I Tried a Week of 1950s Breakfast Foods (there's less cooking than you think)

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With Love, Kristina

With Love, Kristina

Күн бұрын

Hello friends! Ready for some breakfast? Today I'm sharing a week of 1950s breakfast ideas, taken mainly from Betty Crocker's New Picture Cookbook. I tried to choose things that were fairly common and/or easy to make, but lemme tell ya, those prunes???
Stay tuned to the end for a MASSIVE fail. I'm still sad about it.
Anyway! I hope to come back with a week of 1950s lunches, and dinners too! They'll be more recipe-heavy than this video, and I hope you enjoy it all anyway.
Sending you all my love!
Kristina
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Pancakes (from Betty Crocker's New Picture Cookbook)
3 Egg yolks
1-2/3 cups thick buttermilk
1-/2 cups flour
1 tbsp sugar
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp soda
1/2 tsp salt
3 tbsp soft butter
3 egg whites, stiffly beaten
Beat egg yolks well with rotary beater. Measure flour by dip-level-pour method or by sifting. Beat in buttermilk and mixed dry ingredients. Beat in butter. Gently fold in beaten egg whites. Pour batter from the tip of a large spoon or from pitcher in pools a little apart. Turn pancakes when puffed and full of bubbles. Keep hot by placing between folds of warm towel in warm oven (don't stack them!)
Waffles:
2 eggs
2 cups buttermilk
1 tsp soda
2 cups flour
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
6 tbsp soft shortening
Heat waffle iron while mixing batter. Beat eggs well. Measure flour by dip-level-pour method. Beat in remaining ingredients with rotary beater until smooth. Pour from the cup or pitcher into the center of a hot waffle iron.
This video is not sponsored, but if you shop through my links I will earn a small commission which helps support what I do! Thank you!

Пікірлер: 184
@WithLoveKristina
@WithLoveKristina 16 күн бұрын
PS please forgive the inconsistencies in color editing, I am using my husband’s camera because mine completely died and I am NOT used to his color settings! 😅
@jenniferpeterson6617
@jenniferpeterson6617 16 күн бұрын
No worries! I love your content 💖💖💖
@sfviris5582
@sfviris5582 14 күн бұрын
I didn’t notice! ❤
@Kate42
@Kate42 16 күн бұрын
Hi Kristina, I was raised in the 1950s and just to let you know as far as what drinks they had set up for breakfast it was usually coffee, of course, for the adults, but, as far as drinks for everyone it was always a large glass of milk with a small glass of orange juice with every breakfast. It was an American tradition. Also, the grapefruit was always served in a bowl usually the size of the grapefruit itself, and scored before serving. Thought you would enjoy a little more trivia, lol. Great video!🍊🍞🍵❤❤
@WithLoveKristina
@WithLoveKristina 16 күн бұрын
Oh man i forgot orange juice! I did score the grapefruit, I remember my grandpa doing that for my grandma - but totally forgot till I tried eating it at the table 😂
@Kate42
@Kate42 16 күн бұрын
@@WithLoveKristina You did great!
@YT4Me57
@YT4Me57 15 күн бұрын
Exactly. I remember those days well. Breakfasts were most often a hot meal, even if included cereal.
@carlabrown6849
@carlabrown6849 15 күн бұрын
My mom would put a stemless maraschino cherry in the middle of the half grapefruit. 😊 however, this was in the 70s.
@tammyellison735
@tammyellison735 15 күн бұрын
@@carlabrown6849@carlabrown6849 In the 60s, my mom would score the grapefruit the night before and put a little sugar on it; the next morning, it was ready to go.
@terryruiz7417
@terryruiz7417 14 күн бұрын
I was born in 1947, the oldest of 5 children. During the week, we usually had cereal, hot in the winter, cold in the summer. Sometimes, scrambled eggs, and usually a glass of orange juice. Rarely prunes. Sundays, big breakfast day. Pancakes or waffles, bacon or sausage, juice. Hot cocoa was a winter treat. Adults had coffee. A glass of milk was served with dinner. This was a fun video!
@elizabethlauricella7176
@elizabethlauricella7176 11 күн бұрын
I was born in 1947 also!! This is fun to see! I always wanted cake for breakfast!!
