• Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
Search

History in the Kitchen

Cooking with the Home Front Housewife

Menu
Skip to content
  • Home
  • Menus
  • Main Dishes
  • Side Dishes
  • Breakfasts
  • Breads
  • Desserts
  • Drinks
  • Entertainment
  • History
  • Homemaking
  • About
  • Contact

Tag: Salads

  • History

Strawberry Cheese Ring Salad

  • by Shawna
  • Posted on June 1, 2022May 29, 2022

This spring 1942 ad for Ann Page Salad Dressing has a recipe for a strawberry…

Read More
  • Main Dishes

First Monday Menu: April Roast Beef Dinner

  • by Shawna
  • Posted on April 4, 2022April 4, 2022

This menu comes from Margaret Hewett’s Party Menus and Recipes. Published in 1939, it contains…

Read More
  • Breakfast

Spending a Day with a 1941 Menu

  • by Shawna
  • Posted on March 14, 2022

I’m trying something new this month. If it works out well, I might make it…

Read More
  • History

First Monday Menu: January 1943

  • by Shawna
  • Posted on January 3, 2022

This month’s menu is a bit different. It comes from the January 1943 issue of…

Read More
  • Desserts

Thanksgiving 1945: Turkey or No Turkey?

  • by Shawna
  • Posted on November 17, 2021

This is a long post, but I wanted to show you this article from the…

Read More
  • Salads

Potato Salad, 1944

  • by Shawna
  • Posted on August 30, 2021

This potato salad recipe was part of the Better Homes and Gardens August menu feature…

Read More
  • Advertisements

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…

Read More
  • Main Dishes

Hot Potato Cheese Salad

  • by Shawna
  • Posted on April 25, 2021

Here is a potato salad recipe just in time for your spring picnics. This one…

Read More
  • Advertisements

Wesson’s “Quik-Change” Dressing Recipe, 1943

  • by Shawna
  • Posted on April 3, 2021April 2, 2021

I wanted to try another recipe from a magazine ad this week. We’ve been eating…

Read More
  • Condiments

Chiffonade Dressing

  • by Shawna
  • Posted on June 29, 2020June 29, 2020

I wanted to make something a little different for today’s post. I found a salad…

Read More

Follow Us

  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest

Instagram

This month’s First Monday Menu is based on the chart I posted last week. You can find more info on my blog, but here is the main course and the menu for an entire weekend day. These were really good kidney beans, but definitely not enough for a main dish in an evening meal. The menus were for a family of four. You can find the shopping list for the entire week on my blog today, too. Link’s in my bio. Happy Fourth to my United States friends!
This chart from the Bureau of Home Economics was in the May 1942 issue of Woman's Day magazine. It was one of three plans to help women create meal plans on a budget. This one is Plan A. You can see an explanation of how to use the chart on my blog. The link is in my bio. Plan A was heavier on potatoes, dairy, and meat. Plan B had more cereals and leafy vegetables, and Plan C had more dried beans, fat, and eggs. A woman could choose which plan worked best for her family. I'm going to do a short series based on the menus and recipes Woman's Day created for these plans. I'll start with July's First Monday Menu. I'm excited to try some of the recipes and share them with you!
GE Room Conditioners, 1941. You can see the entire ad on my blog today. The link is in my bio. Notice how the ad copy is trying to convince the consumer that they need the air conditioner. Opinions of air conditioning units and what they should do for home owners have definitely changed over time.
This is part of a June 1942 Peter Pan Peanut Butter ad. Peanut butter is surprisingly versatile, and home front housewives in the early 1940s used it in everything from sandwiches to desserts to beverages. If you head over to my blog, I have a couple recipes and the entire ad for you to see. Link’s in my bio.
Here are two of the cold summer drink recipes I have on my blog today. You can find last year's drink roundup in the post, too, and that link is in my bio. These are both from the June 23, 1944 issue of The Family Circle and would be refreshing on a hot day like today! Let me know if you try them.
Today on my blog I have a round up of some movies that folks on the home front would have been watching in the month of June in 1942-44. All are available to watch today. There are a lot of war movies, which is understandable, but there’s also a Bob Hope romantic comedy if that is more your style. The link is in my bio.
Blog at WordPress.com.
×
  • Follow Following
    • History in the Kitchen
    • Join 247 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • History in the Kitchen
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar