We had everything in an old plastic ice cream container ( or any other sturdy-ish plastic food container) they were used for the fridge (left overs, cookies etc) if it was hard enough not needing it, say carrots or apples etc..they'd just be in a simple freezer bag 😂 no fancy boxes etc.
Our food was wrapped in waxed paper and it was always coming undone by lunch. I had a Dukes of Hazzard metal lunch pail my mom got at a yard sale and no I wasn’t a fan! Lol
I have never commented on any UA-cam videos before, but I really wanted to tell you that this is my favorite video of yours. You have such a wonderful, real, and just incredibly comforting personality and that really shines through in every part of this one.
@thehapagirl92 Didn't your mama teach you that if you have nothing kind to say, to say nothing at all? @Cooking_the_books Anna, please remove the rude comment about @B. Dylan Hollis. Dylan is actually extroverted, a bit over-the-top, yes, but also kind-hearted, extremely funny, and sweet. The above commenter has probably only watched a few of his short videos and has now strung him up over that.
I was a young adult in the 1980’s. It feels weird to me that cookbooks I bought new in the 1970’s, 1980’s and 1990’s are considered vintage today. It’s interesting to me to watch the changes in food trends over the years. I really enjoy your meals from different decades videos. They bring back memories for me. Some of my earliest field trips as a child in the 1970’s were to a tortilla factory (and got fresh, warm flour tortillas), and an ice cream factory (and got some ice cream sandwiches). There were also trips to the zoo, the aquarium, the planetarium, museums, pumpkin farms, an orchid farm, operas, ballets, plays, etc.
Yes! I was born in 1992 and it’s weird things from that time are vintage haha. I can imagine how someone your age feels. My mom probably feels the same as you. She was born in 1956
My son was born in 1981. I am from North Carolina and subscribed to Southern Living. This video brought back great so many great memories from that time. In the south egg salads are made with mayo and mustard and tend to be very creamy. Never used cottage cheese. My first field trip was when I was 6 years old and in the first grade in 1960. We took our pack lunches to the movie theater where we all watched a showing of "Dumbo." Never will forget it.
I'm a 1976 baby, from Georgia, and I had totally forgotten about my mom wrapping Cokes in foil. LOL I rarely was allowed to have them, but she made sure they stayed cold! This is my fave video of yours yet!
I was born in 55 so a little older than you but some of my best memories from school are getting to take a sack lunch on field trip day which we always had toward the end of the school year---we paid a nickle or a dime a day or so ahead of time to our teacher then each bus drive loaded up a number 10 wash tub which he filled with a block of ice he had busted up and bottles of pop (the money was to pay for our bottle of pop that he gave us to drink with our lunch--no canned pop back in those days)also for the kids who did not have the money to pay they still got a bottle of pop and no one ever knew the day of the trip that someone couldnt afford it (that was so considerate of the teachers)....I thought I was 'something on a stick' on field trip day lol...mom packed bologna sandwich but I dont remember us being able to afford chips for all of us...sometimes I made oatmeal raisin or peanut butter criss cross cookies for our bag dessert...thanks for bringing back some fond memories ---oh we usually went to the Oklahoma City zoo which was about an hour away from our country school...I love your long videos and would appreciate more of them...
In 2nd or 3rd grade in the early 60s we went to the Wonder Bread/Hostess factory. I remember being on a catwalk peering down over huge vats of bread dough. The best part was the little bag of goodies we all got after the tour with a Hostess cupcake, a wooden ruler and the best thing ever, a mini loaf of Wonder bread. I ate the loaf of bread in the bus on the way back to school.
@geelizzie Lizzie, did you take the wrapper with you, or did you leave it on the floor like many of my kids do every day? Hahaha! (I'm a school bus driver.)
I went through all my mother's cookbooks when she died. There were clippings from 1930 and 1940 newspapers and magazines which were very interesting but my cookbook favourite is "Dinner Dishes for the Raj" ...... My great great uncle had been an Army officer in India and he had brought the book back for his mother. It is full of English versions of Indian food!
What a fun video. I was born in 1969. I feel very fortunate to have grown up during the 70's and 80's. I have all of my mom's "vintage" cookbooks. I have the red McCall's cookbook. I have never really looked through that one. I will have to do that. My mom also had a lot of the Southern Living cookbooks. I am going to make that sandwich for sure. I love soup and sandwich meals. Also, my mom would put the coke in the freezer and let it get slushy and then wrap it in foil. Midwest girl here also--Kansas City area. I am relatively new to your channel and I have been loving it.
Stick those buns in the freezer - they'll be just as good thawed later. If you don't get to them quickly enough and they start to go stale, use them to make garlic toast or bread crumbs. Loved this video!
I haven’t even watched this but I loved it when my mother made garlic Parmesan toast with the hamburger buns! We always had these random bits of bread in our freezer it’s funny we were a family of six when I was growing up and you had a chicken fed the whole family and we would have leftovers of course I was a little kid and I didn’t really like meat so I would eat the back. LoL
My 1st field trip was to our neighborhood library. The childrens section had a stage set up with a whole medieval themed puppet/marionette show area. It was freaking AWESOME! Those librarians were so creative and talented. It was like an actual professional show. One of the naughty puppets threw little bags of candy into the audience to cause chaos. It worked. We were tussling like gladiators for the candy🤣🤣🤣
What a poignant, precious video this is. Love the idea of reconnecting with special childhood memories as you did. I’m a 60s kid and enjoyed seeing how similar your 80s lunch was to mine. The sandwich, carrot sticks, Pringles and Hostess snowballs - same as mine except I loved Hostess Suzy Q’s, not sure they are made anymore. You do wonderful videography and are so engaging to watch. Thanks - keep up the great work! 😊
Seventies kid here, and my memories are similar. Field trips were the best. I have a daughter who's in high school now and I went along on every field trip of hers that I could. Kids on school buses haven't changed much!
