They ate road kill (porcupine,squirrels ,etc.) We are so wasteful in todays generation and also blessed because of the bountiful the earth has to offer . Thank you farmers, fishermen, and all the people who bring food on our table. I’m very grateful!
@sevenn7pure
@sevenn7pure Жыл бұрын
Yes, thank all of them for all they do. However, all of this is being taken away from us purposly. The world is already at war, they just haven't announced it yet. Times are already very rough for some, in Europe more than in the new world, but it's still bad and will get worse. We are indeed moving into very rough times and it will endure for some time unfortunately 😪.
@pamtyree6634
@pamtyree6634 Жыл бұрын
Thank you indeed to all the farmers, ranchers, fishermen and women who supply us with nourishment 🤗
@janbadinski7126
@janbadinski7126 10 ай бұрын
My grandparents had 6 kids during the depression and WWII. Grandpa could grow, catch, or fish to keep everyone well fed. In looking at these stories I realize how fortunate they were. People today don't understand how bleak things were because of the illusion of plenty. That plenty can change in 48 hours if circumstances allow.
@pawpatrolnews
@pawpatrolnews 9 ай бұрын
Not wasteful, we just have no need to by hyper conservative with food.
@queenmotherhane4374
@queenmotherhane4374 Жыл бұрын
My parents were married in 1946. The war was over, but rationing was still in place. My grandmother had to save up sugar ration tickets to give the baker for the wedding cake. Pictures of the cake show it wasn’t covered with frosting, but had a few frosting rosettes on it.
@franlooving4203
@franlooving4203 Жыл бұрын
Oh I haven't heard of the frosting rosettes and I LOVE that idea! I have seen a woman talk about the faux hat box that was decorated to look like a cake and placed on top of the real cake that was tiny and not full of icing. Thanks for sharing this.
@Caperhere
@Caperhere Жыл бұрын
Canada. Still have my grandparents and father’s ration books.
@janicecrose376
@janicecrose376 Жыл бұрын
Queen Mother Hane, my parents were also married in 1946. I remember the sugar rationing very vividly. I was very young and saw my mom accidentally spill some sugar from a big bag. She actually cried and Begged me to Promise to not tell dad. I never realized how significant that was til much later in life.
@acex8124
@acex8124 Жыл бұрын
@ Caper here Here in the U.S.of A. my great-aunt Alice told me about the vouchers. I remember that she told me about gasoline, shoes, and sugar vouchers. I cannot remember but think that flour may have been one. My father said that you could only get one pair of shoes every 2 years. He had to walk to school and to work with cardboard inside of his shoes, because of the holes in the souls of his shoes. I know that there is a lot of rain here in Florida, so he had to change out that cardboard often. It is a good thing that he was not in the snow. If you know where these vouchers are located they may become handy in our near future, huh? lol. Seriously, I would love it if you could send me the list of types of vouchers that they gave out. Thank you, Caper. I am a U.S.of A. citizen. Please anybody out there, I would love to hear the list of our citizens vouchers. Thank you all, and I love you everyone. This is Mrs. Ace X, in Florida.
@chuckschafer6728
@chuckschafer6728 Жыл бұрын
@@acex8124 3 PAIRS A YEAR
@SharonJones-ql8oy
@SharonJones-ql8oy 10 ай бұрын
I was Born in 1953 and I remember Mom telling me these stories. I remember her making that cake with jam between layers😊
@dragoncubes1074
@dragoncubes1074 Ай бұрын
I still do, though I was born in 59. Jam is excellent as a cake filler.
@lscales6131
@lscales6131 Ай бұрын
I remember by grandfather telling me rationing was the reason his parents started growing vegetables themselves. They grew onions and potatoes. Until the day he died his favorite food was potatoes onion soup from his mom (my great grandmother) recipe book.
@kmeccat
@kmeccat 2 жыл бұрын
We still eat sawdust. They call it cellulose now. My grandparents were dairy farmers during WW2. No problem getting meat, milk, eggs and veggies. One of the few times it was a plus to be a farmer!
