I grew up on this cookbook. Mom was given it when she got married to my Dad in 1962. When I left home, I took her cookbook with me and used it until it literally fell apart. I found a copy on eBay, so I’ll be cooking with Betty Crocker as long as I’m alive!
That's awesome. My mom also received this cookbook as a slightly belated wedding gift. My paternal grandmother got a lovely new kitchen in 1962. She pushed to get it finished before her new daughter in law arrived from out west. The cookbook was grandma's to help her figure out how to use all the new appliances. She and my mom got to spend some time together cooking and then the book went with my mom to the air force base in Northern Michigan where Dad was stationed. I learned to cook with this book and still rely on it for good advice. I love all the pictures and the party ideas.
I have a crazy story about this cookbook. In the mid 1990s, I came home for Christmas and my mother gave me this cookbook. It had been hers since she was newly married in the 60s. We still bake Ethel’s sugar cookies from it to this day. I packed it up in my luggage. Headed for California from the Midwest on a greyhound. When I arrived at my final destination, my luggage was lost! It took two weeks to find my luggage which had ended up in lost luggage somewhere in Texas, I think. Once I finally got to go through the suitcase, I was missing all of my shoes, a pair of men’s tidy whiteys had been added. But the cookbook was still there. That was the only thing I cared about.
It comforts me to know that there is someone else out there in the world that loves cookbooks just as much as I do. My kitchen is decorated with cookbooks, and I have MANY shelves holding my MANY cookbooks. I love watching you open them, show the illustrations and discuss the "back then to now"...I'm so happy I found your channel. I'm MUCH older than you and it thrills me to see a younger person appreciate the oldies but goodies! XOXO
I believe many of us in our 30s and 40s have become very interested in learning about the past, and old ways of doing things thanks to channels like this and others on RUclips. Hopefully this will trickle down to the younger generations too. 💛
I’m in my early 60s, and I’ve always enjoyed reading and looking through cookbook (especially ‘vintage’ ones). Its great that others have the same interest. ❤
I have thousands of cookbooks. I've collected them all my life. It pains me that I don't have family and when I pass who knows where they will actually end up. 😮
i'm 23 and have an ongoing collection of cookbooks from the 40s to now! its because such a hobby that my friend gifted me seven 70s cookbooks that she found on ebay! there's something so special about learning about the past and real peoples experiences through the lens of food
I am 82 years old and I was given that cookbook by my mother when I got married in 1962. I still have it and use it occasionally. My favorite recipe in it is chicken ala king. I still make it. I gave Betty Crocker cookbooks to my three children, including my two sons, when they went out on their on. I told them if you an read you can cook.
I make tamale pie fairly often. It's easy to make after a long day, cheap and endlessly customizable. I generally use taco seasoning on the meat and put the cheese under the cornmeal topping. Then we add salsa or sour cream to our liking.
I love this series of budget meals. People could make the tamale pie even cheaper by making it a meatless meal with a can of pinto beans and black beans. Thanks for sharing these recipes!
I love Sunday afternoons with Anna!! I love the recipes and watching you make them, but my favorite part is when you share the recipe book. Your enthusiasm for the illustrations and layouts of the books is so fun! I found the Elsie the cow cookbook this week and remember the discussion about her family.
When I married in 78 I received the revised Betty Crocker cookbook. In it is a recipe for Hamburger Corn Pie, which is basically that Tomale pie. This recipe adds a bit of sausage too but it's the same otherwise, and baked in a 9 x 13. I still make it after all these years!
My mom got this cookbook for her wedding. When I got married 13 years ago I got myself one. It’s my favorite cookbook ever. My mom’s copy was used till it busted, and then we moved and it got lost. I tried to get her a copy online but I couldn’t find one I could afford. A couple of years ago I went to a vintage/antique fair and someone was selling a pretty good copy of this book for $10, and I bought it for my mom. She was absolutely tickled!! I love this cookbook so much. Thanks for the review!! 💕💕
I'm sorry, but i laugh out loud whenever you go on the "I know Betty Crocker's not real" trail. I don't blame you, I talk with the Quaker Oats man all the time!! 😂😊
You forgetting, is wonderful. This means you truly stepped away from your job and enjoyed your time off. As a result you sound so freash, happy and even giggley! You are like a renewed spirit!! Proud of you.😊
A note about cheese…. Pre-grated cheese has an anti-caking agent added, so for a recipe where melting is important, it needs to be freshly grated at home. Also the harder the cheese, the less “melty” it is. I try to sneak in a small bit of velveeta, American, or Monterrey Jack when I can. If the recipe has beer, wine, egg yolk, or mustard then the cheating isn’t necessary. The tamale pie is killer!! My grandmother used to make it. ❤
@jbridges9574 It's strange she didn't "heart" your comment. I'm amazed at how many people are ignorant of this fact about pre-shredded cheese being coated in anti-caking agents, and how that can affect your dish. Anyway, I came here to write exactly this. I'm glad someone else has already mentioned it. 😊
I have my mother's original copy of that cookbook...in excellent condition..they are quite collectable now..refer to it often . Also still have the vintage cookware and measuring cups. I'm 66 yrs old. Ty for sharing your fun site and letting us remember simplar times 😊
I love that stuff. So easy to whip up a few corn muffins for dinner, or like you said, pour it on top of a casserole. Jiffy used to have a little cookbook for their mixes that you could request on their website.