In the early 80s we were blessed with a vending machine in our cafeteria, and I showed my gratitude with the purchase of a Suzy Q and a carton of milk for lunch everyday my 8th grade year. 😬
Anna I have to apologize that I don’t often get to “like” your videos because I rarely watch on my phone or computer. Where most people get in front of their big screen TVs and struggle to decide what to binge watch, Hulu, Netflix, Prime Video etc, I sit down and opt to binge watch the lovely and charming Anna on make and discuss her recipes from her great collection of vintage cook books on Cooking The Books! Today I saw a ‘no cheese cheesecake’, no bake Christmas fruit cake, some tuna, peppers and pineapple over La Choy noodles…I’ll have to find the videos so I can “like” for your channel. PS where do you live that you always have what appear to be HUGE monster sized eggs!!
I can like videos on my tv, as you are watching click the up button, and you should see the thumbs up buttons, right on the screen, you also get the timeline so you can forward if you are not interested in the selling part if the item is not anything you need or want to learn about.
Made the Hot French Cheese sandwich today. I tried it three ways, as per the recipe, with sliced chicken and another with some tuna salad. All were excellent!!!
So glad I found your channel! My kids were born in the 80's. Your recipes amd field trip brought back many good memories. I can't wait to see your '50's videos!
I make cottage cheese egg “mayo” sandwiches all the time. I don’t blend the cottage cheese. I find I can’t really tell the difference between the curds and the cut up egg whites. And I love it more than regular egg mayo. And it keeps together well, not watery. 😊
Thank you for this info. I was thinking the recipe sounds amazing and then wondering if I should just use it as a dip if it liquefies, but I'll first try it without blending it.
I think what that recipe called for was just what today we call regular cottage cheese as opposed to dry curd cottage cheese. No need to smooth it out.
Grew up in Denmark in the 80's. Don't know that we had field trips in 1st grade, but I remember a trip to the danish Island Laesoe in 2nd grade. I found a dog tag on the beach with the inscribtion "Thor Vesteroe 1968". I still have it to this day.
I have that Southern Living cookbook - from that time. When I lived in Germany, I learned to butter, thinly, the inside of the bread for sandwiches to keep the insides from seeping into the bread. Aaah, I miss those days! Those sandwiches look delicious! Very fun day.
That was the "proper" technique to use when making a sandwich, according to my 1968 home ec teacher. She also repeatedly told us to be sure to bring the fillings all the way to the edge, not like the SKIPPY peanut butter commercial where they beautifully smear the middle of the bread with a dollop of peanut butter.
@@eclairtreo of course. Who wants an inch of wasted bread all around the filling of your sandwich? I wish they’d had more home ec classes. We didn’t have much, but what I took were really fun and educational.
Good grief: Betty Crocker (especially the Cooky Book), canned soup meals, 4-H membership, a love of cooking all kinds of food since childhood (I still love cooking and experimenting with foods from around the world), and recent hip surgery-we have a lot in common. Love all of your videos. Thank you for everything you do.
First field trip was to Avery Island in south Louisiana where we learned how and where Tabasco sauce is made. We all got little bottles of it as souvenirs. Don’t know what I ate.
My grandma has the Southern Living annuals from the 70s to the 2000s. I was born in 81, so thats my earliest memories as well and I get very nostalgic for that decade.
My first field trip was to an apple orchard. I was so excited! My Mom always packed ham and cheese with mayo on Wonder bread. She would throw an apple in there. I also got a Hostess Funnybone (my favorite). I never got soda, she always packed juice. I was so envious of the kids with soda.
I love this idea for a UA-cam channel. I am addicted to collecting cookbooks. For some reason I have become a picky eater since marrying my now-ex-husband, which makes me hesitant to try the recipes. Watching you pick out recipes to try is giving me the confidence to try them, as I regularly did before my marriage.
You can’t go wrong with coco wheats and faygo!!! All my school field trips usually involved going into Cleveland for a museum, zoo, symphony or opera. I have fun memories of getting to see behind the scenes at a grocery store and staying overnight at COSI. I am watching this while I drink a mug of glazed lemon loaf tea- all thanks to you!!!
I'm an 80s kid. My Mom liked soup and sandwich lunches on weekends, a lot of Campbell's Bean & Bacon, Vegetable, and Chicken Noodle. She always whisked a beaten egg into the chicken noodle, because Campbell's did a print ad about how adding egg boosted the protein and "added a little sunshine."
That sandwich SLAPS. SO GOOD. I made it immediately while you were. It was aces! Special. Would also rock with some finely chopped immigration crab mixed into the spread.
In 1980, I started working and living on my own. On Sunday I would cook up a roast beef or chicken, so I could make sandwiches for work and maybe a stew or soup with the leftovers to have for dinner for the next couple days. This is what my mother used to do and what I still do. Anyway the first time I was making chicken n dumplings with the leftovers, making broth by simmering the carcass, I called my mother to get recipe for dumplings, she advised me to go purchase a box of bisquick and follow the recipe. LOL. Oh and egg salad for work lunches, I would put the egg salad in a separate small tupperware container and assemble at work.
After watching this video I found the McCall’s cookbook in blue!! I have a bunch of the Southern Living cookbooks from my Mom. I wish shipping wasn’t so expensive I would love to share them with you. I really enjoy watching your videos.
I agree, she is definitely a cool chick. She cares about this channel too I don't know of someone who seems to like and comment on so much. I feel like this is what UA-cam is supposed to be but doesn't ever work out that way. It's like we are a part of a community like that
Our lunches when out on field trips were usually jam and cheese (usually cheddar) sandwiches and some sort of dessert and a bottle of water (because nothing there would spoil in the heat). I didn't realize anyone else did jam and cheese sandwiches until I read a 1950s cookbook in college. As a farm kid, we also had "field meals" which were meals for when we accompanied dad to the field because mom was working and planting or harvest had to get done. Those were some sort of canned meat salad sandwiches (usuallyat least 12 sandwiches) in an Igloo box cooler with a large ice pack, a large box of donut holes, and two large insulated water jugs full of water.