@marciayingling7983
@marciayingling7983 2 жыл бұрын
And that is one reason I like to grate my own shredded cheese since it is used to keep shredded packaged cheese from sticking together. Also I find bricks of cheese don't mold as quickly.
@amazingsupergirl7125
@amazingsupergirl7125 2 жыл бұрын
I wonder why everyone didn’t have chickens. It’s a great investment
@heatheroberlander14
@heatheroberlander14 2 жыл бұрын
When we were kids our dad taught all of us how to raise, pluck, cook chickens. We could choose to help kill them or breed for eggs. I choose eggs. The damn rooster I had last year made me wish I was better at killing chickens. I absolutely believe, now, roosters are little dinosaurs. He was excellent at guarding the Hens, though.
@T0pMan15
@T0pMan15 2 жыл бұрын
@@marciayingling7983 nah corn starch is used for pregrated cheese.
@searcymasonry
@searcymasonry 2 жыл бұрын
here in central indiana we have a plot of several thousand acres owned by a " paper " company . it gets clear cut every few years when the trees are 4 inch - ish in diameter . ive always felt strongly that this was being made into food . we are surrounded by corn , soy beans , and trees . it doesnt take a genius to figure out what most of our food products are made out of . once i looked at fruit pies at our local savalot store . they had apple , cherry , and peach pies . upon reading the fine print , no fruit was existant in either of the three pies . :{>
@Sh-ih5vk
@Sh-ih5vk 2 жыл бұрын
I remember once my Mamaw had some leftover mashed potatoes. We ended up in the chicken house and garden all over mashed potatoes. With the mashed potatoes as her inspiration she whipped up a amazing meal. We had tater cakes, , boiled eggs, sliced tomatoes, fried green onions, and onion cucumber salad. It was amazing to eat fresh from the earth and watch her make something out of nothing. God knows id love to go back and do it again. I love and miss you Mamaw.
@pm5626
@pm5626 Жыл бұрын
Iv haves fried tater cakes onion tomatoe cucumber salad green beans with only ends of fried bacon n cornbread soaked in buttermilk WE DIDNT WASTE FOOD LIKE PEOPLE DO TODAY WHICH PISSES ME OFF!
@m.p.2534
@m.p.2534 Жыл бұрын
My grandma was born in 1942 and she told me her mom mostly cooked pancakes, pea or barley soups with bits of meat, fruit pies, fish potato pies, corn and vegetable stews from the garden, then long macaroni with the leftovers. They even could afford roast beef every Sunday so they were lucky as non farmers (her father was just a blacksmith). In her poor northern village, buying pigs, cows and chickens plus growing a garden was the best decision her family had made in those days.
@paulkeith5000
@paulkeith5000 10 ай бұрын
My mother, who was a teen during the WW2 years, was a wiz when it came to making sure that no leftovers ever went into the garbage pail. The result was often a dish we kids called "Shut-up-and-eat-it" as that was what she said whenever we tried to push the dish away.
@Pieman29666
@Pieman29666 2 жыл бұрын
Just want to say how awesome the narrator is. Truly pleasant and entertaining sir...
@tahamohammad1741
@tahamohammad1741 2 жыл бұрын
It’s almost a modern Trans-Atlantic narrator accent
@CToppa
@CToppa 2 жыл бұрын
He sounds like the actor James Woods.
@JohnRBIV
@JohnRBIV 2 жыл бұрын
It's good overall but sometimes it's laid on a little thick
@strawberrybananapeel2538
@strawberrybananapeel2538 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, and he isn’t trying to crack corny jokes as well.
@jaehaspels9607
@jaehaspels9607 2 жыл бұрын
He sounds like French Stewart who played Harry on the TV show 3rd Rock from the Sun.
