I wasn't that surprised to find a Rawleigh cookbook in my late grandma's belongings. As I have noted before, my family got caught up in that MLM bullshit. What did surprise me was that grandma's copy of Rawleigh's Picture Treasury of Good Cooking was from 1959. I don't think our family got into Rawleigh sales until the 1980s. Now I'm wondering whether we were in it for longer than that and I just wasn't really aware of it until then, or whether grandma encountered Rawleigh salespeople decades before she got involved in the scheme herself. Or maybe our dealer just gave grandma an old cookbook for some reason. Who knows? (Not me.)
My favorite thing about the collection is the pictures, which often do not sell the recipes as well as Rawleigh probably hoped. I mean, I'm not exactly dying to try mud-covered chicken.
More specifically, the topping looks like the thinned-out clay called "slip" that we used in ceramics class to help glue pieces together. Can't say I ever had any desire to taste it.
The fact that this is seasoned with cloves does nothing to make me more excited about this recipe.
I was briefly alarmed by this next picture, thinking that perhaps I was seeing whipped potatoes served on a sea of guacamole and garnished with mushrooms.
This is actually just that old (and usually pretty tasty if you ask me) standby, chicken tetrazzini.
I guess the editors just wanted to show off that the cookbook had full color pictures and didn't stop to think about what green noodles would actually look like in the photograph.
A few of the pictures seem like they could be illustrations in some intro to biology textbook. This first one reminds me of a diagram of a cell: some kind of a membrane enclosing a bunch of tiny organelles you'll have to label on the exam. Maybe the lettuce represents algae in the pond where this single-celled organism lives? Or maybe it's a series of extensions from the membrane to help with locomotion or nutrient absorption?
Nothing that interesting, of course. It's just gelled-up cottage cheese concoction enclosing a salad of canned or previously-frozen vegetables marinated in an oil-and-vinegar dressing.
There's also a protozoa of some sort (or alternatively, an implausibly squishy trilobite?) rowing its way down the dinner table.
This is (also quite implausibly) supposed to be jambalaya.
I realize there are a lot of ways people make jambalaya and that I am NOT by any stretch of the imagination an authority on the subject of Creole cooking, but I'm pretty sure the absence of sausage, the missing celery from the holy trinity, the fact that the rice is cooked separately and not seasoned, and the addition of fried bananas would make many wonder whether this could reasonably be called any variety of jambalaya at all. Then again, it was much easier to get away with calling a recipe whatever you wanted in the 1950s.
The picture that really got me, though, was the one that immediately brought to mind the popular childhood insult "Is that your head, or did your neck throw up?"
Sorry, fish. Looks like your neck threw up. Maybe this is not the best thing to make when someone catches you a delicious bass.
And just because I am so upset by that photo, I won't end on it. We will end with this recipe for fried fish fillets from the opposite page.
And it's not just because fried foods tend to be delicious. It's also because I think the fishy dishware is just so cute.
I love the balloon-with-eyes look of the fish serving platter and the contemplative-but-also-maybe-a-little-horrified look of the fish serving dish above it. They're kind of disturbing in their own right, but still appealing in a hard-to-identify way-- a good ending note for a blog like this.



















