Definitely had coke cans wrapped in foil for field day at school in the late 70s/early 80s. We didn't have a lot of off campus field trips, but field day was a day full of outdoor events on the playground, sack lunch with foil wrapped sodas were a special treat! Just discovered your channel this week and enjoying the trip through the past.
I can remember waxed paper wrapped sandwiches. My mother always did a special fold, and they didn't come open. We would purchase a bottle of milk, with the red striped paper straw. Yes I am a child of the 50's.
Your recipes are so fun. I really enjoy how excited you get! I graduated in 1984 so I really liked that your recipes were right up my alley. Thanks for sharing them. 😘
I grew up in FL and My mom would usually give me one of those little huggie drinks for field trips and she would wrap it in paper towels and aluminum foil to keep it cold. I also love egg salad so I might have to try the recipe ☺️
I loved seeing your packed lunch. I am 64 in a couple of weeks and my mom would wrap a can of pop in foil too for a field trip. What a blast from the past! I am from Portland, Oregon and we called it pop growing up. I live in Pennsylvania now and we refer to it as soda or a soft drink here.
Ah, Coco Wheats.😊 Our mom would make them frequently beginning in the fall, growing up in MI. In the 60s after relocating to FL, we were living in a CBS (Cement Block Structure) house when the temperature dropped and I was freezing. Went to the grocery and could not find Coco Wheats, so I just picked up a box of plain cream of wheat. When I got home, I cooked up enough for my 2 young children and myself adding some instant cocoa in. All these years later, I still do cocoa wheats the same.
Is always nice to see cooking and bringing you to memory lane with foods that you ate when you were a child.. I grew up on the 80's.. so for me corn dogs are my memory lane 80's comfort food. Love your videos, looking forward to your new ones. 😊
Fellow 80s kid here, and the packed lunch absolutely reminds me of what I used to have! My mom wrapped a soda in foil and also a paper towel, which I guess we thought kept it colder? And we always had Pringles. As for the carrots, to this day I think baby carrots are the inferior option. They don't have as much flavor as real carrots, they are always weirdly wet, and they taste of preservatives.
Hi Anna! Very fun meals. The cheese sandwich looked the best! I was born in '61. The first field trip I remember was to Rye Beach in New York. This was an amusement park and I remember that I had a fantastic time. I do remember my mom wrapping a can of soda in aluminum foil. Growing up in that era my mom made me a brown bag lunch every day. Our school didn't have lunches but we had to give 'milk money' every week to buy a small carton of milk to drink with lunch. Typical lunches for me would be a pb&j sandwich or Genoa salami sandwich with a piece of fruit.
I just added my comment then I saw yours. Grew up the in same era and had the same lunches. We had a hot lunch at school bur I rarely ate it since I could leave school and walk home for a meal if I didn't have a sandwich (yes, they let a first grader leave school grounds on their own back then). A school trip I remember from elementary school was to tbe Museum of Natural History in NY. I don't know how the teacher handled a class of 30 or 35 kids on the subway from The Bronx but we all arrived with none lost.
My mom put the can in the freezer and the foil was there to keep the bag from getting soggy (I'm from Detroit). I love cream and coco wheat more than oatmeal.
@BetteStewart Sanders yes. The others I may have heard of but Hudson's closed when I was in elementary school. I went there once but I don't remember it. My mom would talk about it, usually around Christmas. I'm not sure about the market. I grew up to 18 at Michigan & Martin, about a mile from Livernois. We didn't have a car until I was 14 so we didn't get to a lot of places very much.
My favorite vintage cookbook which was our go-to on college and is still one that I consult today is The Fannie Farmer Cookbook, Eleventh Edition, copyright 1896.
Kroger sells whipped cottage cheese now, which is the modern equivalent to creamed cottage cheese. Love the videos, I am also a vintage cookbook fanatic 😊
I feel like we're the only place without a Kroger or Kroger affiliate! 😂 My parents have one nearby though, so I'll have to look for it the next time I visit.
I just found your channel and I really like how you structured this video. It was fun to watch. The first field trip I remember was to our local recycling facility. They showed us the garbage trucks, the different buildings and they prepared a little course on how to make recycled paper.
I'm Canadian and my lunches looked a bit different. Breakfast was the same, cream of wheat (but not chocolate!!! So lucky!). I don't remember lunches on field trips but I remember some 'special' lunches my mom would make. One of them was a hot dog in boiling water in a thermos. She'd make it in the morning and the hotdog would still be warm by lunchtime. The bread (not bun) had all the condiments on it already and I just had to put the hotdog on the bread. I absolutely LOOOVED that lunch and I always thought I was super special in the class because I was having a HOTDOG for lunch, and the rest of the kids were having "just sandwiches"... lol. (I grew up in the country so a hotdog for lunch was a BIG thing.. lol) I loved this episode!
I grew up in the 50s and 60s. My first field trip was to the diary not far from my house. They taught us about pasteurization, making cheese, etc. No lunch was needed. We went home for lunch every day
1. I was born in Ohio but I’m not from Ohio so that might be the difference but we always froze a juice box to use as an ice pack for our 80s kid lunches. We then had fruit snacks (why were they shaped like sharks?) carrot sticks, and grapes an apple or a banana (I preferred the apple). My favorite sandwich is just peanut butter. 2. Coco wheats- I adore coco wheats, we added hot cocoa mix to them to make them more chocolatey. The best way to cook it is to mix part of the water into the cereal before you heat it, that way you don’t get as many lumps. 3. Now I really want vegetables beef soup. Mom used the frozen mixed veggies with the Lima beans and then when it was 1/2 done she added cabbage. I feel like cabbage in soup gets overlooked now. If you want a great vintage cookbook, hunt up a copy of Diet for a Small Planet. Mom bought it in like 77 when she was vegetarian in college- the hippy health food is so….70s.