@mia_seym
@mia_seym 6 күн бұрын
I was born in the 1990s, youngest of 5 children. We grew up on the same breakfasts, except my parents like to make egg-in-a-basket (egg in grilled toast) on an arbitrary interval. If the milk wasn't in cereal, it was in a glass next to the orange juice. I figured you may find it interesting too.
@tinadelarosa8922
@tinadelarosa8922 15 күн бұрын
The cookbook you used was a wedding gift to my grandma in 1952. She gave it to me when I got married. It’s one of my favorite possessions. The Russian tea cake cookie recipe is my favorite cookie.
@ruthlloyd1163
@ruthlloyd1163 16 күн бұрын
My grandma used to heat the prunes in hot water. I just eat them out of the bag. We called them stewed prunes.
@jandurham6231
@jandurham6231 16 күн бұрын
My grandmother would cooked them with cinnamon sticks and cloves and cooked them until they were soft and then discard the cinnamon sticks and cloves. They were delicious.
@karinjcollstrup7360
@karinjcollstrup7360 15 күн бұрын
The 50s diet was very grain heavy. I am digging in to a danish 1950 housekeeping book. It is VERY scientific on noutrision and how to keep the family healthy on a budget. And the point of it really is that grains (and potatos) give enough kalories at a low cost, and then you ad just enough vitamins from a litle fruit and vegetables, meat and coodliveroil. And a lot of the fat and protein would come from milk. You have to remember that in the 50s people still remember when starving and malnutrition (for some) not was uncommen. And after the wars there was a lot of research going into nutrition.
@hiddenhand6973
@hiddenhand6973 15 күн бұрын
How often and what amount of cod liver oil was consumed?
@karinjcollstrup7360
@karinjcollstrup7360 13 күн бұрын
@@hiddenhand6973 codd liver oil was given to make sure pregnent af breastgiving women and children up to age 6 would get enough vitamin D. 5grams pr day - could be substitutet by 10grams of codd liver og 50 grams of herring. It doesn't say if it was to be consumed every day, but in general all vitaminheavy foods are incourieged to be consumed in smaler amounts often rather then a big amout more seldom.
@tateshevchenko6584
@tateshevchenko6584 11 күн бұрын
We still follow this type of diet today in Russia, lots of grains and cheap veggies (potatoes, carrots, onion, beetroot, pumpkin, cabbages and so on).
@karinjcollstrup7360
@karinjcollstrup7360 10 күн бұрын
@@tateshevchenko6584 in the 50s book it is surprizingly little vegetables. 300g potatos, 50g of carrots (the cheapest vegetable) 50g of other vegetables and 50g of fruits pr day. Today the official danish recomendations are 600g of greens and fruit pr day (excludig potatos). That is 4x as much.
@katiel3457
@katiel3457 16 күн бұрын
Your breakfasts look beautiful! Your videos really brighten my day and inspire me. I was one of your viewers who requested this video, so thank you so much for all that you do! ❤
@WithLoveKristina
@WithLoveKristina 16 күн бұрын
Oh thank you Katie! I can’t wait to put together more recipe videos 💖 they are so fun to make!
@jenniferpeterson6617
@jenniferpeterson6617 16 күн бұрын
I loved watching 😊
@tammyellison735
@tammyellison735 15 күн бұрын
I was born in the late 1950s and grew up in the 1960s, so I am excited to see what you come up with. My lunches consisted of bologna, grilled cheese, and canned soup.
@deborahdonovan7892
@deborahdonovan7892 14 күн бұрын
American cheese and Wonder bread!
@celestialfox9282
@celestialfox9282 6 күн бұрын
Watching this makes me realize I’ve been cooking 1950’s breakfast all my life lol
@aussiejubes
@aussiejubes 16 күн бұрын
I love prunes so much that I have to force myself to stop at 6. I learned the hard way probably 10 times before I finally gave in to the reality 😂 I can easily eat quarter to half a kilo without batting an eyelid. Delicious! Especially in custard, num nums.
@WithLoveKristina
@WithLoveKristina 16 күн бұрын
Ok prunes in custard might be better!
@aussiejubes
@aussiejubes 16 күн бұрын
@WithLoveKristina in the 80s it was dessert & mum used heated up custard. I'm lazy & just slop cold custard from a carton on them.
