Friday, November 6, 2009

Campbell's and Ketchup

Food and it's preparation is such a compelling thread in most people's lives. Something that is a shared experience. It would be fun to be a food historian. My husband Hank has enjoyed writing his food columns for eight years celebrating good food and humorous tales of food and life. We attended an author lecture last year by a woman who's book "recommended staying as close as possible to the origins of your food." It was quite an interesting historical look at how people have gotten further and further away from the origins of the food they eat. When canned food first emerged in the early part of the last century, people were extremely wary of it, largely shunning it. I guess it didn't take long, though, to get swayed by convenience. Campbell's Soups and ketchup must have been amazing culinary short cuts for 1950's cooks.

I've been spoiled over the years with my husband's creativity as a cook. He loves food and cooking and experiments a lot with herb and sauce combinations. Interesting because he/we grew up in an era, the 1950's, where Campbell's soup was the amazing new ingredient. His mom's collection of recipes had a bunch using cans of soup. (I typed them all up as family gift one year - and actually crossed stitched covers for the cookbooks!) She really got into the "new" recipes of the 1950's. She had clipped recipes from sides of boxes and from magazines, a couple written on the back of bowling score sheets. It was fun typing them all up. Hank remembers Golden Mushroom Soup over pork chops. For variation and a 'special' version she would use Cream of Celery Soup. The only soup his mom made from scratch was potato soup with about "12 cubes of butter" added. Her clam chowder would be clams in the potato soup. One of his favorite of her dishes was roasted red potatoes baked then roughly mashed with gravy and meat slathered on top. When she made shish ka bobs, for dipping she made her special "Indian sauce", ketchup with curry powder mixed in. Her green salads (tomato and lettuce) were dressed with mayonnaise, when she got fancy, she mixed ketchup into the mayo for Thousand Island Dressing.

I can't remember my folks using Campbell's Soups in recipes. Maybe because Cream of Mushroom was the "magic" new ingredient and they didn't like mushrooms. (Not realizing it doesn't taste like mushrooms when in most dishes.) A cream base for a dish was accomplished by shaking some flour into some bacon grease and adding milk (probably half and half), sort of a Bechemel with flavor. That was the base of tuna casserole, with cheese added. That was the base of SOS (made with chipped beef and served over toast). I'm trying to think of a "fancy dish" my folks made......(thinking).....Well, I guess they didn't experiment much and just stuck to the tried and true. I remember new potatoes and fresh peas in cream sauce (their Bechemel with flavor). Scalloped potatoes were made with potato slices layered with flour and butter chunks throughout then topped with milk and baked. Fried chicken was a favorite but merely dredged in salted flour and fried in bacon grease or Crisco in an electric frying pan.

Ah food, it surprises me how intrigued by it I've become in the second half of my life.

Question of the post (click on the word "comments" below)....Did your family keep bacon grease for cooking and, if so, in what and where?

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