Oh boy, this was fun. Your “vintage” is my life, my “vintage” is my collection of 100+ year old cookbooks that I have been collecting since I was a teen. I think we would make good neighbors!! 😊
Creamed cottage cheese isn't necessarily blended. Creamed cottage cheese can also mean just regular cottage cheese as opposed to dry curd cottage cheese which is hard to find anymore. (Michigan brand comes to mind if they're still making it).
So many memories, far back and very recent, so many tears! This channels is one of my very favorite! I grew up in the late 70s & early 80s, and so many things here clicked. The can of pop, chocolate malt-o-meal in the winter. My mother would make a large pot of malt-o-meal very early so when I made it to breakfast, it was cold and set up. Malt-o-meal was a special Saturday morning thing a few weeks in the winter and I didn’t want to miss out, so I always ate the rubbery chunks with sugar and milk. To this day, if I have malt-o-meal for a nostalgia breakfast, I let it cool so it sets up in rubbery chunks. Hot malt-o-meal never tastes right to me. 😆 For a packed lunch, the sandwich was always two cold hotdogs split down the middle, folded out, and a slice of cheese between white bread. I have never seen the pop in foil before, interesting! For chips I’d get a snack bag of Cheetos (amazing and rare treat!) and Twinkies 🙂 All of this went in an old tall, black plastic lunch box that once had a thermos, long gone. It smelled strongly of chips and bologna or hotdog sandwiches, so my 6 older siblings must have had similar fare. 😊 Oh, I am doin’ that puréed cottage cheese action the next time I make tuna salad, I think I’m going to let it drain a bit after I purée it or I might have trouble blending it. And that toasted cheese sandwich! Brilliant! The soup looked awesome too. Why do I not keep onion soup mix on hand anymore? Your channel always makes me smile, sometimes cry like today, and I love what you’re doing. Thank you so much!!!
I just found a beautiful blue one and am loving it since I started following you. I too am a vintage cookbook fan. Keep up the great job, you're traveling down my childhood and well today is my birthday and I turned 67.
What I can remember from packed lunches I that we definitely had the fold over sandwich bags and not ziplocs because we weren’t rich 😂
OMG you are so right!! That’s what we had too. 😂
My mom wrapped EVERYTHING in foil- sandwiches, carrots, everything. :)
We had everything in an old plastic ice cream container ( or any other sturdy-ish plastic food container) they were used for the fridge (left overs, cookies etc) if it was hard enough not needing it, say carrots or apples etc..they'd just be in a simple freezer bag 😂 no fancy boxes etc.
Our food was wrapped in waxed paper and it was always coming undone by lunch. I had a Dukes of Hazzard metal lunch pail my mom got at a yard sale and no I wasn’t a fan! Lol
Yes!!! Us too.
I have never commented on any UA-cam videos before, but I really wanted to tell you that this is my favorite video of yours. You have such a wonderful, real, and just incredibly comforting personality and that really shines through in every part of this one.
I’m so glad you enjoyed it! This one was very personal to me. Thank you for your kind words. 🥰
I agree! There’s a youtuber on here named BDylanHollis and his personality is over the top and fake and so irritating
@thehapagirl92
Didn't your mama teach you that if you have nothing kind to say, to say nothing at all?
@Cooking_the_books
Anna, please remove the rude comment about @B. Dylan Hollis. Dylan is actually extroverted, a bit over-the-top, yes, but also kind-hearted, extremely funny, and sweet. The above commenter has probably only watched a few of his short videos and has now strung him up over that.
I was a young adult in the 1980’s. It feels weird to me that cookbooks I bought new in the 1970’s, 1980’s and 1990’s are considered vintage today. It’s interesting to me to watch the changes in food trends over the years. I really enjoy your meals from different decades videos. They bring back memories for me.
Some of my earliest field trips as a child in the 1970’s were to a tortilla factory (and got fresh, warm flour tortillas), and an ice cream factory (and got some ice cream sandwiches). There were also trips to the zoo, the aquarium, the planetarium, museums, pumpkin farms, an orchid farm, operas, ballets, plays, etc.
Yes
Yes! I was born in 1992 and it’s weird things from that time are vintage haha. I can imagine how someone your age feels. My mom probably feels the same as you. She was born in 1956
i remember going to the circus on a field trip.
My first field trip was to Audubon to the bird museum! I fell in love with birds and still love them over 60 years later!
My son was born in 1981. I am from North Carolina and subscribed to Southern Living. This video brought back great so many great memories from that time. In the south egg salads are made with mayo and mustard and tend to be very creamy. Never used cottage cheese. My first field trip was when I was 6 years old and in the first grade in 1960. We took our pack lunches to the movie theater where we all watched a showing of "Dumbo." Never will forget it.
I was born in 81.
I'm a 1976 baby, from Georgia, and I had totally forgotten about my mom wrapping Cokes in foil. LOL I rarely was allowed to have them, but she made sure they stayed cold! This is my fave video of yours yet!
Thank you!! Glad you enjoyed it.
I'm a 1976 baby, from Missouri and I have the same exact memories! ❤️
Where in from we used Newspaper pages.
I was born in 55 so a little older than you but some of my best memories from school are getting to take a sack lunch on field trip day which we always had toward the end of the school year---we paid a nickle or a dime a day or so ahead of time to our teacher then each bus drive loaded up a number 10 wash tub which he filled with a block of ice he had busted up and bottles of pop (the money was to pay for our bottle of pop that he gave us to drink with our lunch--no canned pop back in those days)also for the kids who did not have the money to pay they still got a bottle of pop and no one ever knew the day of the trip that someone couldnt afford it (that was so considerate of the teachers)....I thought I was 'something on a stick' on field trip day lol...mom packed bologna sandwich but I dont remember us being able to afford chips for all of us...sometimes I made oatmeal raisin or peanut butter criss cross cookies for our bag dessert...thanks for bringing back some fond memories ---oh we usually went to the Oklahoma City zoo which was about an hour away from our country school...I love your long videos and would appreciate more of them...