@57WillysCJ
@57WillysCJ 15 күн бұрын
Prunes are just dried plums. I eat them like raisons. Stewed they need the water to turn a dark color. Add milk or cream if you want to up them. I have even used evaperated milk which I think is better.
@ariajam5221
@ariajam5221 6 күн бұрын
Same.
@aussiejubes
@aussiejubes 6 күн бұрын
@ariajam5221 I'm glad I'm not alone in this, because I don't know anyone who loves them like I do 😂 I only like the soft ones though. Some brands have hard ones & that wrecks them for me
@leresis729
@leresis729 6 күн бұрын
Oooooh Dessert Rose!! How beautiful!!!
@karrierutherford5490
@karrierutherford5490 14 күн бұрын
I actually love prunes. I might be one of the few but my mom was a breakfast cook when I was a little girl and they had a breakfast buffet where she worked and so she would make these stuffed prunes ...you take cream cheese, a little lemon juice,lemon zest,chopped walnuts and a little powdered sugar mix that up and put it in the prunes and it tastes like you're eating cheesecake or at least some kind of yummy sweet dairy dessert 😁👍👍
@teressebirkett3387
@teressebirkett3387 15 күн бұрын
Being vintage myself, I love my 50 yr old cookbooks, they're the best.
@kimberlycherrine-bell5371
@kimberlycherrine-bell5371 16 күн бұрын
Stewed prunes are so much better than just dried..They can be done ahead and stored for a month of more in fridge..Take your dried prunes ..place in container and pour boiling water to cover..cool..cover..fridge..eat as wanted..and the juice made can be drunk...
@amandasnailtasticnails9657
@amandasnailtasticnails9657 15 күн бұрын
The fluffy pancake recipe has always been my favorite. I really liked to have banana pancakes when I was a child.
@janetsandham7058
@janetsandham7058 5 күн бұрын
Hi I have only just been making banana pancakes Twice now Hubby has found he likes banana ones more than plain pancakes
@maureendonlevy9913
@maureendonlevy9913 15 күн бұрын
I have that same coffeepot that is on the counter. Mine is from 1948 as it was a wedding gift to my parents. It's on display in my kitchen in my 1940 home.
@WithLoveKristina
@WithLoveKristina 15 күн бұрын
I think I have the 1940s one as well! The one I tried to use was the C50 model, but there's a second one that's the c30 model and I'm not sure if it'll work. The switch seems stuck.
@Miss_Kisa94
@Miss_Kisa94 15 күн бұрын
This is so interesting to watch because all the women in my family had jobs so pancakes and waffles weren't common. It was mostly food that could be made really quickly. Biscuits and other treats would be made on holidays and days off. But it's interesting to see what stay at home mom's and wives would make.
@anonomas6126
@anonomas6126 16 күн бұрын
I appreciate how accessible your recipes were. No fancy ingredients no crazy expensive equipment. Just normal Walmart brand stuff.
@WithLoveKristina
@WithLoveKristina 16 күн бұрын
I’m so glad; I try my best to use what I have, and sometimes it feels boring. But I want these videos to be practical!
@WiseWomanLola
@WiseWomanLola 15 күн бұрын
You could probably return the cord. I'm in my 60s and always had a variety for breakfast. Sometimes, french toast, eggs and English muffins, bagels and cream cheese, pancakes, waffles, occasionally cereal. I remember eating these as a kid, made these for my kids, and now just for myself. I never did like potatoes for breakfast or sausage.
@HelennaRose
@HelennaRose 16 күн бұрын
That incredible beautiful dish set. My parents only used it for special occasions, it was an expensive set they bought back during the times of department stores and good economy. I love that you have this beautiful set, my mother adored hers ❤. We had silver ware we used too. (The silver had to be polished). Edit: We had oatmeal with raisins as kids before school. The whole oats cook in 5 minutes. ❤
@WithLoveKristina
@WithLoveKristina 16 күн бұрын
I have wanted this dish set for YEARS and have thrifted most of it, alongside what a friend of mine gave me ❤️❤️❤️ it is beautiful!
@mollymarking8234
@mollymarking8234 16 күн бұрын
Take my advise and buy an electric percolator. Amazon has many to choose from. Some look very retro. I had a drip coffee maker for years until I discovered while camping that I liked the flavor of percolator coffee better.