@cgabb9362
@cgabb9362 2 жыл бұрын
I grew up super-poor in the 1970’s. My dad was a Vietnam vet, disabled. My mom went to work, and my dad stayed home and “cooked.” I remember on Friday he cleaned out the fridge and made “meatloaf.” A loaf of food that had hotdogs, leftover pasta, canned vegetables, baked on top of a layer of bread. We had to eat that, too. I’m a professional chef, now. Nobody in my circle will ever eat like that. I feed neighbors, friends, homeless, and coworkers.
@kimberlylholt
@kimberlylholt 2 жыл бұрын
You are a wonderful person.
@lisahinton9682
@lisahinton9682 2 жыл бұрын
@C Gabb Is your dad still around? I hope you thanked him for keeping you all alive, and for not wasting food, as it would have led to empty bellies by week's end. Thank you for sharing your delicious food with everyone around you. But I do hope you thanked your dad for his efforts.
@bonnievalls5037
@bonnievalls5037 2 жыл бұрын
I think its a disgusting shame that our military vets are not provided for Properly when disabled during their service to this country. And remember who put us into that Viet Nam Conflict as an adviser? JFK!
@lugenewhittenberger1983
@lugenewhittenberger1983 2 жыл бұрын
My ex mother-in-law would do something similar only she made left over soup once a week. She had six hungry children to feed so nothing went to waste. People do what they have to in order to feed their kids.
@cathymacmullin6544
@cathymacmullin6544 2 жыл бұрын
Your Dad deserves a better memory than that. You should be ashamed. He did the best he could with what he had and I bet there were days he did not eat so you could. I would say your dad suffered deeply to feed you.
@suewolf3279
@suewolf3279 9 ай бұрын
When I move to New Orleans in the late 1970s I fell in love with French Market coffee. As soon as I told my grandmother about that she said it has chicory doesn't it. I said yes. She said don't bother bringing any back home with you. We had enough of that during World War II
@tonistrother8266
@tonistrother8266 Жыл бұрын
Does anyone else remember milk toast? Toast in a soup plate covered with scalded milk, some butter and salt.
@PuffKitty
@PuffKitty 6 ай бұрын
My mother fed milk toast to us kids in the '50's whenever we were sick 🤢
@murlthomas70
@murlthomas70 5 ай бұрын
I was going to say, I grew up in the fifties and ate milk toast when I was sick. Lol
@user-xf3qt8yn2w
@user-xf3qt8yn2w Ай бұрын
Yes I remember that !!
@patriciathomas7549
@patriciathomas7549 Ай бұрын
Sounds kinda good. These days I might add some cinnamon.
@suechaidez7161
@suechaidez7161 Ай бұрын
my mother made that a lot for breakfast or when we were sick.
@verahinnant8021
@verahinnant8021 Жыл бұрын
I was a little girl also. My dad was a fireman with a slipped disc in his back. He waited to 1945 to get the surgery, which was very rare at that time. But he had a garden, my mom canned, and my dad hunted. So we ate a lot of rabbit,squirrel and some venison. We lived in an area surrounded by military bases. So we had lots of blackout nights and was scary for a 3 or 4 year old. My dad had friends so he would barter with them. Some could get eggs, some could get other things. So they traded a lot of time.even with all of those things I had a wonderful childhood. Beautiful memories. I did shuck a lot of butter beans and snap a lot of green beans for my mom to can. But they are my memories.
@shylagirl2170
@shylagirl2170 Жыл бұрын
And what great memories those are.. kids now a days cannot say the same to many people on the phones and internet that don’t know about real life real world stuff they complain about any and every little thing.. my grandma and grandpa use to use every little thing nothing was thrown out and I would help my grandma as well I love those memories they are the best ❤
@patcummings201
@patcummings201 Жыл бұрын
Born in the 30's,,,lived through 40's,50's. Mother was an excellent cook. We had a large garden and a kitchen garden, begun in March (midwest region). Gardens were the saviors of the day! Organic and hard work, worth every labor. Loved my life then!❤
@honorsilverthorne7227
@honorsilverthorne7227 Жыл бұрын
Did you live in NC? I did. Surrounded by military bases.