Yes I remember the pop can in foil. 😊
In 2nd or 3rd grade in the early 60s we went to the Wonder Bread/Hostess factory. I remember being on a catwalk peering down over huge vats of bread dough. The best part was the little bag of goodies we all got after the tour with a Hostess cupcake, a wooden ruler and the best thing ever, a mini loaf of Wonder bread. I ate the loaf of bread in the bus on the way back to school.
Was that Wonder Bread factory in Denver? I vaguely remember a field trip there myself.
Caren
We had the Sunbeam Bakery in New Bedford, MA we would go to for field trips in the early 70's.
@geelizzie
Lizzie, did you take the wrapper with you, or did you leave it on the floor like many of my kids do every day? Hahaha! (I'm a school bus driver.)
I went through all my mother's cookbooks when she died. There were clippings from 1930 and 1940 newspapers and magazines which were very interesting but my cookbook favourite is "Dinner Dishes for the Raj" ...... My great great uncle had been an Army officer in India and he had brought the book back for his mother. It is full of English versions of Indian food!
This is Tom's wife, using his account. I love, love, love this video. What wonderful trip to memory lane.
So glad you enjoyed this one! ❤
I’m a 60’s baby and my first field trips were to Old Sturbridge Village and the Bronx Zoo. Loved the 70’s and 80’s.. Great memories
What a fun video. I was born in 1969. I feel very fortunate to have grown up during the 70's and 80's. I have all of my mom's "vintage" cookbooks. I have the red McCall's cookbook. I have never really looked through that one. I will have to do that. My mom also had a lot of the Southern Living cookbooks. I am going to make that sandwich for sure. I love soup and sandwich meals. Also, my mom would put the coke in the freezer and let it get slushy and then wrap it in foil. Midwest girl here also--Kansas City area. I am relatively new to your channel and I have been loving it.
Thank you!! I am so glad you're enjoying my videos. The McCall's book has some really great recipes!
Stick those buns in the freezer - they'll be just as good thawed later. If you don't get to them quickly enough and they start to go stale, use them to make garlic toast or bread crumbs. Loved this video!
That's what we do too. They thaw just fine.
I haven’t even watched this but I loved it when my mother made garlic Parmesan toast with the hamburger buns! We always had these random bits of bread in our freezer it’s funny we were a family of six when I was growing up and you had a chicken fed the whole family and we would have leftovers of course I was a little kid and I didn’t really like meat so I would eat the back. LoL
1982 year I was born! 80's were best time to be a kid. My favorite dish from that decade is tuna noodle casserole 😋
Vintage recipes AND a vintage shopping trip? I'm so happy right now!!!
Glad you enjoyed it! 😄
My 1st field trip was to our neighborhood library. The childrens section had a stage set up with a whole medieval themed puppet/marionette show area. It was freaking AWESOME! Those librarians were so creative and talented. It was like an actual professional show.
One of the naughty puppets threw little bags of candy into the audience to cause chaos. It worked. We were tussling like gladiators for the candy🤣🤣🤣
Just wanted to say I love your videos! (especially these full day decade ones) and I appreciate the hard work you put in to make them :)
Thank you!! ☺
I just love the episodes where you cook for the whole day! Please keep doing these and we will keep watching.
So glad you enjoy them!
I enjoy watching them too.
What a poignant, precious video this is. Love the idea of reconnecting with special childhood memories as you did. I’m a 60s kid and enjoyed seeing how similar your 80s lunch was to mine. The sandwich, carrot sticks, Pringles and Hostess snowballs - same as mine except I loved Hostess Suzy Q’s, not sure they are made anymore. You do wonderful videography and are so engaging to watch. Thanks - keep up the great work! 😊
Seventies kid here, and my memories are similar. Field trips were the best. I have a daughter who's in high school now and I went along on every field trip of hers that I could. Kids on school buses haven't changed much!
Thank you so much! 😄 Glad you enjoyed this one.
Dry cottage cheese used to be a thing, so I guess you're not supposed to use that
In the early 80s we were blessed with a vending machine in our cafeteria, and I showed my gratitude with the purchase of a Suzy Q and a carton of milk for lunch everyday my 8th grade year. 😬
Anna I have to apologize that I don’t often get to “like” your videos because I rarely watch on my phone or computer. Where most people get in front of their big screen TVs and struggle to decide what to binge watch, Hulu, Netflix, Prime Video etc, I sit down and opt to binge watch the lovely and charming Anna on make and discuss her recipes from her great collection of vintage cook books on Cooking The Books!
Today I saw a ‘no cheese cheesecake’, no bake Christmas fruit cake, some tuna, peppers and pineapple over La Choy noodles…I’ll have to find the videos so I can “like” for your channel.
PS where do you live that you always have what appear to be HUGE monster sized eggs!!
I'm in Ohio and just buy large eggs at the grocery store. 😀
I can like videos on my tv, as you are watching click the up button, and you should see the thumbs up buttons, right on the screen, you also get the timeline so you can forward if you are not interested in the selling part if the item is not anything you need or want to learn about.
@@creativcat tx! Good to know😆
Made the Hot French Cheese sandwich today. I tried it three ways, as per the recipe, with sliced chicken and another with some tuna salad. All were excellent!!!
So fun! I’m a 70’s child but this brings back so many memories as an 80’s youngster 😊 I grew up on cream of wheat!! Love it
I’ve never ever ever made a bad meal out of a Southern Living cookbook.
It’s a go to cookbook for me.
I don’t have any of their cookbooks.
So glad I found your channel! My kids were born in the 80's. Your recipes amd field trip brought back many good memories. I can't wait to see your '50's videos!
I have two of these types of cook books gifted to me by an elderly woman my mom used to sit with. She was a very sweet lady.
