Old Arkansawyer
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Maybe I misjudge, but, I think a large percentage of today'sDepression – Era food
PALADIN85020;
You have started a very interesting thread. The foods that folks ate, and survived on, during the depression era. I lived in the Depression era, and had the opportunity to see two completely different types of depression- era food types consumed, by my own family.
On my Dad’s side of the family, they tended to eat the basic, home produced food found on their farms, with little regard to the healthy aspect of their foods. I saw my paternal aunts fry bacon, and Fresh Side, to render the grease, and then throw the bacon, and fresh side in the garbage, and keep the grease. The grease when cooled, and hardened was used as a spread for their toast etc. My Dad loved, and craved potatoes fried, floating in melted lard, and sometimes would fix a batch of potatoes fried that way, himself, as Mom refused to fix ‘m that way. Most of their meat was nearly cooked to a crisp, while their fruit, and vegetables were hardly cooked at all. My Dad always raised tame rabbits, that were a regular family meat supply, also to sell to supplement our monetary income. Dad also, tanned, and sold those rabbit furs also supplementing our income.
On my Mom’s side of the family her cooking style was a different style entirely. Mom was way ahead of her time, and was a ‘Health Food’ advocate, long before there was such a thing as ‘Health Foods’. Mom wouldn’t prepare fatty meats, use Hominy, as lye was used in it’s making, she sun dried all manner of fruit, called ‘Snittla’ in German, to be used in pies, and pastry. She made her own, Grape juice, tomato juice, Sauerkraut, and bean soup. Mom & Dad had a large vegetable garden, that my Dad, and I spaded, and worked the soil up by hand. Mom canned & froze all manner of their home-grown vegetables, and fruit. Our families also shared our produce, and various skills. We were pretty much self-sufficient, back then. I wonder how members of today’s society would cope with the depression era’s foods, and methods of survival?
Chubbo
generation could not cope at all with depression era conditions.
More of the U.S. was rural in 1930 and knew how to grow, at
least some if not most, of their own food.
Today's urban population not so self sufficient. Turning off the
central heat and air would do a bunch of them in.