@elizabethstump4077
@elizabethstump4077 2 жыл бұрын
Day after Pearl Harbor, my grandmother went out and bought a 50# sack of flour and 50# sack of sugar. She grew up in Germany during WWI and knew rationing was coming.
@selvanpillay3346
@selvanpillay3346 2 жыл бұрын
Your grandma was smart
@jalapeno1119
@jalapeno1119 2 жыл бұрын
Smart woman.
@ameliafroehlich2577
@ameliafroehlich2577 2 жыл бұрын
Smart lady!
@jacquelyndevitte4992
@jacquelyndevitte4992 Жыл бұрын
When I was I kid my dad was on strike. Early 70’s. I remember the strike lasted six months. The last month, we ate nothing but biscuits and gravy. This was in butte Montana. So it can happen at any time and I think the egg shortage and the talk of not raising beef for climate control and threat of war etc is very real. Good to have seeds and a prepper pantry.
@SoonersMommy
@SoonersMommy 3 ай бұрын
Yes, these videos have good info for preppers.
@es6986
@es6986 Жыл бұрын
I wish Weird History would do a video about home delivery Milk Man. I have such good memories of them coming early in the morning with our 🥛 and cheese,cream and eggs.
@margarettickle9659
@margarettickle9659 Жыл бұрын
They put it in our milk shoot.
@Elizabeth-rp1pi
@Elizabeth-rp1pi 6 күн бұрын
@@margarettickle9659 that was my dad…..
@beckydavis1820
@beckydavis1820 2 жыл бұрын
My mother would turn 103 this coming February. Now I know why we had potatoes with every meal. I think she could have turned them into lobster given the will. So many different recipes!
@anicatt
@anicatt 2 жыл бұрын
Happy 103 birthday to your beautiful mother God bless her heart ❤️
@staceykersting705
@staceykersting705 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, with us, it was lots of cabbage. Great replacement for noodles, salad, fills up a soup...mom was a spectacular cook.
@robynjefferson4779
@robynjefferson4779 2 жыл бұрын
Maybe she was Irish?
@beckydavis1820
@beckydavis1820 2 жыл бұрын
@@robynjefferson4779 actually there is Irish on her side. They lived in the mountains 12 kids dad killed in an accident. I guess at that point they would have eaten cardboard need be
@eckankar7756
@eckankar7756 2 жыл бұрын
@@staceykersting705 Same here, cabbage will keep for months if you keep it cool. We'd grow them and store them under the house when I was a kid. Lots of Vitamin C in cabbage.
@JeffreyBoser
@JeffreyBoser 2 жыл бұрын
The stamp system transitioned into a sort of reward system that lasted well into the 70's. I remember my mom saving her stamps for small appliances and cookware that my sister has to this day. :)
@sambowz9077
@sambowz9077 2 жыл бұрын
S&H Green stamps😀
@Stephanie-vn6ir
@Stephanie-vn6ir 2 жыл бұрын
If you remember they also had Plaid Stamps. My mother used her Plaid and S&H Green Stamps to get a brand new folding shopping cart and an iron. Those were the good old days!
@bluedragonfly5145
@bluedragonfly5145 2 жыл бұрын
@@Stephanie-vn6ir I was sorting through my grandma’s photos and papers with her, found several sheets of these stamps.
@bryanjones14
@bryanjones14 2 жыл бұрын
Which ever of us kids helped mom carry in the groceries from the car got the S&H green stamps for our book . I still have a Berkeley fishing rod and real that got circa 1982 !
@Stephanie-vn6ir
@Stephanie-vn6ir 2 жыл бұрын
@@bluedragonfly5145 My Sister and I just donated several books and sheets of the S&H Green Stamps to a thrift store that helps our local Animal shelters get the Animals Spayed and Neutered along with their shots..We also had An S&H Green stamp wall holder that held all the Books & Stamps it was Adorable!