I make cottage cheese egg “mayo” sandwiches all the time. I don’t blend the cottage cheese. I find I can’t really tell the difference between the curds and the cut up egg whites. And I love it more than regular egg mayo. And it keeps together well, not watery. 😊
Thank you for this info. I was thinking the recipe sounds amazing and then wondering if I should just use it as a dip if it liquefies, but I'll first try it without blending it.
I think what that recipe called for was just what today we call regular cottage cheese as opposed to dry curd cottage cheese. No need to smooth it out.
@@kimfrank7535 I agree!
oooh, that sounds really good! and so much protein. I need to try this.
Hot cereal made in a pan on a stove- Wow,
That takes me back to
Raising my children in the 80’s.
Your posts are time
Capsules for me.
Keep it up.
Grew up in Denmark in the 80's. Don't know that we had field trips in 1st grade, but I remember a trip to the danish Island Laesoe in 2nd grade. I found a dog tag on the beach with the inscribtion "Thor Vesteroe 1968". I still have it to this day.
I have that Southern Living cookbook - from that time. When I lived in Germany, I learned to butter, thinly, the inside of the bread for sandwiches to keep the insides from seeping into the bread. Aaah, I miss those days! Those sandwiches look delicious! Very fun day.
That was the "proper" technique to use when making a sandwich, according to my 1968 home ec teacher. She also repeatedly told us to be sure to bring the fillings all the way to the edge, not like the SKIPPY peanut butter commercial where they beautifully smear the middle of the bread with a dollop of peanut butter.
@@eclairtreo of course. Who wants an inch of wasted bread all around the filling of your sandwich? I wish they’d had more home ec classes. We didn’t have much, but what I took were really fun and educational.
@@eclairtreoyes ... Spread all the goodies to the edges!!
Good grief: Betty Crocker (especially the Cooky Book), canned soup meals, 4-H membership, a love of cooking all kinds of food since childhood (I still love cooking and experimenting with foods from around the world), and recent hip surgery-we have a lot in common. Love all of your videos. Thank you for everything you do.
I’m in love with this episode! So nostalgic. I’m an 80’s kid too and field trips were THE BEST! Our kids NEVER Have them anymore.
Oh I'm so glad you liked this one! ❤
the soda wrapped in foil unlocked a memory for me wow lol. I'm definitely going to try that hot French cheese sandwich you made, sounds so good.
Ohh, so fun! My children are 80s kids! That's the modern era to me! We had microwaves and food processors in the 80s. 😂
I just found your channel and I love this! I have so many vintage cookbooks, I’ve been collecting for about 20 years.
First field trip was to Avery Island in south Louisiana where we learned how and where Tabasco sauce is made. We all got little bottles of it as souvenirs. Don’t know what I ate.
I love Southern Living cookbooks. I have several.
Your connection to the memories is endearing
Totally special occasion on the soda!!!! Loved field trip lunches!!
Born in 75. I loved when my mom wrapped a Coke in foil for me for a special trip!
YAY I am loving that other people did this too. 😀
My grandma has the Southern Living annuals from the 70s to the 2000s. I was born in 81, so thats my earliest memories as well and I get very nostalgic for that decade.
I have the same crockpot cookbook! Mine was brand new when I got it, because I’m old! Lol. Love your channel! It’s so much fun! Thank you!
Thoroughly enjoyed this! I was a very young adult in 1980 and it was a fantastic decade. Thanks for the memories.❤
My first field trip was to an apple orchard. I was so excited! My Mom always packed ham and cheese with mayo on Wonder bread. She would throw an apple in there. I also got a Hostess Funnybone (my favorite). I never got soda, she always packed juice. I was so envious of the kids with soda.
I love this idea for a UA-cam channel. I am addicted to collecting cookbooks. For some reason I have become a picky eater since marrying my now-ex-husband, which makes me hesitant to try the recipes. Watching you pick out recipes to try is giving me the confidence to try them, as I regularly did before my marriage.
You can’t go wrong with coco wheats and faygo!!! All my school field trips usually involved going into Cleveland for a museum, zoo, symphony or opera. I have fun memories of getting to see behind the scenes at a grocery store and staying overnight at COSI. I am watching this while I drink a mug of glazed lemon loaf tea- all thanks to you!!!
Oh my gosh, I would have LOVED behind the scenes at a grocery store! Enjoy your glazed lemon loaf tea!! 😊
Older Southern Living cookbooks like that are full of great recipes.
I was a 70’s kid and yes…. We had the aluminum wrapped soda for field trips! Why did our parents think that was gonna keep it cold?!
I completely forgot about the tinfoil wrapped soda until I saw your thumb nail. How I forgot, I have no idea! Very nostalgic for me though. Thank you!
I'm an 80s kid. My Mom liked soup and sandwich lunches on weekends, a lot of Campbell's Bean & Bacon, Vegetable, and Chicken Noodle. She always whisked a beaten egg into the chicken noodle, because Campbell's did a print ad about how adding egg boosted the protein and "added a little sunshine."
My era, what a time to grow up😍 THANK YOU!
Gen x (52) here but OMG I am SCREAMING over the foil on the pop!!! And the snowball!! Love this episode!!
That sandwich SLAPS. SO GOOD. I made it immediately while you were. It was aces! Special. Would also rock with some finely chopped immigration crab mixed into the spread.
Totally!
In 1980, I started working and living on my own. On Sunday I would cook up a roast beef or chicken, so I could make sandwiches for work and maybe a stew or soup with the leftovers to have for dinner for the next couple days. This is what my mother used to do and what I still do. Anyway the first time I was making chicken n dumplings with the leftovers, making broth by simmering the carcass, I called my mother to get recipe for dumplings, she advised me to go purchase a box of bisquick and follow the recipe. LOL. Oh and egg salad for work lunches, I would put the egg salad in a separate small tupperware container and assemble at work.
After watching this video I found the McCall’s cookbook in blue!! I have a bunch of the Southern Living cookbooks from my Mom. I wish shipping wasn’t so expensive I would love to share them with you. I really enjoy watching your videos.