@tasia2174
@tasia2174 15 күн бұрын
For cords that I know I might forget what they are for in future but still need, I take one of the wired twisty things from bread bags (sorry not sure what they are actually called) and a post-it note, stick the wire through the top corner of the post-it note after I've written what the cord is for and then use it to twist the cord together. It's saved me several times from throwing away a cord I would have actually needed albeit not often. 😄
@lyannecb8499
@lyannecb8499 10 күн бұрын
I've got a sticky label on my rechargeable torch that tells me where the charger is, as well as a label on the charger to tell me what it charges.
@frogfernforest
@frogfernforest 10 күн бұрын
I enjoyed you esting prunes probably much more than you did, I like that you really committed to this. I really felt transported!
@lizadams7662
@lizadams7662 16 күн бұрын
I love your bumper music! Very cheerful fifties vibe.
@barbaraweber3084
@barbaraweber3084 16 күн бұрын
I think the grain heavy thing is the fault of the old food pyramid......
@FennecTheRabbit
@FennecTheRabbit 15 күн бұрын
This was so fun! Made for very fun viewing while eating my own breakfast (sourdough pancakes because my sister had a bunch of discard from her starter that she didn’t want to go to waste).
@lynneeie5226
@lynneeie5226 10 күн бұрын
The BEST way to eat dried prunes is chopped fine and baked into a chocolate cake. They really are amazing there. ❤️ (& love your videos!) Best, Lynne
@katwitanruna
@katwitanruna 15 күн бұрын
I prefer bacon in the oven. I like to lay mine on a short wire rack in the baking dish.
@cmkaminski
@cmkaminski 15 күн бұрын
On the weekends when my kids want waffles or pancakes, i make a double batch and freeze the leftovers. Makes weekdays easy.
@WithLoveKristina
@WithLoveKristina 15 күн бұрын
I’ve been meaning to do this! Homemade toaster waffles!
@awilson8521
@awilson8521 15 күн бұрын
Wow, my formula is Betty Crocker's formula 😮 I'm so proud. I don't do cereal everyday though. Cereal days are for Sunday (no time to cook with church).
@cassierobertson6157
@cassierobertson6157 5 күн бұрын
How fun! I loved getting to see your breakfasts. Bummer the coffee pot didn’t work out! Thanks for sharing your life and creativity ❤
@ktrayan1
@ktrayan1 16 күн бұрын
Your dress at the first breakfast is sooo cute
@e.urbach7780
@e.urbach7780 16 күн бұрын
I love your Mission Rose dishes! My grandma had that pattern.
@beeblebomb
@beeblebomb 15 күн бұрын
Heya Kristina, just wanted to shout out to you for this channel. I absolutely love the cleaning routines as I follow along while I clean my house almost every time. I'll just leave your channel on in the background and clean up. Só thank you for motivating me to tidy up my home, and thank you for your authenticity as you try out all these cool vintage lifestyle hacks!
@user-ov6bv9cn1o
@user-ov6bv9cn1o Күн бұрын
I was born in 1952. We kids usually had cereal (non sugared) for breakfast or oatmeal or cream of wheat. On Saturdays we might have bacon and eggs and toast or occasionally pancakes, but never strawberries too. My parents were very frugal and didn’t overdo meals. Never never ate prunes. I would have died since I have IBS. Sundays were rushed because we always went to church. We always had a glass of orange juice for breakfast and my mother made us eat a tablespoon of cod liver oil before anything because it’s good for you. WE HAD MILK AT EVERY MEAL.We didn’t have red fridges and my mother never wore a scarf like that on her head either. That’s more of a 1940s look.