The Lumberjack Macaroni recipe is also in The Betty Crocker Picture Cookbook on page 381. However, it says American Cheese instead of Cheddar. It even includes the information about the founder of General Mills making it.
Just found your channel and love these 1950s recipes! I really want to try the batter idea over chilli next time I have leftovers! Just a friendly fun fact that I thought of while watching this: the word tamale is plural for referring to a single “tamal”. Saying “A tamale” is the equivalent of saying “a tacos” or “a burritos”. My mind was blown when I learned this! It still doesn’t seem right in my head, lol.
Another Army brat food memory. Living in West Germany in the 1960's. All families had access to " C-rations". Dark green cans of food storied in the attics of all military housing. And ours were never labeled! Opening them was always a surprise. Spaghetti and meatballs to a Hershey bar. Some even had mini packs of cigarettes. Like 6 to a pack. The 1960's. Once my Mom opened a can with strawberry jam. Like 16 ounce can of jam.
The Mac and cheese is similar to a recipe my dad preferred. Growing up in dense urban housing in the early 1900s, they didn't have access to fresh milk all that often. I didn't even know that people made it with milk and a cream sauce until I went to school.
It's complete random chance that RUclips popped this video up in my feed, as I've never watched one of your videos before... But wow, what a great video. I'm totally subscribing... and totally trying one or all of these recipes
I think that illustration was absolutely meant to suggest Bing Crosby! It was above the St. Patrick's Day section, and he was well known for his Irish ancestry and his love of Irish songs.
Good recipes. So many ways to vary the Fiesta Pie. More sliced olives! Worked on a drug store food counter in 1975. My after-school job. Made a lot of Denver/Western style omelets and sandwiches. Very popular. Thanks for the reminder.
That’s the version of the Betty Crocker my mom had. Every illustration you showed I’ve seen thousands of times. That poor thing fell apart and disappeared over the years. I managed to find and keep my grandma’s 1950 first edition hardcover version. Still pristine in its machine stitched plastic cover.
I just started watching you a couple of days ago and am hooked. I'm 60 years old and remember seeing those cookbooks in my own and grandmother's home. We had one for kids called My First Cookbook put out by Imperial Sugar. If you could find one of those, you could make some of the things my sisters and I did. 😉
I have my mother's copy from 1961 and I was given a copy when I married in 1971. My copy I sent to my neice when I downsized and will some day give my mother's copy to one of my children.
My favorite way to make mac & cheese…is to make homemade mac & cheese and then add bbq sauce to the sauce. That’s similar to the Lumberjack Mac & Cheese recipe. Mmmmmm….
During your review of the cookbook, you commented on how your edition was turquoise, yellow, and pink as opposed to "Betty Crocker red." When I got married in 1973, I was looking for an apartment for my husband and I (This was also my first apartment) I remember one that had a yellow refrigerator, a turquoise stove, and a pink sink . . .
I don't know why but chili powder back in the day was more flavorful. I suspect like many products it has been cheapened over the years. I double the amount to get the flavors I remember.
I made the lumberjack mac & cheese & my hubby was eating it for lunch today during a lunchtime zoom meeting (lunch break? 🤣). Anyway, he made some work peeps jealous cuz he described what it was….so I sent them the recipe too…. Thank u! It’s YUMMY
Hi Guys, Talk about success in advertizing I'm having this Fiesta Tamale Pie in an hour because of the leftovers we happen to have in the fridge and pantry. Thanks for this Happy new year to everyone, wishing you all prosperity and happiness this year of the Dragon Jim Oaxaca Mexico (Lumberjack macaroni joke...it didn't get smooth cause those little axes refuse to melt....mwahh mwahh)
Giving the cost per serving so helpful. I’m a single cook only for myself and knowing the cost per serving helps me budget. I’ll save or freeze leftovers.
I will be making the fiesta tamale pie for a work pot luck and swapping the pork sausage with turkey or chicken sausage and will be using sliced olives
I just had a fried egg on buttered toast sandwich for breakfast, so I am definitely going to try the Denver one. I have never heard of a Denver omelette before.
My Mom had that cookbook when I was growing up and my sister has it now. Mom made the salmon loaf often and I hated it. Mom let us make something we called biscuit sticks but I think they were called Butter Dips or something like that. I do remember that they were on page 77 because we made them a lot in 1977.