I agree, she is definitely a cool chick. She cares about this channel too I don't know of someone who seems to like and comment on so much. I feel like this is what UA-cam is supposed to be but doesn't ever work out that way. It's like we are a part of a community like that
Our lunches when out on field trips were usually jam and cheese (usually cheddar) sandwiches and some sort of dessert and a bottle of water (because nothing there would spoil in the heat). I didn't realize anyone else did jam and cheese sandwiches until I read a 1950s cookbook in college.
As a farm kid, we also had "field meals" which were meals for when we accompanied dad to the field because mom was working and planting or harvest had to get done. Those were some sort of canned meat salad sandwiches (usuallyat least 12 sandwiches) in an Igloo box cooler with a large ice pack, a large box of donut holes, and two large insulated water jugs full of water.
Loved me some snowballs back in the day!
Your personality is adorable!!! I just love watching you!!!
Same! Her laugh is infectious!
Really great content.🌼🐝
Oh my gosh, thank you so much! ☺
@dianaarmitage512 thank you!!
Definitely had coke cans wrapped in foil for field day at school in the late 70s/early 80s. We didn't have a lot of off campus field trips, but field day was a day full of outdoor events on the playground, sack lunch with foil wrapped sodas were a special treat!
Just discovered your channel this week and enjoying the trip through the past.
I can remember waxed paper wrapped sandwiches. My mother always did a special fold, and they didn't come open. We would purchase a bottle of milk, with the red striped paper straw. Yes I am a child of the 50's.
I was born in 1982 and this made me so happy!
Oh I'm so glad you liked this one! 80s babies unite! 😂
Your recipes are so fun. I really enjoy how excited you get! I graduated in 1984 so I really liked that your recipes were right up my alley. Thanks for sharing them. 😘
Thanks for watching! ❤
I grew up in FL and My mom would usually give me one of those little huggie drinks for field trips and she would wrap it in paper towels and aluminum foil to keep it cold. I also love egg salad so I might have to try the recipe ☺️
My family had these rooster design salt and pepper shakers. WOW. A definite blast into my childhood.
I loved seeing your packed lunch. I am 64 in a couple of weeks and my mom would wrap a can of pop in foil too for a field trip. What a blast from the past! I am from Portland, Oregon and we called it pop growing up. I live in Pennsylvania now and we refer to it as soda or a soft drink here.
I'm a huge fan of vintage 😍 probably cause I'm vintage 😂😂 my daughter was born in 82 😉
I am enjoying your videos. This one was especially fun and cozy 🥪 🍲
Ah, Coco Wheats.😊 Our mom would make them frequently beginning in the fall, growing up in MI. In the 60s after relocating to FL, we were living in a CBS (Cement Block Structure) house when the temperature dropped and I was freezing. Went to the grocery and could not find Coco Wheats, so I just picked up a box of plain cream of wheat. When I got home, I cooked up enough for my 2 young children and myself adding some instant cocoa in. All these years later, I still do cocoa wheats the same.
Yes!! My mom totally wrapped my special soda can in foil!! I had forgotten until I saw your video. Thank you for bringing back that memory!!
What a cute vintage shop!!
Is always nice to see cooking and bringing you to memory lane with foods that you ate when you were a child..
I grew up on the 80's.. so for me corn dogs are my memory lane 80's comfort food. Love your videos, looking forward to your new ones. 😊
When I was a kid in the 80s, my mother often used Soup Starter for hamburger soup. It was pretty tasty but I haven't seen it in a long time.
Fellow 80s kid here, and the packed lunch absolutely reminds me of what I used to have!
My mom wrapped a soda in foil and also a paper towel, which I guess we thought kept it colder? And we always had Pringles. As for the carrots, to this day I think baby carrots are the inferior option. They don't have as much flavor as real carrots, they are always weirdly wet, and they taste of preservatives.
I completely understand the joy of finding your treasures "in the wild". I am the same.
Hi Anna! Very fun meals. The cheese sandwich looked the best! I was born in '61. The first field trip I remember was to Rye Beach in New York. This was an amusement park and I remember that I had a fantastic time. I do remember my mom wrapping a can of soda in aluminum foil. Growing up in that era my mom made me a brown bag lunch every day. Our school didn't have lunches but we had to give 'milk money' every week to buy a small carton of milk to drink with lunch. Typical lunches for me would be a pb&j sandwich or Genoa salami sandwich with a piece of fruit.
I just added my comment then I saw yours. Grew up the in same era and had the same lunches. We had a hot lunch at school bur I rarely ate it since I could leave school and walk home for a meal if I didn't have a sandwich (yes, they let a first grader leave school grounds on their own back then). A school trip I remember from elementary school was to tbe Museum of Natural History in NY. I don't know how the teacher handled a class of 30 or 35 kids on the subway from The Bronx but we all arrived with none lost.
You are a Joy to watch and listen to.
Thank you! ☺️
My mom put the can in the freezer and the foil was there to keep the bag from getting soggy (I'm from Detroit). I love cream and coco wheat more than oatmeal.
Detroiter, here...do you remember Sanders? Do you remember JL Hudson's Tea Room? Do you remember Grand Central Market?
@BetteStewart Sanders yes. The others I may have heard of but Hudson's closed when I was in elementary school. I went there once but I don't remember it. My mom would talk about it, usually around Christmas. I'm not sure about the market. I grew up to 18 at Michigan & Martin, about a mile from Livernois. We didn't have a car until I was 14 so we didn't get to a lot of places very much.
Thank you.@@lisapop5219
I love this video, visiting the thrift store was a really great idea. Even the park. Great content.
I’m an 80’s kid too ☺️ Born late in the year of 79. My jaw dropped when I saw where your field trip was….so fun! Definitely a fun video idea.
It was magical and left quite the impression on me! 😄
So glad I found your channel. You are such a joy to watch.
