Grannie Pantries
A place to appreciate the horrors of vintage cookbooks
Saturday, July 18, 2026
An awkward family photo and exciting news from Robin
Wednesday, July 15, 2026
Cooking with an enthusiastic Aloha
Aloha! I picked up Cooking with Aloha (Joyce Mondoy for Hawaii Foodbank, Inc., undated) mostly because I was enchanted with Brett K. Waipa's illustrations of Aloha.
From the big, dopey grin to the hole in the middle (Must be helpful on days with a lot of recipe testing! There's always room for more.) to the stumpy little legs, the dude is pretty endearing. So for this booklet, we will check out Aloha's appearance on the title page for a chapter and then go over one or two of the most Hawaiian-seeming recipes from the section.
The book, fittingly enough, starts out with a chapter on salads and pupus.
Aloha is taking "tossed salads" very literally! My favorite thing about this might just be that it's easy to forget he's supposed to be the letters A-L-O-H-A stacked on top of each other (since a big chunk of his body is covered by the jersey). This makes his legs especially puzzling. I can't imagine him running two steps without falling over. I am no sports expert, but I still can't help but think this would be a severe disadvantage in football...
The most interesting recipe in this chapter just might be the Papaya Seed Dressing.
Being a Midwesterner with very limited exposure to tropical fruits, I had no idea papaya seeds were even edible, but apparently they are! Easier to eat when they're ground down to "the size of ground pepper," though.
And if you wondered whether Hawaiians had the same fondness for Jell-O based salads as mainlanders, fear not! This chapter also features an Avocado and Gelatin Salad.
I'm pretty sure I'd prefer the Avocado and Lime Pie from the Pieathalon to this, though! Cream cheese sounds way better than mayonnaise in this mixture.
Next up is the breads chapter.
Aloha is so entertained by his "rolling in the dough" joke that he doesn't seem concerned that the rolling pin and oven seem to be wildly out of scale with each other, or that everything is just about to fall on his head.
What kind of bread might you make in Hawaii? While there are the old standbys like bran muffins and zucchini bread, I was most interested by Avocado Bread.
I thought it might be pretty similar to zucchini bread recipes, but this has no cinnamon, salt, or vanilla, so I wonder if it would be rather bland... (I'm sure it wouldn't matter to Aloha, though. He's enthusiastic about everything!)
Speaking of enthusiasm, he's fully in 8-year-old "sharing" mode for the chapter on cakes.
You can have a tiny slice. Aloha will polish off the rest! I'm sure people expect a fruity, tropical cake from this chapter, so here's Hawaiian Pineapple Carrot Cake for you.
I'm not really sure what sets this apart from the carrot cakes we bake in the Midwest. (My recipe has pineapple too!) So I'm going to include a second recipe-- one that seems much more regional to me: Cocoa Mochi.
I'm guessing that mochi would have seemed pretty exotic for a lot of mainstream Midwesterners until fairly recently (and I'd still have to go to a specialty store or order online to get mochiko!), so this seems much more unique to the island than the recipe with Hawaii in the name.
Aloha is a real fan of sweets! The cakes aren't enough, so we'll look at pies and desserts next.
One thing that the mainland and Hawaii had in common: weight jokes. (Sigh.) The scales are not too excited that Aloha is into the sugar again. I'm representing this chapter with something typically Midwestern (chiffon pie) crossed with something Hawaiian (lilikoi).
I was really curious about what "lilikoi" might be, but it turns out it's something I have heard of! It's the Hawaiian word for passionfruit. At least that means that mainlanders can make it if we want to.
We'll top off all these (mostly) desserts with a main dish.
I'm trying to decide whether Aloha is a sloppy eater or growing a weird mustache. (Maybe both?) In any case, he just might eat his napkin too if he doesn't pay attention...
And what might he be chowing down on? Well, it's fishy, as you might expect, given that he lives on an island.
But it's salmon loaf (from canned salmon)! The thing that sets this apart from the typical Midwestern version is that this incorporates tofu and shoyu with the more common ingredients like veggies, eggs, and bread crumbs. (Plus, honestly, I couldn't resist including a recipe that starts out with the crossed-out sentence "Beat eggs; add vanilla, mushroom soup, shoyu, oil, salt." Where did the vanilla come from? And why is this recipe ALL CAPS?)
I'm sure Aloha doesn't care about the inconsistency. He's just glad to be here and to wish you aloha.
Saturday, July 11, 2026
Funny Name: Fo' Jonni
I had to read this recipe title from Ground Beef Cookbook (Favorite Recipes Press, 1967) several times, and it made me laugh every time.
My guess is that Mrs. Emma Frances McCluskey wanted a recipe for Johnny Marzetti, but didn't really understand the name when she wrote it down. I swear, if this cookbook was from the early 2000s, I'd think the title was made up by a midwestern mom who really wanted her kids to like Johnny Marzetti, noticed kids were saying things like "fo' shizzle," and decided to try to make it sound cool by changing the name to "Jonni-Majarizy" (without fully understanding where "fo' shizzle" trend came from because then she definitely wouldn't have played along).
Wednesday, July 8, 2026
Carbin' in South Carolina
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.




















































