What North Americans REALLY Ate Growing Up in the 1960s

  Рет қаралды 7,007

Vintage Lifestyle USA

Vintage Lifestyle USA

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 39
@margaretlouise6200
@margaretlouise6200 Ай бұрын
SOS doesn't stand for same old stuff. It stands for shit on a shingle, which is the name given to it in WW2 by service men.
@leeannafitzgerel8740
@leeannafitzgerel8740 Ай бұрын
According to the military men in my family, SOS stands for "S-word" (poop) on a Shingle
@ghw7192
@ghw7192 Ай бұрын
In the South, New. Years Day was collard greens and black eyed peas
@Cook-hb2nf
@Cook-hb2nf Ай бұрын
Here in NE Tennessee, we eat blackeyed peas, smoked jaw meat, and greens. If we don't have greens in the freezer we use cabbage and we bake a pone of cornbread 😋
@margaretlouise6200
@margaretlouise6200 Ай бұрын
Where I was in the south it was cabbage and black eyed peas.
@richardabraham5663
@richardabraham5663 Ай бұрын
My dad was a vet from WWII and we ate SOS. I promise you in this context it’s shit on a shingle. My father refused to eat this meal!
@DenWell-SeedsOfChaos
@DenWell-SeedsOfChaos Ай бұрын
This video will make you so hungry!
@gulfgypsy
@gulfgypsy Ай бұрын
My mom used to make wonderful pork roast with sauerkraut, onions, apples and potatoes.
@01maggie
@01maggie Ай бұрын
Yummy 😋❤
@BLACKVIKNGS88
@BLACKVIKNGS88 Ай бұрын
Tavern style pizza is Chicago pizza.
@Cook-hb2nf
@Cook-hb2nf Ай бұрын
In the South, SOS wasn't the same old stuff. It was called shịt on shingles.
@maryjane-vx4dd
@maryjane-vx4dd Ай бұрын
My mother-in-law called it creamed chipped beef. She taught me, so ...
@debdubois3636
@debdubois3636 Ай бұрын
@@maryjane-vx4dd She was more genteel than the soldiers who coined the original name.
@b1k2q34
@b1k2q34 Ай бұрын
Ketchup inside the pizza? Wtf
@NancyD...
@NancyD... Ай бұрын
I don't think so but that is what he said 😮
@debdubois3636
@debdubois3636 Ай бұрын
They say northern, I say Midwest.
@amypulitano7516
@amypulitano7516 Ай бұрын
Stouffers makes a really good creamed chipped beef. AKA SOS. You can pour it on toast, biscuits or on mashed potatoes.
@maryjane-vx4dd
@maryjane-vx4dd Ай бұрын
Never heard tater tot casserole called hot dish. Almost everyone I know lives it except me
@vlrissolo
@vlrissolo Ай бұрын
Down south many churches still have fried fish dinners. Cat fish is fantastic if soaked in buttermilk 1st, like many foods. It is the non-fishiest fish😅 and just delicious... I don't think it endangered like many sea fish are. Quite the opposite. They have been introduced to lakes and are killing of native species. I wish I could remember what large city it I s where the huge catfish are hunting and eating the PIGEONS! It's horrible. Yeah, fried catfish! Let's make it popular 😊😅
@vlrissolo
@vlrissolo Ай бұрын
Eggs Benedict will never get old❤
@rg1whiteywins598
@rg1whiteywins598 Ай бұрын
Smoked fish I had at age three. It was the most delicious thing in the world. I loved rye bread too. But we had mostly very much different foods than these. I grew up in Minnesota. I'm Italian so we had a lot of Italian food as well as plain things like steak pork chops, chicken, fish shrimp etc. And always a couple veggies, a salad, rice or potatoes or pasta, relishes or called crudites a fruit and usually a dessert mom made. My friends didn't eat a lot of your foods shown here either. ????? All Minnesota people.
@vlrissolo
@vlrissolo Ай бұрын