Thank you so much! ❤
My favorite vintage cookbook which was our go-to on college and is still one that I consult today is The Fannie Farmer Cookbook, Eleventh Edition, copyright 1896.
This video was so delightful and one of my favourites that you've done. The aluminum foil wrapped soda can is really bewildering though!
Kroger sells whipped cottage cheese now, which is the modern equivalent to creamed cottage cheese. Love the videos, I am also a vintage cookbook fanatic 😊
I feel like we're the only place without a Kroger or Kroger affiliate! 😂 My parents have one nearby though, so I'll have to look for it the next time I visit.
@@cooking_the_booksOklahoma doesn’t have Krogers, but I hear we are supposed to get one in either Oklahoma City or Tulsa in the next 2 years.
Our no name soda was Shasta and I was ADDICTED to the grape flavor
Love the video. The bows were called perky bow. I had to wear it with a collared blouse. A collared blouse was hard to find.
Another great video! Im an 80's kid!
I really enjoy all of your shows. I just started watching you. I can't wait to see more. You are such a joy to watch.
❤
Thank you so much for watching and for your kind comment! ❤
Thanks, Anna. This is so much more enjoyable than the typical "what I eat in a day" video. Great walk down memory lane!
I just found your channel and I really like how you structured this video. It was fun to watch.
The first field trip I remember was to our local recycling facility. They showed us the garbage trucks, the different buildings and they prepared a little course on how to make recycled paper.
This brought back all the good memories of field trips. You nailed it! And the grilled cheese, wow!!!!!! Going on my lunch menu this week
I'm Canadian and my lunches looked a bit different. Breakfast was the same, cream of wheat (but not chocolate!!! So lucky!). I don't remember lunches on field trips but I remember some 'special' lunches my mom would make. One of them was a hot dog in boiling water in a thermos. She'd make it in the morning and the hotdog would still be warm by lunchtime. The bread (not bun) had all the condiments on it already and I just had to put the hotdog on the bread. I absolutely LOOOVED that lunch and I always thought I was super special in the class because I was having a HOTDOG for lunch, and the rest of the kids were having "just sandwiches"... lol. (I grew up in the country so a hotdog for lunch was a BIG thing.. lol) I loved this episode!
I loved this story!! What a fun and special memory. Thank you for sharing!
I grew up in the 50s and 60s. My first field trip was to the diary not far from my house. They taught us about pasteurization, making cheese, etc. No lunch was needed. We went home for lunch every day
1. I was born in Ohio but I’m not from Ohio so that might be the difference but we always froze a juice box to use as an ice pack for our 80s kid lunches. We then had fruit snacks (why were they shaped like sharks?) carrot sticks, and grapes an apple or a banana (I preferred the apple). My favorite sandwich is just peanut butter. 2. Coco wheats- I adore coco wheats, we added hot cocoa mix to them to make them more chocolatey. The best way to cook it is to mix part of the water into the cereal before you heat it, that way you don’t get as many lumps. 3. Now I really want vegetables beef soup. Mom used the frozen mixed veggies with the Lima beans and then when it was 1/2 done she added cabbage. I feel like cabbage in soup gets overlooked now. If you want a great vintage cookbook, hunt up a copy of Diet for a Small Planet. Mom bought it in like 77 when she was vegetarian in college- the hippy health food is so….70s.
I love putting shredded cabbage in my beef vegetable soup.
I have a fussy eater, but she will eat any soup with cabbage.
Oh boy, this was fun. Your “vintage” is my life, my “vintage” is my collection of 100+ year old cookbooks that I have been collecting since I was a teen. I think we would make good neighbors!! 😊
I love this video! And I need to make that sandwich ASAP.
I loved this personal video.
I hope you make more.
I just love the back ground music.
Thank you.
Creamed cottage cheese isn't necessarily blended. Creamed cottage cheese can also mean just regular cottage cheese as opposed to dry curd cottage cheese which is hard to find anymore. (Michigan brand comes to mind if they're still making it).
I was thinking that maybe it should be strained and/or squeezed through cheese cloth after blending.
So many memories, far back and very recent, so many tears! This channels is one of my very favorite!
I grew up in the late 70s & early 80s, and so many things here clicked. The can of pop, chocolate malt-o-meal in the winter.
My mother would make a large pot of malt-o-meal very early so when I made it to breakfast, it was cold and set up. Malt-o-meal was a special Saturday morning thing a few weeks in the winter and I didn’t want to miss out, so I always ate the rubbery chunks with sugar and milk. To this day, if I have malt-o-meal for a nostalgia breakfast, I let it cool so it sets up in rubbery chunks. Hot malt-o-meal never tastes right to me. 😆
For a packed lunch, the sandwich was always two cold hotdogs split down the middle, folded out, and a slice of cheese between white bread. I have never seen the pop in foil before, interesting! For chips I’d get a snack bag of Cheetos (amazing and rare treat!) and Twinkies 🙂
All of this went in an old tall, black plastic lunch box that once had a thermos, long gone. It smelled strongly of chips and bologna or hotdog sandwiches, so my 6 older siblings must have had similar fare. 😊
Oh, I am doin’ that puréed cottage cheese action the next time I make tuna salad, I think I’m going to let it drain a bit after I purée it or I might have trouble blending it.
And that toasted cheese sandwich! Brilliant! The soup looked awesome too. Why do I not keep onion soup mix on hand anymore?
Your channel always makes me smile, sometimes cry like today, and I love what you’re doing. Thank you so much!!!
I just found a beautiful blue one and am loving it since I started following you. I too am a vintage cookbook fan. Keep up the great job, you're traveling down my childhood and well today is my birthday and I turned 67.
Happy birthday!
Happy birthday! 🎉 I hope you'll have lots of scrumptious cake.🎂
Happy (belated) Birthday! I hope you had a great day. 🍰
What an absolutely delightful walk down memory lane! Thank you, will subscribe for more!!
So glad you liked this one! 😊