I have the 1961 edition of that cookbook, in hardcover. I got it from a friend of my mother-in-law, and it’s been my favorite for the past 25 years. Not just for recipes, but also for kitchen tips, menu planning, and table setting.
I really liked this video, especially your 1/2 version which makes it perfect for a senior who lives alone. They are perfect serving sizes for 2 or 3 because we just don't eat that much anymore. When I was a teenager in Ontario, Canada, my friends and I would go to the movies and stop by a very popular restaurant near the theater, and get what they called a "Western Sandwich", same exact ingredients as this recipe. I really loved it, even though I was not an egg eater at the time. Thanks for the memory on this one. On the lumber Jack macaroni, I would use even less of the Worcestershire Sauce, maybe only 1 Tbsp. for the 1/2 recipe and I would drain the macaroni put it back in the hot pot rather like you would for Kraft Dinner., and then add the other ingredients as you did. Thanks so much for sharing these recipes and for your commentary at the end. Have a Blessed day.
I got the Cooky Book as a wedding present in 1971. My children always loved looking through it, especially the Christmas gingerbread house. A few years back the company did an exact recreation, of that book, and I purchased one for my daughter because mine has some of the pages falling out.
I have my mother's copy of this book! She, and now I, have used it so much, that I have lost both the front and back covers! The recipe we have made the most out of this book is the salmon loaf recipe! So good and one of the only fish meals I could get my kids to eat!
I bet you can make a new cover. Just need some stiff cardboard cut to fit front and back. Pick out some cool looking duct tape or contact paper from the craft store and just layer long strips (or a big sheet) over both covers and the spine. Maybe print off a picture of the old front cover and put it inside the new cover and go over that with clear contact paper or 2" clear tape. It'll last another 50 years!
Tamale pie was a go-to in my household growing up. So much so I swore off it when I was young. I tried your recipe. But me and chili powder are not friends, so I substituted for Taco Seasoning. It made me like this dish. I am not sure if my mom got heavy-handed with the chili powder, but loved the texture and taste. I am a texture queen, too. My husband didn't remember the recipe but once I cooked it it jogged his memory as well. Keep up the good work. Enjoy watching you.
Cooked egg type sandwiches taste even better if you butter the toast! I like just a fried egg on buttered toast sandwich and when I was a kid I would always eat my scrambled eggs on buttered toast. Yum!
Please feel free to add the kids cheering more often! It was so unexpected and made me laugh right out loud! You deserve all the cheers for your hard work and quality.
I love the retro recipes! Thank you. What a great idea!! Yes, yes, yes.... the versatile egg sandwich reminder... thank you! Now, I am looking for omelet and quiche recipes too! Easy to prepare and take to work for a light lunch. Peace
I have a shelf of vintage cookbooks. This has really inspired me to dive into them. I gravitate to just looking up recipes here or Pinterest. So glad this video was in my recommended. Thank you!
Dear Anna, I'm a big fan of your jam! The combo of history in food, publishing/graphics and foodways is so brilliant and your presentation is so effective, soothing and entertaining. I have come off an Asian food deep dive and watching your channel inspired a wild fusion that was so darn good I have to share. Sauce for macaroni (or any shape pasta) evaporated milk, cream cheese, processed cheese (proportion to your taste) melted in sauce pan, simmer to desired thickness, take off heat whisk in 1 tbsp quality miso and pinch of red chili flakes. Mix with pasta and OMG. Thank you for bringing evap milk into my repertoire!!! ❤❤❤
I love your channel and I remember many of the recipes from growing up in the 1960s. Just a note from a word nerd and a Brit: Worcestershire is pronounced “wouster” with the same sound as would, should, could. The “shire” is dropped, unless you are talking about that county in England. I’m definitely going to try that Lumberjack macaroni!
Super fascinated by that lumberjack macaroni. I also like to put vegetables with macaroni and cheese, my fave is dumping in some frozen corn. I also like to put a little bit of Worcestershire sauce and yellow mustard with my macaroni and cheese, so this seems like something I’d like. Super unusual prep method by Mr. Bell! 😃 Tamale pie, looks super easy and yummy! Yes, I also totally want to slap a piece of American cheese and sriracha on that egg sandwich, looks very yummy! Love 💜 the cookbook chat as always!!! 🙂 Hooray! Super fun video!
> I'm 63 years old, I grew-up eating that Fiesta Tamale Pie during the 1960's & 70's. As I got older, I grew to hate-it and would purposely skip dinner when I knew mom was making-it. However, now seeing this dish again, I can't help but feel nostalgic and would be willing to try it again.
I'm a cheese lover and even still, plenty of flavor in that egg sandwich to not need cheese. But I think I would need a little butter on the dry toast. Toast with butter is heaven.