@deborahdonovan7892
@deborahdonovan7892 14 күн бұрын
I could listen to you all day! I usually listen while showering and take occasional peeks to see what you’re doing. Thank you for this peek into your vintage lifestyle ❤️
@Fg4e
@Fg4e 15 күн бұрын
I was wondering what kind of apple sauce you used. If you make homemade, it's very different from store bought. Homemade has a completely different texture and consistency. My recipe calls for peeled and cored apple chunks, fresh cider, white and dark brown sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg and a dot of real butter. When it's cooked down, the apples aren't completely crushed. There's some chunks. It's severed hot off the stove. Very different in taste so this may make the difference. I normally make this in the fall, so we can locally source are apples and cider. Four sweet apples like Honey Crisp to one tart apple like Granny Smith. If you ever try it, you'll never go back to store bought. 😊
@amblyommaamericanum6590
@amblyommaamericanum6590 16 күн бұрын
Great video! Lol, I like prunes! I like just about any dried fruit, tho. Random, but if you like raisins, put them in the pot and boil them with the oatmeal - it is tasty! The raisins get soft and plump and naturally sweeten the oats a bit. Anyway, your kitchen is so friggin cute and these videos really make my day a little happier. Hope you have a good and peaceful weekend!
@wendywarren5756
@wendywarren5756 16 күн бұрын
If I'm feeling healthy I love applesauce and plain yogurt on high protein pancakes (or waffles) with just a drizzle of maple syrup over it. Yum yum! No butter for this one. (If I'm in a hurry, just butter and syrup.)
@marysuzyperla6740
@marysuzyperla6740 15 күн бұрын
I like to cook bacon in the oven also. But, I place the bacon on parchment paper, which helps to absorb the grease and makes clean up a little easier. 🥓🥓🥓
@myhauntingromance
@myhauntingromance 14 күн бұрын
That first red cookbook is my family's cookbook. My mom has her grandmothers copy and I use it as recipe reference all the time
@winwinmyfriend4727
@winwinmyfriend4727 15 күн бұрын
This is my morning good feelings here. I love ❤your stove so jealous. Your dresses are so sweet I finally got one for myself.
@user-ln4op5oj4q
@user-ln4op5oj4q 3 күн бұрын
I love your Franciscan ware desert rose. Reminds me of my aunt's, when I was a child.
@thefaeriebaker
@thefaeriebaker 16 күн бұрын
The dress you're wearing for day 1 reminds me of the fruit wall in Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory in the best way possible
@kara8274
@kara8274 15 күн бұрын
Your videos are just wonderful. I appreciate your honesty, creativity, and flair. You're fabulous!
@hyacinth4368
@hyacinth4368 6 күн бұрын
My mom used to sprinkle cinnamon and sugar on grapefruit half, and place it in oven under broiler for a few minutes. Delicious! This was in the 1960s, though, I don't really remember the '50s.
@isabellerininger6249
@isabellerininger6249 15 күн бұрын
😍I love prunes.. aka dried plums😁 Fun video!
@SincerelyHerself
@SincerelyHerself 16 күн бұрын
I really love these types of videos 🥰
@Gaga2311-ko2ii
@Gaga2311-ko2ii 15 күн бұрын
Love breakfast food
@ruthjohnson6369
@ruthjohnson6369 13 күн бұрын
I was married in 1977 and your strawberry pots and skillet set was among my first pots and pans along with my revere ware which I am still using! Glad to see all the vintage things.
@taraelyse6989
@taraelyse6989 13 күн бұрын
Try stewed prunes. I stew mine in red wine, brown sugar, and spices. Perfect over yogurt or oatmeal.
@elizabethlauricella7176
@elizabethlauricella7176 11 күн бұрын
So happy to see you!! Thanks. Hugs.
@GeorgimFamily
@GeorgimFamily 2 күн бұрын
Love the coloring on this video.
@rowanaembers4929
@rowanaembers4929 15 күн бұрын
Moving into my first house with my fieance
@Cecilia24645
@Cecilia24645 16 күн бұрын
Thank you! I am going to have to try the pancake recipe! They look amazing.
@lisaroberson9105
@lisaroberson9105 13 күн бұрын
🤗,...yay,.....new vid! Thank u for making me smile!
@aslfdjalskjflkajs134
@aslfdjalskjflkajs134 16 күн бұрын
what a fun video !
@CandyCoated7779
@CandyCoated7779 16 күн бұрын
omg the prunes i was like nooooooooooo. in the 50's older people ate them or drink the juice if had number 2 issues. even as a child at my grandmas home she had them and the juice i avoided it.
@sharondiaz137
@sharondiaz137 3 күн бұрын
Oh my goodness I love your kitchen ❤
@amandasnailtasticnails9657
@amandasnailtasticnails9657 15 күн бұрын
That’s my favorite cookbook. Oh I’ll have to check it out and actually read it instead of using it as a food guide.
