Grannie Pantries
A place to appreciate the horrors of vintage cookbooks
Saturday, July 4, 2026
Ground beef gets patriotic
Wednesday, July 1, 2026
A Royal Pain
All-American Royal Desserts (Standard Brands Incorporated) has such a patriotic cover that I thought it might be for America's bicentennial, but it's actually from 1968-- a few years too early.
And as I flipped through, I was dismayed (but not particularly surprised) to see it celebrating a dark chapter in our history.
It is interesting to know that Royal Lemon Flavor Pie Filling apparently included a "flavor capsule" that might not dissolve without special prompting, though.
The booklet has an extremely expansive definition of cake. When we're talking desserts, I don't think it's unreasonable to expect some flour-and-sugar-based concoction at the very least. Even if we're being more expansive-- like salmon cakes or rice cakes-- people usually expect them to at least be solid. Nobody hears Peach-Pineapple Upside-Down Cake and imagines this:
Well, nobody except Royal, obviously. They apparently didn't think they could sell this as a salad. Maybe they figured people were getting tired of gelatin-based desserts (even though my cookbook collection would suggest otherwise!) and thought calling it a cake was the way to go? By the time guests who had been promised cake realized they were actually getting gelatin, it was too late to object...
There's even a layer "cake." (Okay, the other one had layers too, but one is meant to represent the peach-pineapple topping and I'd say the other is meant as the "cake." This one is all "cake.")
And if you pay attention to the colors of the layers, you can probably guess that this is billed as "Citrus Cake."
The booklet isn't all fake cakes, though. There's an attempt to highlight a brand-new product-- pistachio pudding mix. (I assumed that Jell-O created pistachio pudding, but it was actually Royal in 1966.) This recipe doesn't sound bad-- just like it was probably a real pain in the ass to make, and more likely to result in a mess than to be the cute little individual servings the recipe developers envisioned.
I've always thought chocolate and pistachio pudding were a great combination that most people don't seem to think about. Here, they're combined, but I can't imagine Pistachio Cups coming out well. I have never tried peeling thin chocolate shells filled with pistachio pudding out of paper cups, but I can already imagine bits of broken chocolate cups and globs of pistachio pudding covering the work surface... I initially wondered why the instructions didn't say to make the chocolate cups, remove them from the paper, and then fill the cups with pudding. That seems like it would be way less messy. But then I realized the instructions are probably an implicit admission the recipe is unlikely to work very well. The recipe writers probably realized the cups might have holes in them and/or crack on being removed from the paper cups, so trying to fill them with pudding after they've already been removed would obviously be a losing proposition. Better to get the cooks to actually use the pistachio pudding mix before they realize the whole recipe is a waste of time.
Other recipes seem mainly fine, at least until you get to some weird little twist. I'd expect a recipe for a whipped-cream-topped chiffon pie, for instance, but what is with the weird brownish lumps in this pie's topping?
If you remembered that prune whip used to be a popular dessert, give yourself 50 bonus points. This is Orange Chiffon Pie with Prune Topping.
I'm certainly not opposed to a flavored whipped cream, but I doubt "prune" is at the top of anyone's list of flavors they would request...
And of course, this post would be incomplete without at least one terrifying "salad." The picture may not look too bad if you're only half-paying attention...
But then you'll look closer and think the mold looks kind of lumpy, and the topping on the cream is not walnut halves, but ...
Shrimp! Yes, Lime-Cheese Salad with Shrimp Sauce combines sweet lime gelatin with lumpy cottage cheese and disconcerting onion, mayo, and horseradish before plunking a blob of shrimp salad into the middle. That's 1960s "cooking" at its "finest."
This booklet should make you think twice about wanting the Royal treatment... I don't want to leave you with a bad taste, though, so I'll end with a picture of the back cover (really just because I am a sucker for pictures of old products, and I assume anybody who shows up here shares my weakness).
I love that the Burgerbits for dogs hung out with the coffee and tea.
Saturday, June 27, 2026
Some snibbled wet bumpers for July
Happy (almost) July! July is when things REALLY start to heat up-- both in the daily weather forecast and in Home Gardener's Cookbook (Marjorie Page Blanchard, 1974).You could fit the February chapter into the July chapter three times and still have room to spare. The July section showcases recipes for all of mid-summer's heavy hitters: cherries and berries, green beans, tomatoes, and of course, zucchini.
I'll start with the green bean recipe just because I like the title. I wasn't sure what "snibbled" meant, but it's a fun word.
So I tried to look it up and... I still don't know what "snibbled" means. There's a recipe for Snibbled Beans on the Mount Vernon website, but that one has a sweet-n-sour egg sauce over green beans, onion, and bacon. I also saw some references to "snippled beans," but they're pickled. So maybe Blanchard just heard the term somewhere and made up her own version?
I picked the tomato recipe because I thought the title didn't do it any favors.
"Deviled Tomatoes" probably sounds fine to people who like things like deviled eggs, but adding "wet"? I don't know.... Makes it sound like something went wrong in the deviling process and the cook feels compelled to warn the diners that this batch is a little off, so they'll need extra napkins.
At least the name of the Zucchini Sauce for Pasta is pretty straightforward.
It sounds pretty bland, but it would help use up the bumper crop of zucchini, and it's probably fine as long as you keep the pepper and Parmesan on the table so diners can add as much extra as they need to make it taste like something.