Shocking but Betty Crocker was actually based on a real person: Marjorie Child Husted. I have most of the Betty Crocker cookbooks. I love the recipes and the older the better. They used different ingredients that complimented each other to make meals. Suggestion: next time grill the toast in the frying pan it will give it a different taste. Thanks for sharing and you have a wonderful day.
When I was able to eat cheese I would add a can of tuna and peas with the Mac and cheese. When they redid Betty Crocker a lady from our city was apart of the new Betty.
Have you ever came across the better homes and garden junior cookbook? I was gifted it as a child and you wouldn’t believe the amount of amazing recipes in there. Even my mom used it. Our favorites were the snickerdoodle recipe and the caramel corn one.
I love your apron! Years ago I had white pants with those types of fruit on them. They were orange, yellow and green fruits . My coworkers called them “produce pants” lol
I remember "tamale pie" from the late 1970s. We felt so exotic eating it! We were little white kids in a white suburb in the Midwest and were so excited to have this meal. Thanks for the memories, Anna. Your dish looked delicious.
Are your casserole dishes and bowls as vintage as they look? I love them! I swear the dish you mixed they mac n cheese in my grandma had. Love watching you. I love cookbooks myself. I read them like novels!😂
I grew up on this cookbook. Mom was given it when she got married to my Dad in 1962. When I left home, I took her cookbook with me and used it until it literally fell apart. I found a copy on eBay, so I’ll be cooking with Betty Crocker as long as I’m alive!
Lovely memory and story, thanks!
That's awesome. My mom also received this cookbook as a slightly belated wedding gift. My paternal grandmother got a lovely new kitchen in 1962. She pushed to get it finished before her new daughter in law arrived from out west. The cookbook was grandma's to help her figure out how to use all the new appliances. She and my mom got to spend some time together cooking and then the book went with my mom to the air force base in Northern Michigan where Dad was stationed. I learned to cook with this book and still rely on it for good advice. I love all the pictures and the party ideas.
@@bethenecampbell6463 that’s a lovely family memory thank you for sharing it!
What is your favorite recipe from the book?
Same here! Mom got it as a wedding gift in 1962. I learned to cook from this book. That tamale pie was one of my favourites. What wonderful memories….
I have a crazy story about this cookbook. In the mid 1990s, I came home for Christmas and my mother gave me this cookbook. It had been hers since she was newly married in the 60s. We still bake Ethel’s sugar cookies from it to this day. I packed it up in my luggage. Headed for California from the Midwest on a greyhound. When I arrived at my final destination, my luggage was lost! It took two weeks to find my luggage which had ended up in lost luggage somewhere in Texas, I think. Once I finally got to go through the suitcase, I was missing all of my shoes, a pair of men’s tidy whiteys had been added. But the cookbook was still there. That was the only thing I cared about.
Oh my gosh!! Glad you got your cookbook back, but sorry to hear about the missing shoes! Even more sorry about the uh...'bonus' item. 😂
That's the best story! So glad the cookbook was saved. The bonus item is just weird. People can be so strange....
Thank heavens they didn’t steal the cookbook! Ethel’s sugar cookies are a Christmas classic! ❤️
Wish I had the recipe for the cookies
Ethel's Sugar cookies are my favorite.
It comforts me to know that there is someone else out there in the world that loves cookbooks just as much as I do.
My kitchen is decorated with cookbooks, and I have MANY shelves holding my MANY cookbooks. I love watching you open them, show the illustrations and discuss the "back then to now"...I'm so happy I found your channel. I'm MUCH older than you and it thrills me to see a younger person appreciate the oldies but goodies! XOXO
I believe many of us in our 30s and 40s have become very interested in learning about the past, and old ways of doing things thanks to channels like this and others on RUclips. Hopefully this will trickle down to the younger generations too. 💛
I looove cookbooks and the cookbook style magazines that have gorgeous nostalgic photos from all decades! It’s fun! Gives us inspiration!
I’m in my early 60s, and I’ve always enjoyed reading and looking through cookbook (especially ‘vintage’ ones). Its great that others have the same interest. ❤
I have thousands of cookbooks. I've collected them all my life. It pains me that I don't have family and when I pass who knows where they will actually end up. 😮
i'm 23 and have an ongoing collection of cookbooks from the 40s to now! its because such a hobby that my friend gifted me seven 70s cookbooks that she found on ebay! there's something so special about learning about the past and real peoples experiences through the lens of food
I am 82 years old and I was given that cookbook by my mother when I got married in 1962. I still have it and use it occasionally. My favorite recipe in it is chicken ala king. I still make it. I gave Betty Crocker cookbooks to my three children, including my two sons, when they went out on their on. I told them if you an read you can cook.
My mom loved Denver Sandwiches, but she spread margarine, ketchup and horseradish on the bread.