@CherylWells-zf5ts
@CherylWells-zf5ts 7 күн бұрын
I love your videos.... vintage has a special place in my heart. Your house is adorable. I think i was born in the wrong era.
@tammyr2966
@tammyr2966 15 күн бұрын
All of these breakfast meals looked delicious! Growing up in the late 60’s and early 70’s, weekends we had pancakes and waffles and sometimes cereal early morning while we watched cartoons, then late morning was the pancakes or waffles with sausage or bacon. Weekdays it might be oatmeal and toast, egg and toast or cereal and toast. We always had fresh milk from the dairy close by and orange juice!
@user-fg6jm4lq3q
@user-fg6jm4lq3q 15 күн бұрын
Love your videos. Please wear your slippers when using old electrical items. The rubber soles will earth you. Bonus you will be super comfy homemaker.
@bellablue5285
@bellablue5285 16 күн бұрын
Love to see the franciscanware, I have the apple version. I use my grandmother's copy of Ann Pilsbury's Baking Book rather often, but I think her copy of The Good Housekeeping Cook Book has similar plans as what you've used here, I'll need to pull that one back out and look. I've found I don't tend to stick to meal plans I lay out (outside of use stuff up before expiry) might be fun to try following one
@SewRena
@SewRena 16 күн бұрын
This is such a lovely video very relaxing ❤
@Rachel.Lee.athome
@Rachel.Lee.athome 8 күн бұрын
Hi! My grandma has a lot of the same strawberry things as you have in your kitchen. Definitely reminded me of her. 😊
@anonymous78546
@anonymous78546 15 күн бұрын
I'm so here for this. Thank you Kristina. ❤
@3rdCoastMermaid
@3rdCoastMermaid 15 күн бұрын
I love your sweet dishes!!!
@juliemoore6957
@juliemoore6957 9 күн бұрын
Awesome vintage stove! Wow!
@teena4rl211
@teena4rl211 5 күн бұрын
I love your outfits! Beautiful!
@lisaann6267
@lisaann6267 15 күн бұрын
Ps. I love your teapot and pots n pans! 😊
@robinmaynard1640
@robinmaynard1640 15 күн бұрын
I love the steamed prunes. I add a sprinkling of cinnamon and water and heatvthem to boiling. I ket them stew a bit. Sometimes over ice cream. Yummy, yum yum!
@kathrynmacgown6575
@kathrynmacgown6575 16 күн бұрын
My mom had the same 1960s perpetrator. ❤
@kathrynmacgown6575
@kathrynmacgown6575 15 күн бұрын
Spell check is dangerous. "Percolator"
@juliemoore6957
@juliemoore6957 9 күн бұрын
Love your red frig!❤
@sharonwest1602
@sharonwest1602 16 күн бұрын
Kristina I love your videos I like the 1950’s cooking 🍓🍓🍓
@lesleyharris525
@lesleyharris525 13 күн бұрын
As for the grapefruit, one way was to grill it sprinkled with sugar, i tend to just have fruits for breakfast as it's better for my stoma. ❤
@LiaBunny93
@LiaBunny93 15 күн бұрын
yay new video! 💌I love pancakes and eggs and coffee! and fresh fruit
@LeeZetLMG
@LeeZetLMG 15 күн бұрын
I loooove tomatoe juice
@planetpompom
@planetpompom 16 күн бұрын
I love your strawberry pots and pans, I think I have a couple items from the same set/collection that I found at a thrift store!
@WithLoveKristina
@WithLoveKristina 16 күн бұрын
I thrifted these as well!
@JanChan1106
@JanChan1106 16 күн бұрын
I loved this video! I really like your content.
@mgp_art
@mgp_art 16 күн бұрын
Love your videos!!! 🥰♥️
@donnakerstiens9899
@donnakerstiens9899 16 күн бұрын
Everything looked yummy! 🍓
@jennbidwelledwardson2885
@jennbidwelledwardson2885 16 күн бұрын
Thanks for the fun video! I mix together the dry ingredients for pancakes -2 recipes at a time - and then all i have to do is add in the liquid, and I have pancakes in no time.
@WithLoveKristina
@WithLoveKristina 16 күн бұрын
So smart!