We will end with a dessert-- once again chosen for its name. This one sounds cute!
I am all for referring to hand pies as "bumpers." Plus, it's fun that you can use bumpers to help use up a bumper crop of cherries!
Okay, it's too nice a day to spend it all marveling at old recipe names... It's only (almost) July once a year, so I'm going out to enjoy it.
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
Modern(ish) poultry in family meals!
Saturday, June 20, 2026
Not committed to the bit
The recipe for Meat Loaf in the Women's Circle Home Cooking magazine (April 1990) is a little odd-- subbing in All-bran for the usual bread or cracker crumbs. (Frankly, you don't see a lot of recipes mixing All-bran cereal with tomato sauce, onion, mustard, and chili powder.)
But that's not why I picked it.
You might notice a theme: the Cherry Coffee Cake that shared the page also features All-bran, this time with the more expected dessert-y ingredients, like sugar, pecans, and maraschino cherries.
The reason I really picked the recipes, though, is because of the section of the magazine where I found them.
I don't think Mary Pledge Peterson was very committed to the bit, considering that one recipe in the "Cooking for Two" section serves six, and the other serves eight to nine. Yes, the headnote for the meat loaf insists "You'll welcome the extra servings for sandwiches, to reheat in the microwave oven or on a griddle," but nearly any food that home cooks make can also be eaten as leftovers. Same thing with noting that the coffee cake "Freezes well." Sure, but a lot of desserts do. I didn't major in math, but I'm pretty sure "Cooking for Two" is meant to imply that the recipes will serve TWO without leaving a bunch of leftovers. Otherwise, pretty much every recipe in this booklet fits the "cooking for two" requirement, in which case... WHY BOTHER WITH THIS SECTION AT ALL?
Maybe I'm overthinking this, but I don't care. And no, a slab of microwaved leftover meat loaf will not calm me down.
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
The mystery of cooking for two
I was surprised to find a copy of Cooking for Two (USDA, August 1974) so battered and taped up among my grandma's old cookbooks.
As I mentioned before, I don't really remember her using recipes for very much, but this book clearly got used. The date is 1974, though, not too long before their youngest child left for good. Maybe grandma was having trouble cutting her cooking back to a manageable level for two people, and this was a help. (Come to think of it, she'd cook holiday meals for 10 that could easily have served at least twice as many people, so this seems kind of likely....)
But then I went through the recipes, and many of them are so sad and basic that I was once again shocked that grandma not only gave this book a second glance, but apparently used it regularly. I mean, there's a recipe to make mashed potatoes from instant potatoes.
She made them from scratch as long as I knew her, but even if she wasn't so inclined, the recipe for using instant mashed potatoes is right on the package they're sold in! I can't imagine why anybody would need a cookbook to explain it.
There was also a recipe for something that's so easy most middle-schoolers can manage it without formal instructions: grilled cheese sandwiches. (And it's not like this recipe would be hard to cut down!)
These are SAD grilled cheeses, too, filled with just one thin slice of process cheese. I always use at least a couple types: a slice of process cheese because it's a good melter and a slice of whatever other cheese I already have open so it will taste better. (Plus a slice or two of Tofurky "ham" for some smoke flavor, and maybe a sprinkle of shredded mozzarella if I have some open and want a nice cheese pull.)
At least this sad little grilled cheese recipe comes with an interesting variation.
I never thought of combining my two favorite types of sandwiches, and I'm still not convinced it's a good idea, but I'm also a bit intrigued...
Speaking of SAD meals... I wasn't surprised to see recipes for cooking dried beans or peas in the book, but I expected them to be used as ingredients in other recipes. The recipes seem to expect readers to straight-up eat the plain cooked legumes as a meal, though.
To make lightly-salted cooked split peas into a meal, all you have to add is a fruit-cottage cheese salad and a slice of yellow cake. If you've got dried beans, on the other hand...
Serve 'em with coleslaw and applesauce. I'm not making fun of beans. They can be great in things, but I've never been tempted to just open up a can of kidney beans and call it dinner.
To be fair, the pages with these recipes also offer a bit of advice on how to make the beans more flavorful.
But throwing in some bacon drippings or a bit of ham will only take it so far. I still can't imagine it feeling much like a main dish without a little more assistance.
Then I saw a recipe for rice and beans. That would have to be much better, right?
Not so much. It's barely different-- just adding rice and instructing cooks to include a little meat for flavoring. Not even a few aromatics, herbs, or a couple drops of hot sauce!
The tomato-meat sauce (also known as spaghetti sauce!) is similarly bland.
No seasonings aside from onion and a little Worcestershire sauce. (Maybe this cookbook is why grandma always bought Prego instead of making her own tomato sauce?)
The book is falling apart, and a lot of pages are stained, though, so I imagine she must have used it. The only recipe I can definitively say she tried was "Chinese-Style Dinner."
You can see how I knew-- she didn't want all that soy sauce! So I guess the blandness wasn't necessarily such an issue for grandma. Still, I am not sure what she saw in such a basic cookbook when she'd already been cooking for decades. Maybe it was a comfort when dealing with an empty nest? Now, it's just a reminder that we can never truly understand anyone else's life... There are always a few surprising, nearly-inexplicable bits if you have a chance to look closely.















