I make tamale pie fairly often. It's easy to make after a long day, cheap and endlessly customizable. I generally use taco seasoning on the meat and put the cheese under the cornmeal topping. Then we add salsa or sour cream to our liking.
We make the tamale pie too...we use sliced black olives (more to go around😊) and add a can of chopped green chiles to the corn meal mixture
I haven’t thought about tamale pie in years, but we had this a lot when I was a kid. And we all loved it. I’ll be making this soon
I’ve had the tamale pie - or some version of it - many times, but completely forgot about it. I’ll be making it again for certain!
I just made it last week, it’s delicious
I love this series of budget meals. People could make the tamale pie even cheaper by making it a meatless meal with a can of pinto beans and black beans. Thanks for sharing these recipes!
I love Sunday afternoons with Anna!! I love the recipes and watching you make them, but my favorite part is when you share the recipe book. Your enthusiasm for the illustrations and layouts of the books is so fun! I found the Elsie the cow cookbook this week and remember the discussion about her family.
When I married in 78 I received the revised Betty Crocker cookbook. In it is a recipe for Hamburger Corn Pie, which is basically that Tomale pie. This recipe adds a bit of sausage too but it's the same otherwise, and baked in a 9 x 13. I still make it after all these years!
My mom got this cookbook for her wedding. When I got married 13 years ago I got myself one. It’s my favorite cookbook ever.
My mom’s copy was used till it busted, and then we moved and it got lost. I tried to get her a copy online but I couldn’t find one I could afford.
A couple of years ago I went to a vintage/antique fair and someone was selling a pretty good copy of this book for $10, and I bought it for my mom. She was absolutely tickled!!
I love this cookbook so much. Thanks for the review!! 💕💕
I'm sorry, but i laugh out loud whenever you go on the "I know Betty Crocker's not real" trail. I don't blame you, I talk with the Quaker Oats man all the time!! 😂😊
I still get 'You know Betty Crocker isn't real right' comments on several of my videos ALL THE TIME. I just like to chat with her, ok? 😂
My Mom taught a class using that cookbook so me and fellow Junior Girl Scouts could earn our “Hospitality” badge.
You forgetting, is wonderful. This means you truly stepped away from your job and enjoyed your time off. As a result you sound so freash, happy and even giggley! You are like a renewed spirit!! Proud of you.😊
A note about cheese…. Pre-grated cheese has an anti-caking agent added, so for a recipe where melting is important, it needs to be freshly grated at home. Also the harder the cheese, the less “melty” it is. I try to sneak in a small bit of velveeta, American, or Monterrey Jack when I can. If the recipe has beer, wine, egg yolk, or mustard then the cheating isn’t necessary. The tamale pie is killer!! My grandmother used to make it. ❤
@jbridges9574
It's strange she didn't "heart" your comment. I'm amazed at how many people are ignorant of this fact about pre-shredded cheese being coated in anti-caking agents, and how that can affect your dish.
Anyway, I came here to write exactly this. I'm glad someone else has already mentioned it. 😊
I use an egg yolk and/or a bit of cream cheese. It really made it creamy and rich.
@@lisahinton9682I didn't 'heart' the comment because I just returned from being away for a few days.
Thank you!!!! I really live vintage recipies and enjoy your presentation. You always respect the history. ☮️💟 2:02
I have my mother's original copy of that cookbook...in excellent condition..they are quite collectable now..refer to it often . Also still have the vintage cookware and measuring cups. I'm 66 yrs old. Ty for sharing your fun site and letting us remember simplar times 😊
The tamale pie is better the next day. And more spices, of course.😊
You could also use Jiffy Corn Muffin Mix for the tamale pie . It’s cheap! The recipes look delicious!
I love that stuff. So easy to whip up a few corn muffins for dinner, or like you said, pour it on top of a casserole. Jiffy used to have a little cookbook for their mixes that you could request on their website.
Jiffy is so perfect! Yes, I bake from scratch…and yes, I can make cornbread from scratch, but I really enjoy the taste of Jiffy better.
The Lumberjack Macaroni recipe is also in The Betty Crocker Picture Cookbook on page 381. However, it says American Cheese instead of Cheddar. It even includes the information about the founder of General Mills making it.
Just found your channel and love these 1950s recipes! I really want to try the batter idea over chilli next time I have leftovers! Just a friendly fun fact that I thought of while watching this: the word tamale is plural for referring to a single “tamal”. Saying “A tamale” is the equivalent of saying “a tacos” or “a burritos”. My mind was blown when I learned this! It still doesn’t seem right in my head, lol.
I remember my mom making Fiesta Tamale Pie in the 70s. She used Jiffy cornbread mix for the topping.
I am HERE for that Fiesta Tamale Pie!!! (minus the olives... yeah... I'm one of "them" ;)
I have this book too! THANK YOU, again for all your vids!
It was so delicious. I took some to my dad and he loved it!