@athenathegreatandpowerful6365
@athenathegreatandpowerful6365 16 күн бұрын
Plus if you store the 2 servings in a Ziploc bag and mix in the liquid in the bag, you can clip off one corner and squeeze one pancake out at a time for cooking. Zero mess pancakes.
@jennbidwelledwardson2885
@jennbidwelledwardson2885 15 күн бұрын
@athenathegreatandpowerful6365 good thinking! I usually do store them in ziplocks and then in a glass jar. I use the zip locks on repeat, but using them to pipe out the batter would really control thr mess.
@athenathegreatandpowerful6365
@athenathegreatandpowerful6365 15 күн бұрын
@@jennbidwelledwardson2885 just looked it up, used as pencil cases in 1951. Robert Lejeune demonstrated their use as food storage in 1957. Not on the market until the late 60s as food storage BUT Alligator bags were readily available all through the 50s and would have worked quite nicely. I REALLY miss alligator bags.
@Heidishereandthere
@Heidishereandthere 16 күн бұрын
Theres the Desert Rose plates my grandmother used. 😍🌹
@joegilbody4878
@joegilbody4878 6 күн бұрын
I grew up in 50s. 8 boys and 2 girls so any idea of a normal breakfast has to go out the window. It might be a Rhode Island thing but we had coffee milk or strawberry milk for breakfast. Chaotic would describe it best. No way to fit 12 around a table. But we ate well and grew up!
@wisewomanhealing
@wisewomanhealing 11 күн бұрын
I love your collection of book themed cookbooks.
@csjkscs
@csjkscs 13 күн бұрын
Can you do a “safe and loved” merch line!?!? It’s literally my favorite sign off on KZfaq!
@BoolaHoola
@BoolaHoola 16 күн бұрын
Fantastic
@Shea45
@Shea45 8 күн бұрын
My husbands favorite waffle/pancake topping is peanut butter and applesauce, but the applesauce has to be room temp or cooler! You may like it better that way lol
@RadianceRush
@RadianceRush 13 күн бұрын
This was fun! Looking forward to the lunches and dinners!
@TracieSmithpomeranian
@TracieSmithpomeranian 6 күн бұрын
This coffee percolator would happen to me. So don't feel bad about that bust. ❤
@megangreene3955
@megangreene3955 15 күн бұрын
My version of brekkie is yoghurt and honey or beans on toast or perhaps a couple of eggs and toast. I don't like sweets for breakfast most of the time.
@bobchevallier8456
@bobchevallier8456 5 күн бұрын
Beans on toast are you from England?
@megangreene3955
@megangreene3955 5 күн бұрын
@@bobchevallier8456 No, I'm American, but I enjoy English food and culture. I would feel perfectly at home in England.
@DvorahDavida5778
@DvorahDavida5778 14 күн бұрын
I have the bottom part of that Sunbeam *with a new cord too* . I use it every day make tea. It boils water SUPER fast! I love it.
@theehappyhousewife3346
@theehappyhousewife3346 16 күн бұрын
Loved this video!
@sheilawlliams5263
@sheilawlliams5263 15 күн бұрын
Your dishes are beautiful! It's nice to see a nice table setting.
@CrystalinWade
@CrystalinWade 16 күн бұрын
I love that strawberry teapot. I think that's what it is.... Either way it's amazing ❤ insta love
@WithLoveKristina
@WithLoveKristina 16 күн бұрын
Yes it’s a teapot!
@gabgrl7862
@gabgrl7862 12 күн бұрын
Ok but tell me why I’ve watched this like 5 times already😂 and now I have to order the Betty Crocker picture book…
@kandacek63
@kandacek63 13 күн бұрын
Put some parchment paper under the bacon and you’ll have a little less grease to deal with for cleanup. Best way to make bacon as far I’m concerned. :)
@kandacek63
@kandacek63 13 күн бұрын
My aunt has or did have that desert rose china set. And one of my grandmas had the same white mixing bowls. :) I’m going to have to check out my mom’s Betty Crocker book, as I don’t think my ‘80s edition has anything like a meal plan. But I could be wrong. Try to get some lard instead of Crisco.
@baxleylady1944
@baxleylady1944 13 күн бұрын
I love the “I did try that. It was not very good.” 🤣❤️
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