Cookbook… no, wait, Cookcards? (Ham and Bananas Hollandaise)

 

Ham-Banana. Fun to say, questionable to eat. Click for biggyness.

You read this blog, so you know that I lazily collect old cookbooks. That is, I don’t actively seek them out, but I “somehow” have two shelves full and as many more stacked in piles on my dining room table. Bad Housekeeping Seal Of Approval.

When I was a kid, my mom had the McCall’s Great American Recipe Card Collection set of, well, recipe cards. The plastic bin for them was a light beige on the bottom, hot stamped with some sort of patriotic shield-and-eagle thing, and a clear, hinged lid. I never made a single thing from those recipe cards, and I don’t know if my mom did either. Somewhere along the way, it disappeared. Nobody was saddened.

About 5 years ago, I picked up my own nearly-complete set of the 1978 Better Homes and Gardens Recipe Card Library. I’ve never made a single thing from these recipe cards, either, but I did finally go through each and every one to pick out some that look tasty. Many are dubious, and I’m sure they’ll get posts of their own in the future.

Today’s post is about a stack of those old McCall’s cards, found for me last week by my friend Erin of ThedaBaraVintage. My plan is to share these 1973 recipe cards with my customers, and most of them are feasible for today’s palate. Zucchini Tossed Salad. Peaches in Marsala. Salmon Steaks Tarragon. But a few, just a few, would test the taste buds of anyone I know. It will be a crapshoot, and I hope my customers enjoy the gamble. Will you get a recipe card for Creole Doughnuts (Beignets), or for Perfection (gelatine) Salad?

Because I know that everyone will want to make the Ham and Bananas Hollandaise shown above, I’ll share that recipe with you here.

6 medium bananas
1/4 cup lemon juice
6 thin slices boiled ham (about 1/2 lb)
3 Tbs prepared mustard
2 envelopes (1-1/4 oz size) hollandaise sauce mix
1/4 cup light cream

  1. Preheat oven to 400F. Lightly butter 2-quart, shallow baking dish.
  2. Peel bananas; sprinkle each with 1/2 Tbs lemon juice to prevent darkening.
  3. Spread ham slices with mustard. Wrap each banana in slice of ham. Arrange in single layer in casserole. Bake 10 minutes.
  4. Meanwhile, make sauce: In small saucepan, combine sauce mix with 1 cup water, 1 Tbs lemon juice, and cream. Heat, stirring, to boiling; pour over bananas. Bake 5 minutes longer, or until slightly golden. Nice with a green salad for brunch or lunch. Makes 6 servings.

You’re welcome.

3 Comments

Filed under amusement, collections, food, friends, kitchen, nostalgia, vintage

Cookbookery: Big Boy Barbecue Book

Yesterday, I promised my Facebook followers (and IG and Twitter) a post dedicated to one of my newest finds: the Big Boy Barbecue Book: Shows how easy it is to cook on Spit or Grill. And so here you go!

Published in 1957 by the “Tested Recipe Institute” with the “cooperation” of the Big Boy Mfg. Co., this spiral-bound booklet is filled with…well, it’s filled with instructions for using a Big Boy grill or any of the possible Big Boy accessories, such as the (snicker, giggle) Big Boy Electro-Rod briquet fire starter. Now don’t get me wrong, there are plenty of helpful hints to be found, but you have to push through the Big Boy propaganda.

One full page describes the many benefits of barbecuing at home, including this gem:

That’s right, wifey has only to make a salad and dessert! Here’s the first of 4 dessert recipes included in the booklet:

Yup, that shouldn’t require any kitchen time or clean-up!

For those of you hoping that this gem of a book will find its way to the shop, I’m sorry to disappoint you. This one has already been claimed, but I’ll try to make some equally interesting items from my cookbook collection available in the future.

As Julia Child would say, Bon Appétit!

Leave a comment

Filed under advertising, collections, food, kitchen, vintage

Estate Wizards: Thbpppt

I’ve been frequenting estate sales for a couple of years now, but due to scheduling and locations I hadn’t yet shopped with A&A Estate Wizards. Now that I have, I’m sure that I won’t a second time.

I typically try to arrive after the initial melee of shoppers have gone through in order to avoid standing around and waiting for the sale to start, but some items in the preview photos for this sale particularly intrigued me so I decided to mingle with the throng of Regulars (those folks who hit up multiple sales every weekend, and who are always first in line). The sale was about a 45 minute drive away so I gassed up the car, cashed up my wallet, and headed down to arrive 20-25 minutes before doors were scheduled to open.

