Grannie Pantries
A place to appreciate the horrors of vintage cookbooks
Tuesday, March 3, 2026
Maple Madness
Saturday, February 28, 2026
Some OLD recipes (and old problems)
Mountain Makin's in the Smokies: A Cookbook (The Great Smoky Mountains Natural History Association) is from 1957, but s lot of the recipes in the book credibly claim to be much older than that, starting with the recipe on the first page: Ash Cake.


And I am sure today's parents are glad not to have to try to use cloth to wrap mashed roast onions "to the hollow of the child's feet" whenever the kids have a cold.
But who knows? Distrust of vaccines and pharmaceutical companies could mean that the Whooping Cough Syrup recipe becomes newly relevant.
No matter how unsavory history may be, looks like we can be drawn back whether we like it or not.
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Of smoke and cornmeal
Surprise! Today, we're looking at a cookbook I don't really want to make fun of because it seems like such an earnest effort, with recipes that don't call for a lot of industrial ingredients combined in unlikely ways.
Mountain Makin's in the Smokies: A Cookbook was published by The Great Smoky Mountains Natural History Association in 1957, and the recipes have the make-do, regional flavor you might expect. So here's a brief menu to give you a taste.
Protein is often the most expensive ingredient, so it's better if you can get it for free (or at least, for the cost of a fishing license). "First, catch the fish!"
This picture accompanies the recipe and illustrates the first line-- the one I just quoted! Then clean the fish and cook with a relatively inexpensive cut of meat.
This recipe is meant to make it easier to cook fish that are pretty small-- layering them over strips of bacon both to make the fish easier to turn and to baste them in hot, salty, smoky fat.
You'll need an accompaniment. The book has sooooo many recipes for bready, cornmeal-based sides, but we'll go for the traditional accompaniment for fish: hush puppies.
The page actually has three different hush puppy recipes, but I chose this one because it has the most explicit instructions on how to make them.
And then to round out our meal, we'll need something sweet. (And full of cornmeal. Just about everything in this book is full of cornmeal because that's what people had on hand.)
The cornmeal custard pie is exactly what it sounds like: a custard pie thickened with cornmeal. It should be cooled on a windowsill, according to the accompanying illustration.
I'd be reluctant to do that, though, as my knowledge of cartoons suggests that someone nearby will follow the aroma lines (probably floating through the air without even needing to put their feet on the ground!) right to the pie and steal it before anyone can stop them.
This is full of recipes claiming to be much older than 1950s-old, and we'll look at some of them later. I just wanted a teaser for today, like a pie on a windowsill.
Saturday, February 21, 2026
Funny Name: What's the Bo Status? Edition
Tuesday, February 17, 2026
Wear-Ever you go, aluminum cookware will be there for your health
Saturday, February 14, 2026
Something hot to get you through February... Hope you're not too picky
Since we were just looking at the Cooks' Round Table of Endorsed Recipes supplement about vegetables from February 1951, let's follow up with their page of "Meats" recipes from February 1952. The front of the page shows off this pile of slop.
But it's topped off with a couple of pepper rings to class it up a little. What might it be?
Goulash Supreme! "Supreme" is often code for "sour cream" in old recipes, so I hoped this would be enriched with a little dairy fat, but no such luck. I guess the "supreme" is for the "unusual blend of spices": caraway, crushed peppercorns, bay leaf, and paprika. I'm not sure I'd call any of that unusual, but I guess maybe it was for 1952 when most white families' spice cabinets had pre-ground pepper, salt, onion salt, cinnamon sugar, and maybe a little chili powder or oregano if the family felt particularly adventurous.
The picture for one of the recipes on the back drew my attention, too. Are... Are those cinnamon rolls on top of the Savory Stew?
I'm now just trying not to imagine eating a cinnamon roll soggy from being cooked in a stew of carrots, onions, and beef.
Luckily, though, the bready topping is parsley pin wheels! (I'm still convinced they would be much better if you just baked them on a baking sheet rather than letting their butts get water-logged, but again, at least they're not cinnamon rolls.)
I guess in February, you have to take whatever hot glopola you can get!
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
Easy, one-dish meals that kind of aren't....
I love that the foreword of McCall's Book of Wonderful One-Dish Meals (edited by Kay Sullivan, 1972) tries to align itself with "Women's Lib," noting "That old slogan 'Let George do it!' is in vogue again. Thus, our cookbook has double value.... Easy one-dish meals for the liberated lady to prepare so that she does not have to spend all day in the kitchen. And even easier one-dish meals to aid novice George as he encounters soup bones, roux, and shallots for the first time." Plus, the cover is a perfect shade of harvest gold.
Sometimes, this premise means exactly what you think it means: open a bunch of cans, dump contents together, and heat. Ta-da! Dinner.
I'm sure the combination of musty canned peas and sulfurous hard-cooked eggs smelled just lovely, and the crunchy onion topping was enough to make up for the mush-on-mush-on-mush texture.
Other recipes are a window into what foods used to be more common in the early 1970s. Sure, Tongue Hash Casserole may have been pretty easy to throw together 50-some years ago.
You just had to have two cups of coarsely ground cooked tongue lying around first-- a distinctly unlikely scenario today.
And sometimes the book seemed to give up the idea of convenience entirely, as in the recipe for Chicken Pie.
Cooks had to start by cooking a full chicken (well, except for its innards). Then those innards had to be browned with bacon, sausage, and lamb kidneys. (So it was more of a meat-lovers pie than just chicken.) Then cooks had to make the rest of the filling, put all the meats and veggies with their sauce into a casserole (so much for the "one-dish" idea-- whoever is in charge of cleanup will not consider this a "one-dish" meal), make and roll out a pie crust (sorry, a "piecrust," and it's easy because it starts with a mix), top the casserole with the crust, decorate the crust with extra little cutouts if they were feeling ambitious, and then bake the whole thing... So Kay Sullivan was clearly not that committed to the promises at the beginning of the book. (And I am worried that I never saw any instructions to debone or even cut up the chicken. Is the cook just supposed to cook a WHOLE chicken under a pie crust? I thought perhaps the step of picking the meat off the bones was so obvious that the recipe writer didn't feel the need to state it explicitly, but "Lift chicken... to a 3-quart oval casserole" seems to imply that the thing is still whole. How would you even serve something like that?)
These recipes make me kind of anxious just thinking about them. At least the anxiety is opt-in labor! There's no family expecting me to have their nightly anxiety ready when they get home from work or school, and no urge to push "George" to worry about old recipes for me... Yet another reason I'm glad to know that there are decades between me and these recipes. All I have to do is feel pointlessly anxious, and I don't even have to do that! (But it's better than feeling pointedly anxious about, well, everything else.)






























