Since we've been thinking about economizing lately, let's look at Ground Beef Cookbook (Favorite Recipes Press, 1967), which opens with a reassurance that ground beef "fits into every budget and any type of meal."
And some recipes really seemed bent on economizing. (And yes, those italics are meant to suggest that the emphasis on saving money was to the detriment of the recipe.) Wash Day Soup seemed pretty sad, for example.
The soup has nothing in it aside from the meatballs (bound with eggs and graham cracker crumbs, so they're likely to have a weird, overly-sweet flavor). The meatballs aren't even browned first (maybe to save cooking fat?), so they don't get a chance to develop flavor before being dumped into lightly-salted-but-otherwise-plain water-- not even broth! I can't imagine this tastes like anything other than disappointment. Better to just ask for extra slices of toast covered with grated cheese and skip the soup altogether....
The book did offer some ways to turn cheap ingredients into something more appetizing than this soup, though. The simple addition of a flour-and-shortening crust turns plain old meat loaf into something akin to Beef Wellington.
Plus, these are individual loaves, so everybody can feel special!
Still cheap, but probably not as good unless you enjoy soggy fries is the Beef and French Fry Loaf.
It has not one, but TWO strata of fries between beef layers.
Of course, there were plenty of recipes for ground beef in a tomato sauce with pasta and often a cheese topping. These types of recipes are usually described as Italian in vintage cookbooks, but this one was a little more imaginative, describing one such dish as Chop Suey...
...and another as a Danish Casserole.
I also expected the "Polynesian" recipes to have the usual combination of pineapple and green peppers seasoned with soy sauce, but this book's Beef Polynesian went a different route.
Here, "Polynesian" adds curry powder to the soy sauce and substitutes mushrooms, raisins, peas, and mandarin oranges for the pineapple and green pepper. I never thought the pineapple-pepper combo sounded good, but this take makes it sound better by comparison!
Speaking of questionably-"ethnic" recipes, this booklet had a note from the original owner in it. Written on a scrap of a calendar from 2005, it just said "Japanese Casserole." It was on the page for (you guessed it!) Japanese Casserole, so I suspect the previous owner may have made this one.
I have zero sense of what makes this casserole Japanese. It sounds far more like a recipe from the Midwest to me, what with the meat, potatoes, carrots, and cream of mushroom soup. If anybody figures out how this name got attached to the recipe, let me know!
At least Japanese Casserole is, indeed, a casserole. This last recipe title has me even more stumped. I wasn't expecting to find kimchee in a mainstream American cookbook from the 1960s... and I'm still not convinced I actually found a kimchee recipe.
What this combination of veggies, ground beef, chili sauce, pinto beans, and bean sprouts has to do with kimchee, I have not the faintest idea. Maybe Mrs. William H. Buescher heard that "kimchee" was a Korean word that referred to vegetables and involved chili, so she assumed this could somehow fit the bill, not realizing that fermentation was a vital part of the equation?
Whatever happened, I like that there is such a variety of recipes in this book-- expected, unexpected, nasty, not so bad. It's a fun collection! And it makes me glad that "wash day" is not really a thing anymore...
















