It was no surprise to see a sign-up sheet on the door, and I was even prepared with my own pen. Good thing, too, as the “Wizards” hadn’t provided one. It did feel a little silly to sign up as #36 on the list, because…well, here’s how these things typically work: Some estate sale companies employ the use of sign-up sheets so that they aren’t overrun with rabid bargain hunters as soon as they open the door. Particularly when the house is small, has a clunky floor plan, or when there’s lots of furniture, it can be a big help to space out the crowd to a manageable horde. A person from the estate sale company will open the doors at the stated time, permit the first 10 or so names on the list to enter, and then shut everyone else out for the time being. 5 or 10 minutes later, after the initial group have thinned out through the house, they’ll invite the next batch of people in. This will continue until the first 25ishy folks are in (and beginning to leave) and after that, it’s just open to the general public. I’ve been to a number of sales where I was early enough to sign up on the list, but have never actually had my name called, as I’ve never been that high up on the roster. So yeah, when I saw that I would be #36, I almost didn’t bother to write my name down at all. Almost.

At the starting time, the first 12 names (two people were absent) were called. They entered. The rest of us waited.

5 minutes went by.

10 minutes went by. One of the first people exited, empty handed. He was frustrated because the Wizards had apparently pre-sold some items, in particular whatever items he happened to be after. That’s not typical, and not cool.

15 minutes went by. The crowd was getting very restless. We began to realize that the speech a Wizard had given as the crowd had formed earlier about “not acting up like children” should have been a warning to us as to how their methods generally influence their customers’ moods.

18 minutes went by, and the second of the first batch exited, with a camera in hand. EIGHTEEN MINUTES for the Wizards to make their first sale. One of the Regulars, he was surprised to see us all still standing outside and waiting.

20 minutes in, and two more names were called to enter. Two. We had been joking amongst ourselves that the Wizards must be employing a one in/one out rule, but we didn’t think that they actually were. Without the “pressure” of other shoppers wandering through the house, it’s all too easy to take your merry old time, to pore over items, to sit back and flip through every page of a photo album. It’s okay, because the next customer won’t be allowed in until you leave. That’s all very nice for the shoppers already IN the house, but as I watched people trickle out, I was noticing how little (if anything) they were carrying with them. Obviously, this tactic is not good for the people waiting, nor is it good for the bottom line.

My mom had come with me this time, but she gave up on the waiting game and left. I multiplied my travel time by my time already invested and decided to stick around a bit longer.

We waited. One fellow wait-er took out his notepad to record the company name so he would know to avoid them in the future, and saw that he already had them written down. Oops! Upon hearing this, one of the Regulars said that she’d avoided Wizard sales for a year, but was giving them another chance. She didn’t think she’d be back again.

It took SEVENTY-FIVE minutes to get to #36 on the list, and if you factor in how many people had already left out of frustration, I was probably only the 25th actual shopper. I zipped in and tried as quickly as possible to locate the blue dress I’d spotted in the preview photos, but I couldn’t find it. A black dress I’d seen in the photos was still there, though, and while no individual item of clothing was marked with a price, a day-glo yellow sign said clothing (mostly of the pastel polyester pantsuit variety) was $1–$5, priced at checkout. (At checkout, the conversation went like this: Me—Can you tell me how much this is? Power Trip Wizard, indignant—I never said it was $20! Me—No, um, I’m asking how much. Power Trip Wizard—Oh, $50.)

It wasn’t until after I’d already explored the bathroom and the first bedroom that I discovered that the Wizards had not only not priced anything but the furniture, but that they also hadn’t taken the time to actually empty the cabinets or dresser drawers of their contents. I tried to go through some drawers as best as I could, but I was by now encumbered with seven shoeboxes, and there was no Hold area. Unheard of! I very much liked the jacquard towels in the bathroom, and would have bought the set if there had been two of each size, but only one of each was on the towel rack. It’s entirely possible that there were more stored in the vanity, but the cabinets are usually (always) emptied out first so I didn’t even think to look! Dang!

It didn’t take me long to scope out the rest of the sale and determine that while the lady of the house did collect shoes, she didn’t use Pyrex, or cookbooks, or sew. The pretty “Cake” tin shown above was nowhere to be found, and a set of chrome kitchen canisters (Garner Ware perhaps?) was being sold at $22…a very good price but for the fact that one section had over the years become entirely too fussy to close. I do actually USE these things, so that would be a bother.

Checking out was another fiasco. The Wizards had inexplicably chosen a cluttered back room with only one entrance/exit (through the kitchen) as their checkout area. Why not in the nearly empty living room, right by the front door so they could keep an eye on potential thieves? No idea. There was no place to form a line, and once it was my turn, there was no place to set down my merchandise while my haul was tallied up. Peon Wizard #1 had me set my items on the “cashier table” which was covered in jewelry cases, but Power Trip Wizard chastised her and had me move my items to the floor behind the table. This move involved getting both in and out of the way of numerous other customers, in addition to the cashiers themselves. While I was paying, Peon Wizard #2 tried to explain to Power Trip Wizard that the crowd outside had been keeping count of how many people were leaving and were wondering not-so-politely when anyone else would be let in. Power Trip Wizard told Peon Wizard #2 to ignore the shoppers still outside and instead make sure the house was tidy.