@craigscothern5100
@craigscothern5100 Жыл бұрын
I grew up on bubble and squeak. On Sundays we had the traditional roast. Any left over potatoes, cabbage was kept for lunch on Monday.. My mother would fry them together in lard sometimes adding a chopped onion. The lard made them form a delicious crust. With the price of oil gone through the roof I have gone back to using lard. It makes the best roast potatoes, chips and pastry. If you like your roast potatoes crispy on the outside and light and fluffy on the inside, use lard.
@dianasthings729
@dianasthings729 Жыл бұрын
Lard is way healthier than seed oils. (trans fats)
@saritataylor4235
@saritataylor4235 Жыл бұрын
I think I read that lard has less fats than butter or oils. Interesting that we were made to feel we should not use lard. It's way better at browning foods.
@ajrwilde14
@ajrwilde14 3 ай бұрын
Lard is 100% fat as is oil@@saritataylor4235
@ajrwilde14
@ajrwilde14 3 ай бұрын
Tallow is probably better, it has more nutrients than lard.
@bettypearson5570
@bettypearson5570 Жыл бұрын
Beef tongue can be rubbery but isn't tough. It is a consistent texture throughout. After boiling with onions and herbs we would cool it and then slice into thin slices and it would retain it's shape. With any other meat you run the risk of it breaking into pieces. But this was more like the firmness of cold cuts. We were too poor growing up to be able to buy extravagant things like a chub of bologna so this was our version of lunch meat for our sandwiches when we got tired of jam and butter sandwiches.
@marysuniga1157
@marysuniga1157 9 ай бұрын
It’s actually good after you boil take the skin off and dice my great grand ma used to make it I also remember eat lard on a rolled up tortilla
@nancywilson1488
@nancywilson1488 2 жыл бұрын
Menus were so much different when I was a girl back then. Fresh fruit and vegetables were seasonal. Jams and jellies provided the vitamins during the cold weather and vegetables had to be canned. Local areas ate local grown food .We take for granted today the great variety in our supermarkets brought in by trucks and ships from afar. There were no supermarkets and no fast transportation. No freezers, either. Kids were excited to find an orange in their Christmas stockings! The 1960’s introduced new seasonings and new food. And it’s gotten “worse” (to me.)I still prefer the “simple”food.!
@hmpz36911
@hmpz36911 2 жыл бұрын
I feel so much better when I eat simple foods. It's like when you fill your gas tank with premium gas and your engine runs clean.
@beautylovess13
@beautylovess13 2 жыл бұрын
My mom was born in 1964. She got an orange in her stocking every year. It’s crazy how much the world has changed so quickly in such a short amount of time.
@havabird2772
@havabird2772 2 жыл бұрын
We got apples, oranges, pecans and walnuts!
@dwightl5863
@dwightl5863 2 жыл бұрын
I knew an old farmer that grew up in the era you are talking about. And told us it was such a treat to get an orange that he ate the peelings as well.
@beautylovess13
@beautylovess13 2 жыл бұрын
I never once got anything like that. I think this generation’s parents overcompensated…out of love, because they wanted their children to have more/ to have better, the American dream, but in the midst of it, we (millennials/gen z/whatever you want to call it) my generation…got spoiled. There was so much so fast. We went from being thankful and amazed by oranges in our stockings one generation to now expecting stockings full of toys and treats and a tree full of presents. It’s all so much😅whatever you believe etc….it would be nice to go back to basics. Just my rant.
@victoriawilliams2786
@victoriawilliams2786 2 жыл бұрын
In acknowledgement of "Victory Gardens"; Maine just became the first state in the Union to vote that growing/raising your own food is a legal right. Some people don't realize that they do not have the legal right to grow their own gardens or raise their own farm animals for food. I was stunned when I learned about those facts. So I definitely voted that food is a human right.
