Grannie Pantries
A place to appreciate the horrors of vintage cookbooks
Saturday, January 17, 2026
It's not easy to make cooking easy, even if you do have a microwave
Wednesday, January 14, 2026
There's no pressure to make these recipes....
Before the days of Instant Pots, home cooks who wanted things cooked quickly relied on pressure cookers, so I find pressure cooker manuals from time to time. I'm not sure when Mirro's Speed Pressure Cooker and Canner booklet came out, but the addresses in it have zip codes, so it's post-July 1963. Mirro was acquired by The Newell Companies in 1983 (at least, if Healthy Canning is to be believed), so it's before that. The cover looks like it's closer to the 1960s than the 1980s.
And I think people in the 1980s might have been at least a tiny bit more adventurous with spices and Mexican flavors than the writers of this booklet were. I mean, as far as I can tell, the only heat in the "Hot Tamales" is the physical heat generated by the pressure cooker.
And I am far from a tamale expert, but doesn't the recipe usually involve a filling wrapped in masa and then a corn husk (or other inedible wrapper) before being steamed? This recipe is basically unsweetened sloppy joe filling on a bun. (And why would you need to pressure cook that in the first place? It's not like sloppy joes are known for being too tough! Even the recipe points out that pressure cooking could actively be a problem, advising cooks, "If mixture is not thick enough, cook it uncovered to evaporate liquid.")
The Mexican Scramble seems at least vaguely more aligned with my limited understanding of Mexican cuisine-- it's got a little chili powder and some corn.
I'm not really sure why a lot of the recipes are included in a pressure cooker book, though, as they seem like they would be better suited for just a regular old cookbook. Take the Saucy Peas and Cucumbers, for instance.
I've always regarded frozen peas as something you add a recipe at the last minute and cook just until they are warmed through. Otherwise, they turn an ugly shade of green and smell like something that got forgotten in your gym locker over Christmas break. SO WHY WOULD YOU PRESSURE COOK THEM?
And the Macaroni Tuna Casserole is basically the same dish my mom made just in a regular saucepan.
Cook your pasta. Drain it. Stir in a can of tuna and a can of cream-of-mushroom soup. If you just heat it briefly so the soup and tuna aren't cold, it's done! Why pressure cook it? Hoping the pasta will get extra mushy?
I guess Mirro was succumbing to the same temptation that lured microwave cookbook authors to recommend cooking everything in the microwave--Homemade bread! Whole lobsters! Batches of cookies!-- regardless of whether that was the best appliance for the job. Ignore the stinky, army-green peas and disintegrated macaroni and just be thankful you can use the pressure cooker for everything! Of course, recipes like these might make cooks regret the purchase, but by then, it's too late. Mirro's already got their money.
Saturday, January 10, 2026
Don't tell them it's healthy! Unless you do...
In the introductory chapter to Carlton Fredericks Cook Book for Good Nutrition (updated 1974 edition), Fredericks admonishes readers to "never place a dish or a meal before your husband and the children and announce that it's (a) a new one, and (b) good for them." I'm not so sure he believed part b of this rule, though, as he sometimes gave recipes titles that give away the game. (And it was a game because "taking care of oneself ... is essentially a feminine philosophy," and "American men, doubtful of their masculinity, suffer great anxiety when asked to participate in something they consider feminine. They therefore are charter-bound to reject anything that is good for them." I swear, the more I read this book, the more depressingly current it seems...)
But anyway, don't let them know you're serving something good for them. Just call it Soybean-Bran Yeast Muffins. That name certainly doesn't have the stench of "health food" about it.
Or maybe whip up a nice big Vitamin B Protein Loaf.
Granted, "protein" might not be so bad if the man of the house thinks only in terms of gains. But still, the vitamin B shouldn't lead, and "protein loaf" doesn't exactly have the most appetizing sound. If you're going to eat a meat-based loaf, you probably want to know what kind of meat it is. Presenting it as mystery meat probably isn't the best move.
The next item-- Vitamin-Protein Cookies-- might sound nearly acceptable to the types of guys who now buy things like Lenny & Larry's Complete Cookies (and they are definitely not a sponsor. In case you don't realize, I am kinda making fun of them! Plus, I have, like, 12 readers, so asking me to advertise anything would be a total waste of money.), but 1. the original target audience for this book was not exposed to that kind of marketing, so I'm guessing this title would be a harder sell, and 2. even Lenny & Larry know "complete cookie" sounds better than "vitamin-protein cookie."
Of course, if you're giving the family a cookie that is enjoyed by children primarily for its "chewing exercise" because it consists of nothing more than skim milk solids, wheat germ, a little sugarless sweetener, and whatever variety of baby food the household has on hand (up to and including strained meat), it probably doesn't matter what you call it. I'm guessing most family members will be pretty goddamn resistant.
So maybe Fredericks just ignored his own rules because he realized they may not be particularly helpful--it would take very little effort to deduce that this stuff is supposed to be "healthy"-- and hoped the readers wouldn't catch on until after they bought the book? Or maybe he was just lazy, like I am as I end this post somewhat abruptly.
Wednesday, January 7, 2026
A book that made nutrition "great"
Saturday, January 3, 2026
It's January-- Get Ready to Garden!
Wednesday, December 31, 2025
A "Fabulous" Finale for the Year
I've got some loose pages with "Betty Baker Tested" headings. I suspect they were from a calendar, as they have a hole in the top of the page-- but if it's a calendar, I don't have any indication of dates. In any case, the year is ending, so we will check out some of the recipes from the "Fabulous Finale Spread" page-- both because it's a finale and because a lot of people eat appetizers for New Year's Eve.
First up, of course, is the titular spread.
It starts out sounding rather cheesecake-esque, with all that cream cheese and sugar. But combine the fear of salmonella from the raw egg yolk and the tinny graininess of canned fruit cocktail, and this takes a turn for the no-thank-you.
I am also not sure what "thin lemon-scroll-type cookies" might entail. My Google search suggests it might mean rolled-up tubular cookies (like Pirouettes), but it would be hard to spread anything on those-- much less big chunks of fruit cocktail! The picture clearly looks more like it's for a recipe for one of those desserts that can pass as salads in the Midwest than for a spread.
Our appetizer platter could have a very last bite of Christmas with the Christmas Strawberries (no relation to The Cooking Calendar's Winter Strawberries).
This offers yet another odd way to ingest cream cheese-- this time mixed with liver sausage, blue cheese, and onion (and mayo as needed), then shaped into "strawberries" before being rolled in "Fine bread crumbs, colored red" and given parsley leaves to help complete the strawberry look. I'm sure that dying bread crumbs red because you need to make fake strawberries is a fine way to end the old year...
To finish off the platter, here's a combination of dippers and dip: Meat Loaf Cubes with Applesauce Dip.
It's for those who want to eat cold meat loaf dipped in a mixture of seasoned applesauce and sour cream... A group that, unsurprisingly, would not include me. But hey-- at least these appetizers could make for a super-easy New Year's Eve party. Just make the recipes well ahead of time, shove everything in the fridge, set the food out on chilled platters as the guests arrive, and you're pretty much done! You probably won't even need to refill anything.
Plus, whatever you eat tomorrow is bound to be better than this! It's an easy way to make sure the new year really will be an improvement-- at least in a very limited way, but we will take what we can get.






