Another Army brat food memory. Living in West Germany in the 1960's. All families had access to " C-rations". Dark green cans of food storied in the attics of all military housing. And ours were never labeled! Opening them was always a surprise. Spaghetti and meatballs to a Hershey bar. Some even had mini packs of cigarettes. Like 6 to a pack. The 1960's. Once my Mom opened a can with strawberry jam. Like 16 ounce can of jam.
There’s so much variety that could be added to the macaroni, I love how simple it is yet would never think of adding those ingredients.
We didn’t have taste buds back then! 😂
The Mac and cheese is similar to a recipe my dad preferred. Growing up in dense urban housing in the early 1900s, they didn't have access to fresh milk all that often. I didn't even know that people made it with milk and a cream sauce until I went to school.
It's complete random chance that RUclips popped this video up in my feed, as I've never watched one of your videos before... But wow, what a great video. I'm totally subscribing... and totally trying one or all of these recipes
So glad to have you here! Welcome! ❤
love love love!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I think that illustration was absolutely meant to suggest Bing Crosby! It was above the St. Patrick's Day section, and he was well known for his Irish ancestry and his love of Irish songs.
What a great video!! Love 1960's, cookbooks and fun recipes!! You really made it come alive😊
Thanks so much! 😊
Good recipes. So many ways to vary the Fiesta Pie. More sliced olives! Worked on a drug store food counter in 1975. My after-school job. Made a lot of Denver/Western style omelets and sandwiches. Very popular. Thanks for the reminder.
That Denver sandwich would be great with tomato soup for a simple comfort meal. Great recipes to add to the budget meal plan.
Love that combination. 😋
What an inspired channel name. Great content
Oh my gosh! I grew up in the 60s, and we had red bowls EXACTLY like that!
This was an interesting recipe (the Mac and Cheese plus. )
THE CORN CHOWDER IS THE BEST IN THAT COOKBOOK.
I love your vintage cookware and bowls. It makes me want to start collecting some
Hello! You do know that Betty Crocker isn't real, right? 😂😂😅😅😅😅 I couldn't resist!
she is in our imagination 🙂
These recipes remind me of renditions of recipes from my mom’s rotation when I was a kid. Fun stuff!!
The Denver, my mom called a western (Canada!) .. dip in ketchup!
That’s the version of the Betty Crocker my mom had. Every illustration you showed I’ve seen thousands of times. That poor thing fell apart and disappeared over the years. I managed to find and keep my grandma’s 1950 first edition hardcover version. Still pristine in its machine stitched plastic cover.
I just started watching you a couple of days ago and am hooked. I'm 60 years old and remember seeing those cookbooks in my own and grandmother's home. We had one for kids called My First Cookbook put out by Imperial Sugar. If you could find one of those, you could make some of the things my sisters and I did. 😉
I have my mother's copy from 1961 and I was given a copy when I married in 1971. My copy I sent to my neice when I downsized and will some day give my mother's copy to one of my children.
Everything looked delicious, I think a little sour cream with that tamale pie would be tasty! Great recipe choices!
Thank you for making these videos! I love that you show us the vintage books and their illustrations. You always cook some interesting dishes 🙂
My favorite way to make mac & cheese…is to make homemade mac & cheese and then add bbq sauce to the sauce. That’s similar to the Lumberjack Mac & Cheese recipe. Mmmmmm….
I made the Mac and cheese and the fiesta tamale pie tonight and they both were really good. My husband really likes the tamale pie
During your review of the cookbook, you commented on how your edition was turquoise, yellow, and pink as opposed to "Betty Crocker red." When I got married in 1973, I was looking for an apartment for my husband and I (This was also my first apartment) I remember one that had a yellow refrigerator, a turquoise stove, and a pink sink . . .
Oh my gosh, those appliances sound amazing!
Today, yes. But then, everything I had was earth toned: beige, brown, gold, orange, and avocado. Rather ghastly.
I don't know why but chili powder back in the day was more flavorful. I suspect like many products it has been cheapened over the years. I double the amount to get the flavors I remember.
I made the lumberjack mac & cheese & my hubby was eating it for lunch today during a lunchtime zoom meeting (lunch break? 🤣). Anyway, he made some work peeps jealous cuz he described what it was….so I sent them the recipe too…. Thank u! It’s YUMMY
Hi Guys, Talk about success in advertizing I'm having this Fiesta Tamale Pie in an hour because of the leftovers we happen to have in the fridge and pantry. Thanks for this Happy new year to everyone, wishing you all prosperity and happiness this year of the Dragon Jim Oaxaca Mexico (Lumberjack macaroni joke...it didn't get smooth cause those little axes refuse to melt....mwahh mwahh)
Giving the cost per serving so helpful. I’m a single cook only for myself and knowing the cost per serving helps me budget. I’ll save or freeze leftovers.