@terrimoore8433
@terrimoore8433 2 жыл бұрын
That is just crazy! I believe your state government needs an overhaul. I don't think you could tell anyone in my county here in Arkansas that we could not grow our gardens. We would just laugh at them.
@geddylee4082
@geddylee4082 2 жыл бұрын
In North Korea today, people can not legally grow their own food. Everything is owned by the government. Everything. People risk jail if they plant a small garden.
@terrimoore8433
@terrimoore8433 2 жыл бұрын
@@geddylee4082 that is just sick...
@sarakennedy1385
@sarakennedy1385 2 жыл бұрын
Michigan tyrannical governor Gretchen whitmer ban the sell of seed durning the big scamdemic scare ,,,yet she and her hubby did as they pleased as did most of the democrats rino politicians...
@sarakennedy1385
@sarakennedy1385 2 жыл бұрын
@@terrimoore8433 Tyrannical governor Gretchen whitmer in Michigan did ..yet she/ hubby did as they pleased.
@normansilver905
@normansilver905 Жыл бұрын
I was a kid in thee 2nd grade in early WWII. My mom was the block coordinator for the Ration Stamps. The women of the neighborhood all banded together. They setup a Vicory Garden, a Can collection point, collected newspapers and magazines, a cooking grease pot and also gasoline, tire and auto parts stamps too. We rode the local trolly car, used public transit and had block parties. One who was a Trailways Bus driver brought us whatever fresh produce she could find on her bus trips to agricultural areas. Three worked in he wartime aircraft production plants and brought us newsletters from their plants. AND we had twice a week "DROP!" drills in our classrooms and a once a week "Exit the building and go to the bomb shelter" drill.
@donnamcknight3584
@donnamcknight3584 8 ай бұрын
I was born during WW ll. My Mom made things like cabbage & noodles. However, my Grandfather had a huge garden and fruit trees plus berries! And he owned a butcher shop so, according to my sister, the family are well and shared with our friends and neighbors.
@Patterrz
@Patterrz 2 жыл бұрын
Amazing how creative people can get with limited resources
@SimonVanliew26
@SimonVanliew26 2 жыл бұрын
What’s really amazing is that a verified channel has only got 6 likes on their comment!
@claytonhawk8512
@claytonhawk8512 2 жыл бұрын
Necessity is the mother of invention
@staceykersting705
@staceykersting705 2 жыл бұрын
Have chickens if possible. Eggs are such a great source of protein.
@sweetie3.145
@sweetie3.145 2 жыл бұрын
@@staceykersting705 so are chickens😏. Lol
@azureramorganna7337
@azureramorganna7337 2 жыл бұрын
Learn to make Congee. 1c rice 8c water. Abs anything else you would like to add.
@scasey1960
@scasey1960 2 жыл бұрын
It confuses the issue to combine US and European food shortages. Mass hunger throughout Europe does not compare to US rationing. I suppose most people today do not appreciate what was required to win the war against fascism.
@BTScriviner
@BTScriviner 2 жыл бұрын
They've don't, which is why so many Americans seem keen to embrace it now.
@Nifflerify
@Nifflerify 2 жыл бұрын
Well looks like we'll have another crack at it...
@SuperSPatrick
@SuperSPatrick 2 жыл бұрын
I didn't get confused.
@superIBM1231
@superIBM1231 2 жыл бұрын
I thought it was refreshing to get something other than an American view on WW2
@horacegentleman3296
@horacegentleman3296 2 жыл бұрын
@@Nifflerify delusions
@johnbehneman1546
@johnbehneman1546 5 ай бұрын
THANK YOU SO MUCH. YOU GUYS ANSWERED A LOT OF MY QUESTION ABOUT CERTAIN DISHES. GREAT VIDEO AND A GREAT HISTORY LESSON. THANKS FOR SHARING. PLEASE CONTINUE TO SPEAK YOUR TRUTH.