Yes, it's all where you grew up and when. I ate raw clams as long back as I can remember. Still love them but full belly fried clams are the best! No place in over 50 miles sells the here in the Capital city of NC😢. We found a place q few years back but they stopped selling them stating they were too expensive!? We couldn't get olive oil when we moved here in the 70s. Mom had to MAKE ricotta cheese ,and her friends shipped real parmesan cheese and the olive oil!... I still love smoked oysters 😊
@raulduke6105
@raulduke6105 Ай бұрын
Lots of hot dogs and hamburgers pizza started rolling in 1965ish
@b1k2q34
@b1k2q34 Ай бұрын
Hummus on toast? What
@debdubois3636
@debdubois3636 Ай бұрын
Yeah, there was no hummus in SOS
@vlrissolo
@vlrissolo Ай бұрын
I heard S.O.S. stood for Save Our Souls... which makes more sense since I believe it was a military code originally.
@FranciscoJHerrera429
@FranciscoJHerrera429 Ай бұрын
Some people in the military call it sh*t on a shingle 😬😬😬
@vlrissolo
@vlrissolo Ай бұрын
@FranciscoJHerrera429 yes, but an SOS is a call for help.
@elainemarten2147
@elainemarten2147 Ай бұрын
@@vlrissolo lol maybe you needed it after eating it
@vlrissolo
@vlrissolo Ай бұрын
@elainemarten2147 have you ever had it I've only had it with ground beef. It's fantastic and I'm telling you if you make it once you'll be making it once a week! It's easy and it's delicious and I want some right now but no it doesn't make you run to the bathroom. I think that some of the soldiers made up
@maryjane-vx4dd
@maryjane-vx4dd Ай бұрын
I always made it with dried beek in a jar. It was real salt, so I'd rinse the dried, salted beef. My family lived it​@@vlrissolo
@christopherrobinson1219
@christopherrobinson1219 Ай бұрын
4:45 it's crazy how Italian beef stands for snitching in 2024
@margaretlouise6200
@margaretlouise6200 Ай бұрын
We didn't eat fast food in the 60's. We mostly ate food made at home.
@patriciasantillanes2497
@patriciasantillanes2497 Ай бұрын
Chipped Beef and HUMMUS (?) on toast? I've lived on this earth for 68 years and have never heard of that ungodly combination. Perhaps you have a computer voicing these episodes, maybe you shouldn't. Cuz nobody l know of would ever combine those things, that's just disgusting. And if someone actually did, they might be on crack.
@azsunburns
@azsunburns Ай бұрын
This channel is horrible at getting anything right
25 Cheap Meals Grandma Cooked for Less Than a Dollar
1:00:58
Vintage Lifestyle USA
Рет қаралды 13 М.
What We Ate During 1960s Holiday Dinners That VANISHED Forever!
1:02:20
Vintage Lifestyle USA
Рет қаралды 7 М.
Мясо вегана? 🧐 @Whatthefshow
01:01
История одного вокалиста
Рет қаралды 7 МЛН
Tuna 🍣 ​⁠@patrickzeinali ​⁠@ChefRush
00:48
albert_cancook
Рет қаралды 148 МЛН
99.9% IMPOSSIBLE
00:24
STORROR
Рет қаралды 31 МЛН
25 Things From 1960s Once Necessary, NOW COMPLETELY OBSOLETE!
25:32
America Before
Рет қаралды 394 М.
What other countries are told is "American"
12:53
J.J. McCullough
Рет қаралды 4,1 МЛН
26 Of The Most Expensive Liquids In The World | Business Insider Marathon
3:49:32
The History of Burger King | Burger Wars Explained
39:30
EAT'S HISTORY
Рет қаралды 54 М.
Here's What We Stockpiled To Survive the Great Depression!
59:03
Vintage Lifestyle USA
Рет қаралды 100 М.
The Rise And Fall Of American Chain Restaurants | Compilation
1:31:15
Weird History Food
Рет қаралды 239 М.
25 Foods That Kept Us Alive Before Refrigeration Existed
1:00:36
Vintage Lifestyle USA
Рет қаралды 334
We've been conditioned to OVER-CONSUME- A throwback to rationing.
16:27
Real Vintage Dolls House
Рет қаралды 79 М.
How Boomers SURVIVED On Leftovers Without Spending Money
1:00:19
Vintage Lifestyle USA
Рет қаралды 10 М.
What Food was Served at Wild West Saloons?
21:52
Tasting History with Max Miller
Рет қаралды 5 МЛН