As I left, 90 minutes after the sale had officially started, there was still a crowd of people waiting outside. The same people who had been waiting with me earlier! Someone said that 8 people had exited the sale, with still no new shoppers allowed in. I wouldn’t be surprised if they turned into an angry mob, with rakes and torches!

4 Comments

Filed under reviews, shopping, vintage

How To: Draft a missing pattern piece

A couple of weeks ago, a reader asked how I’d drafted the missing pieces for Vogue 9996 (1960) as mentioned in a previous post (actually, that post is Part 3 of 3). Rather than answer in the comments, I thought it would be easier to write a new post, and then I immediately put it off. What better time than a gorgeous, warm, sunny Saturday (when I should be sewing or packing for my upcoming trip) to hang out in my basement office and finally get around to writing said post?

First off, this “how to” is along the lines of Do As I Say, and Not As I Do. What I say is: this method has a certain level of inaccuracy. If you’re a Seamstress, just stop reading right now. You will possibly break out in hives and/or start crying. Besides, you already know how to draft a pattern. If, however, you are “merely” Someone Who Sews, and have a scanner and printer, and are caught in a bind with a half-finished garment, and are okay with taking shortcuts marked with signs such as BRIDGE OUT, and are maybe using a forgiving fabric, AND don’t need the finished item to fit like a tailor-made glove, then read on.

NOTE: If you’re missing nothing but a facing piece, stop right here. You can recreate the facing simply by tracing the piece it is the facing for, but make it only about 2″ deep. Now carry on with your sewing. If you don’t understand what this means, skip ahead to the TEST below.

Okay, here’s the quick-and-dirty trick for quickly recreating a missing pattern piece using very little math and no actual drafting: There should be an index of the included pattern pieces, printed on your instruction sheet(s). It looks something like this:

That there index is typically drawn to scale. Which means that you can measure a full-size pattern piece that you do have against its representation in the index and find out how much that drawing has been scaled down. (If you don’t have an index, you can do this same trick with the cutting layout. If you don’t have a cutting layout either, you should really consider using a different pattern.) Using the above as an example, let’s say you have everything but piece #2, the bodice back.

TEST: if you couldn’t tell that piece #2 is the Bodice Back from looking at the above index, this entire technique may be a bit overwhelming for you. Stop here and sew a couple of garments from complete patterns to get some practice in before you start taking confusing shortcuts like this.

Okay, so let’s take a pattern piece for the skirt, and measure the longest edge. Let’s pretend it’s 30 inches long (I’m not measuring the actual pattern pieces in this example, so don’t think you can cheat and make this particular dress from using these instructions). On the index, that corresponding edge is 1.625″ long. You wind up with an equasion that looks like:

1.625 * X = 30

…wherein X is your mystery number. Insert some 8th grade algebra here to deduce that you need to multiply the index drawing by 18.5 to make it life-size (If 1.625 * X = 30, divide both sides by 1.625 to solve for X). If you double-check the math, you’ll discover that 1.625 * 18.5 is actually 30.0625 but I warned you that this method was a teensy bit inaccurate. Besides, you’ll likely err that small of a difference when you cut out the fabric.

Okay, now let’s measure piece #2 on the index. The waist length on the index drawing is exactly .5″ long. Multiply by 18.5 to determine that it should be 9.25″ long. Scan in your missing piece from the index, adjust it in the computer program of your choice until it’s “life size” based on your math, and print it out full size. After a bit of taping if you had to tile it together, you have your missing pattern piece! It will be missing helpful marks such as grain line and darts, but you’re an advanced enough sewer to be able to figure out those bits. You should test out your new piece by pinning all of the pattern pieces together before you cut any fabric. If the piece you made seems way off, either your math is bad or the index for your pattern isn’t drawn to scale. Try again with the cutting guide instead of the index. If it’s still way off, well, at least this method wasn’t a huge investment of your time. Try scouring PatternRescue for your missing piece.

14 Comments

Filed under fashion, sewing

If there are no more phone booths, where will Clark Kent change into his Superman duds?

Bell Telephone introduces Airtight Outdoor Telephone Booths, scanned from The American Home, October, 1954. Click image to enlargify.

Bell Telephone: Reminding you that someone, somewhere, would enjoy hearing your voice today.

Leave a comment

Filed under advertising, nostalgia, vintage