@twoshaayea5304
@twoshaayea5304 Жыл бұрын
My elderly friend told me her story of how her family in her country ate what they called wheat meat because flour was much more available and cheaper than meat during the war in her country. She said they also drank burnt grains for coffee substitute. She also commented that wheat meat or seitan was eaten in her country before it became common in the United states.
@annasultana6433
@annasultana6433 2 жыл бұрын
Greetings from the island of Malta where our people were living in shelters for 2 years under constant bombardments obviously basic food was practically non existent yet they survived, so proud of all the Maltese who never gave up!
@brandycarter9829
@brandycarter9829 2 жыл бұрын
The folks, in every country involved, who rationed without complaint and relied on creativity to feed their loved ones, won the war along with the soldiers as far as I’m concerned. My mom used to tell me about how my great-uncle would hunt every day so they could enjoy fresh meat during rationing!
@melissaborowy4241
@melissaborowy4241 2 жыл бұрын
Imagine this happening today. Cries of MaH rIgHtS would ring out and protests would ensue. It’s gross how entitled people are in this country these days. Especially because these same people feel the poor are so much lesser than them.
@staceykersting705
@staceykersting705 2 жыл бұрын
Plenty of squirrels died for the cause. Rabbits, too. I'm not a vegan or anything, but one thing good to know; lentils are a good meat substitute. Try beans a couple times a week. Great for your health.
@staceykersting705
@staceykersting705 2 жыл бұрын
@Cherish God My mom said, during the Depression, men wd come to the back door, begging to work for food. My grandma wd always manage to feed them.
@staceykersting705
@staceykersting705 2 жыл бұрын
@Cherish God Our whole family learned generosity thru previous generation's hardships. To this day, my now grown kids are known for feeding ppl, esp children.
@kathleenmichelet6493
@kathleenmichelet6493 2 жыл бұрын
@@melissaborowy4241 we can't even get them to wear a mask!!!
@colletteseders2874
@colletteseders2874 Жыл бұрын
My mother in law was raising 3 children in The Netherlands during the war. She told stories about boiling tulip bulbs to feed her children. Tulip bulbs are poisonous, especially in large amounts, but she boiled them in milk, and then mashed them with potatoes. Sometimes she would have fresh fish to add to the mixture, because they lived right on the coast. She also grew a garden, but her produce was often stolen by occupying soldiers.
@mehere8038
@mehere8038 6 ай бұрын
I was going to say, "aren't tulips poisonous?" yikes that she needed to do that!
@pgandy1
@pgandy1 Жыл бұрын
The meat or lack of it, is what I remember mostly. There was spam and bologna, fried or otherwise. I had dislike for both and stopped with the spam after the war but ate bologna sandwiches from my brown lunch bag at school which stopped by high school. 20-30 years after the war I bought a can of spam out of nostalgia. It wasn’t as bad as I remembered, but that one can was enough. We had fish from time to time as we lived on the coast. It was always flounder. I didn’t like it nor the bones I had to contend with. And then there was hamburger in every conceivable manner, when available and no telling what was ground up in it. We were lucky as there was a lady in the next block that raised chickens that was a supply of eggs and meat. When in the need, we would walk around the corner, buy the chicken and she would place its head on a stump and gave a whack with a hatchet. I think at any other time there would have been a conflict with the zoning laws, but at that time who carried? Vegetables always seemed available, onions, string beans, potatoes, and beets. Mom had a thing she called Spanish Omelet that she served us kids frequently, I think mostly because it was easy to prepare. This was a can of Campbell’s Vegetable Soup, water, and sliced green olives. I liked those olives. Campbell’s Tomato Soup made with milk was also a favourite. Butter was non-existent, and I learned to eat bread substituting salt. It seems that peanut butter and jelly sandwiches were readily available. I remember the ration books and those tokens, and my mom or grandma saying that she couldn’t buy whatever it was that day.
@c0ya1
@c0ya1 Жыл бұрын
Whelp, we might have to do this again, if things gets even more crazy.
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