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Cooking with the Home Front Housewife

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Shelf Liners in 1945: Your Kitchen Cabinet’s Best Friend

  • by Shawna
  • Posted on July 14, 2022July 12, 2022

I recently acquired some paper samples from 1945, and this nearly perfectly preserved shelf liner…

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Cooling Off in the Summer of 1941

  • by Shawna
  • Posted on June 27, 2022June 25, 2022

It’s been so unbearably hot this summer. I found this ad for General Electric room…

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Peter Pan Peanut Butter, June 1942

  • by Shawna
  • Posted on June 23, 2022

I thought you might enjoy this Peter Pan Peanut Butter ad from June 1942. Scroll…

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How Many Ways Can You Use Fruit Cocktail?

  • by Shawna
  • Posted on January 13, 2022

This ad is from January 1943. It is typical in it’s home front battle approach.…

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A Bowl of Soup Will Warm You Up

  • by Shawna
  • Posted on January 8, 2022January 8, 2022

Canned soup was popular before and during the war both for convenience and as a…

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Del Monte Corn, 1945

  • by Shawna
  • Posted on November 3, 2021October 29, 2021

This is a Del Monte corn ad from the October 1945 issue of Better Homes…

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Stuffed Tomato Salad and Baked Rice Pudding

  • by Shawna
  • Posted on June 15, 2021

This ad for Ann Page Foods’ brands was from May 1940. Both recipes can be…

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Del Monte Foods Helps You Plan to Can

  • by Shawna
  • Posted on April 23, 2021

This May 1943 Del Monte Foods ad encouraged the home front housewife to supplement their…

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Meat Pies, 1943

  • by Shawna
  • Posted on April 17, 2021April 22, 2021

The home front housewife was always looking for recipes that helped her stretch meat and…

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Vegetable Soufflé

  • by Shawna
  • Posted on March 24, 2021

As promised, a veggie dish instead of cakes and pancakes today. Sometimes I think vegetable…

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Here is a quick Valentine's Day recipe for you. It's from the 1944 cookbook Dessert Magic. General Foods Corporation published this great little book and stuffed it full of Jell-O recipes.
Over on my blog today I have a look at a wonderful Jell-O cookbook from 1944. There are some quick recipe ideas listed, too. I’m excited about this booklet because women in the 1940s used Jell-O differently than we tend to do. I’m going to try some of the more unique recipes this year and share them with you. Do you have any Jell-O recipes that your family loves? Link is in my bio.
These Victory Croquettes are actually pretty tasty. The recipe calls for eating them with ketchup, but I think experimenting with different sauces might be fun. The recipe is made from lima beans and you can find it over on my blog. The link is in my bio. The recipe is from a 1943 cookbook called Redbow Recipes. The Redbow Company sold dried vegetables in cartons with a cellophane window so you could see the product inside. I had a very hard time finding out much about Redbow. I also found it interesting that in a 48 page book with recipes like Victory Croquettes, neither the war nor rationing was mentioned at all.
I'm back from a much needed break. I feel refreshed and excited to be back in 2023! Today I am flipping through this 1943 Better Homes and Gardens New Gardening Guide because I want to add more gardening posts this year. I know Victory Gardens were so important to the home front family. During my planning I found a folded newspaper article from 1974. It was an article by Jack Kramer from the San Francisco Sunday Examiner and Chronicle about how to build your own greenhouse. Someone kept this 1943 gardening guide until at least October 1974 and must have consistently referred to it if they placed a saved newspaper article in it. That's 31 years! It amazes me. I wonder if they ever built that greenhouse.
These drop cookies are so addictive! The fact that they are small makes them easy to pop in your mouth. (Unfortunately it makes them easier to eat by the handful, too!) They are from the 1942 edition of The New American Cook Book. Recipe is on my blog. Link’s in my bio.
This is this month’s menu. It’s from the September 1940 issue of Woman’s Day. If you head over to my blog, you can see this issue’s cover, too. Link’s in my bio.
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