I tried this recipe and my family loved it. Thank you for your channel.
We usually serve broccoli with macaroni and cheese dishes, because you can’t go wrong with broccoli and cheese.
I was so looking forward to seeing you again! Thank you so much for all your hard work!❤
I will be making the fiesta tamale pie for a work pot luck and swapping the pork sausage with turkey or chicken sausage and will be using sliced olives
Love this! 😋
I just had a fried egg on buttered toast sandwich for breakfast, so I am definitely going to try the Denver one. I have never heard of a Denver omelette before.
My Mom had that cookbook when I was growing up and my sister has it now. Mom made the salmon loaf often and I hated it. Mom let us make something we called biscuit sticks but I think they were called Butter Dips or something like that. I do remember that they were on page 77 because we made them a lot in 1977.
I have the 1961 edition of that cookbook, in hardcover. I got it from a friend of my mother-in-law, and it’s been my favorite for the past 25 years. Not just for recipes, but also for kitchen tips, menu planning, and table setting.
I really liked this video, especially your 1/2 version which makes it perfect for a senior who lives alone. They are perfect serving sizes for 2 or 3 because we just don't eat that much anymore. When I was a teenager in Ontario, Canada, my friends and I would go to the movies and stop by a very popular restaurant near the theater, and get what they called a "Western Sandwich", same exact ingredients as this recipe. I really loved it, even though I was not an egg eater at the time. Thanks for the memory on this one. On the lumber Jack macaroni, I would use even less of the Worcestershire Sauce, maybe only 1 Tbsp. for the 1/2 recipe and I would drain the macaroni put it back in the hot pot rather like you would for Kraft Dinner., and then add the other ingredients as you did. Thanks so much for sharing these recipes and for your commentary at the end. Have a Blessed day.
I have some of the cookbooks you use but I've also bought a few. Right now I'm waiting for the Cooky Book. Thanks for all your recipes.❤❤❤
I got the Cooky Book as a wedding present in 1971. My children always loved looking through it, especially the Christmas gingerbread house.
A few years back the company did an exact recreation, of that book, and I purchased one for my daughter because mine has some of the pages falling out.
I have my mother's copy of this book! She, and now I, have used it so much, that I have lost both the front and back covers! The recipe we have made the most out of this book is the salmon loaf recipe! So good and one of the only fish meals I could get my kids to eat!
Maybe Ana can do that 1 for us too!
I ❤ seeing your vintage kitchen ware
I bet you can make a new cover. Just need some stiff cardboard cut to fit front and back. Pick out some cool looking duct tape or contact paper from the craft store and just layer long strips (or a big sheet) over both covers and the spine. Maybe print off a picture of the old front cover and put it inside the new cover and go over that with clear contact paper or 2" clear tape. It'll last another 50 years!
@@bethenecampbell6463 You just gave me hope for an old photo album! Thanks.
Wow, the lumberjack macaroni sounds so prestigious hahaha
I love your sweater, by the way!
Thank you! I found it at a little shop in Gatlinburg.
My sisters and I learned how to cook from this book . . . We still make the date/nut pinwheel cookies every Christmas!
Tamale pie was a go-to in my household growing up. So much so I swore off it when I was young. I tried your recipe. But me and chili powder are not friends, so I substituted for Taco Seasoning. It made me like this dish. I am not sure if my mom got heavy-handed with the chili powder, but loved the texture and taste. I am a texture queen, too. My husband didn't remember the recipe but once I cooked it it jogged his memory as well. Keep up the good work. Enjoy watching you.
I'd make ground beef to put in the lumber Jack macoroni
Useless Fact: The Denver Omelet actually came after the Denver Sandwich.
Love your videos!
😮 that is an interesting factoid!
Cooked egg type sandwiches taste even better if you butter the toast! I like just a fried egg on buttered toast sandwich and when I was a kid I would always eat my scrambled eggs on buttered toast. Yum!
i knowww your channel is going to blow the heck up. you consistently provide well-made and approachable videos full of interesting information!
Oh you are so kind! Thank you! ❤
Please feel free to add the kids cheering more often! It was so unexpected and made me laugh right out loud! You deserve all the cheers for your hard work and quality.
I love the retro recipes! Thank you. What a great idea!! Yes, yes, yes.... the versatile egg sandwich reminder... thank you! Now, I am looking for omelet and quiche recipes too! Easy to prepare and take to work for a light lunch. Peace
I was thinking that the Denver scramble needed cheese, right after I thought it, you said it. lol
I have had that book for at least 45 years.
Denver sandwich was on the menu in the dinner I worked in in the late 70s.
I am making the fiesta tamale pie tonight! 😋😋😋 Thank you for sharing this recipe..
I have a shelf of vintage cookbooks. This has really inspired me to dive into them. I gravitate to just looking up recipes here or Pinterest. So glad this video was in my recommended. Thank you!
Dear Anna, I'm a big fan of your jam! The combo of history in food, publishing/graphics and foodways is so brilliant and your presentation is so effective, soothing and entertaining. I have come off an Asian food deep dive and watching your channel inspired a wild fusion that was so darn good I have to share.
Sauce for macaroni (or any shape pasta) evaporated milk, cream cheese, processed cheese (proportion to your taste) melted in sauce pan, simmer to desired thickness, take off heat whisk in 1 tbsp quality miso and pinch of red chili flakes. Mix with pasta and OMG. Thank you for bringing evap milk into my repertoire!!! ❤❤❤
I think the miso could work really well as it's umami, like the Worcester sauce so it'll be the same kind of flavour.
Sounds delicious! 😋
I love your channel and I remember many of the recipes from growing up in the 1960s. Just a note from a word nerd and a Brit: Worcestershire is pronounced “wouster” with the same sound as would, should, could. The “shire” is dropped, unless you are talking about that county in England. I’m definitely going to try that Lumberjack macaroni!
Super fascinated by that lumberjack macaroni. I also like to put vegetables with macaroni and cheese, my fave is dumping in some frozen corn. I also like to put a little bit of Worcestershire sauce and yellow mustard with my macaroni and cheese, so this seems like something I’d like. Super unusual prep method by Mr. Bell! 😃
Tamale pie, looks super easy and yummy! Yes, I also totally want to slap a piece of American cheese and sriracha on that egg sandwich, looks very yummy!
Love 💜 the cookbook chat as always!!! 🙂
Hooray! Super fun video!
Thank you! I love this easy recipe. All in with meat, vegetable, and cornbread ❤
Love all your glassbake.
> I'm 63 years old, I grew-up eating that Fiesta Tamale Pie during the 1960's & 70's. As I got older, I grew to hate-it and would purposely skip dinner when I knew mom was making-it. However, now seeing this dish again, I can't help but feel nostalgic and would be willing to try it again.
I'm a cheese lover and even still, plenty of flavor in that egg sandwich to not need cheese. But I think I would need a little butter on the dry toast. Toast with butter is heaven.
Shocking but Betty Crocker was actually based on a real person: Marjorie Child Husted. I have most of the Betty Crocker cookbooks. I love the recipes and the older the better. They used different ingredients that complimented each other to make meals. Suggestion: next time grill the toast in the frying pan it will give it a different taste. Thanks for sharing and you have a wonderful day.
I love your channel! I have been watching a couple months now, and i just love your whole vibe. I need to get this cookbook!
When I was able to eat cheese I would add a can of tuna and peas with the Mac and cheese. When they redid Betty Crocker a lady from our city was apart of the new Betty.
Have you ever came across the better homes and garden junior cookbook? I was gifted it as a child and you wouldn’t believe the amount of amazing recipes in there. Even my mom used it. Our favorites were the snickerdoodle recipe and the caramel corn one.
Yes! I believe my Grape Surprise Salad video is from the BHG Junior Cookbook. I love cookbooks for children in general. 😁
I love your apron! Years ago I had white pants with those types of fruit on them. They were orange, yellow and green fruits . My coworkers called them “produce pants” lol
i eat egg sandwiches almost every day for breakfast. They really are so good and underrated!
Anna, I just love you! The recipes are fab, and as a book nerd and librarian, I LOVE the way you analyze the books. 😉💚
Love your dishes! ❤
Have a blessed new year and a prosperous one God bless you
I like the black olives, too!
Interesting crust!! I’m glad you stayed Betty Crocker isn’t real! That history is interesting!
I love your videos; I feel as though I’m hanging out in the kitchen with a friend. Thanks so much! 🥰
So glad you enjoy them! ❤
Love the Pyrex and other vintage bowls you use! Perfect for the 1950’s recipes 😄
I am glad you are back! I by the way love olives. My grown daughter after a stint at a pizza joint having to put olives on many orders, hates them.
love, Love, LOVE the illustrations in that particular edition of BCNPC!!
yay! this is exactly what I needed today.
I remember "tamale pie" from the late 1970s. We felt so exotic eating it! We were little white kids in a white suburb in the Midwest and were so excited to have this meal.
Thanks for the memories, Anna. Your dish looked delicious.
My mother used that cookbook all the time! It’s mine now! Made me so happy to see it featured today! ❤
In the Southwest, we would add a can of hatch green chilies to the meat mixture or cornmeal topper. 💗💗Olive Lover here💖💖
Another set of winners Anna! 👍🏻👍🏻
Welcome back 🤗
Are your casserole dishes and bowls as vintage as they look?
I love them! I swear the dish you mixed they mac n cheese in my grandma had.
Love watching you. I love cookbooks myself. I read them like novels!😂
Many of them are vintage! The dish I mixed the macaroni in is from the 60s though.