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I ate enough Corn Meal Mush for breakfast to have some pretty strong feelings about it.
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My mom used to get bread from the co-op and condiments from the dumpster at the dollar store.
several years there I was looking forward to those BBQ sauce stale bread sandwiches as a meal. I had a crack barrel pellet gun, and i made every single shot count. Out of a can of pellets, there would maybe be 3 wasted due to misses. If it came in range, it was getting eaten. You do what you have to do when you're hungry. |
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Quoted: I still eat that and ask my mom to make it. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Bell peppers stuffed with ground beef and rice, then baked, was a childhood staple. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/326493/stuffed-bell-peppers-2_jpg-2133162.JPG I still eat that and ask my mom to make it. [Costco] |
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Peanut butter and corn syrup sandwiches.
Sometimes my mom would toast the bread, sometimes. |
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Quoted: Chipped beef on toast. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/326845/C5FABE13-B03F-40DC-9B8B-F31E79CDF23A_jpe-2133108.JPG Never again. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/326845/0F78D415-263A-4620-BD39-FA443D6AA213_jpe-2133110.JPG View Quote Throw a couple of over easys on that and I'm in 7th Heaven! |
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Tomato sandwiches
Corn on the cob as a meal Spam & Cheese spread on a toasted bun curried onions on rice with leftover chopped turkey fried potatoes/scrambled eggs/bacon BBQ baloney sandwiches Beef Stroganoff Hamburger Helper and add mixed vegetables, a chopped onion, and stewed tomatoes served as a soup. It was great. Baked beans w/ hamburger/chopped onion over toast with a slice of cheese. Pancakes with a strip of bacon Toasted cheese sandwiches with tomato soup There were 7 of us so it had to s t r e t c h. |
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Quoted: Chipped beef on toast. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/326845/C5FABE13-B03F-40DC-9B8B-F31E79CDF23A_jpe-2133108.JPG Never again. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/326845/0F78D415-263A-4620-BD39-FA443D6AA213_jpe-2133110.JPG View Quote I’ve had that several times. I’ll pass |
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I have a friend that left home in his early teens and went to live in the woodlands. He had a BB gun and subsisted primarily on Blue Jays. (His girl friend however would visit occasionally, bringing him maybe bread, peanut butter, perhaps cheese.) My friend does not partake of chicken wings for some strange reason...
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Quoted: I have a friend that left home in his early teens and went to live in the woodlands. He had a BB gun and subsisted primarily on Blue Jays. (His girl friend however would visit occasionally, bringing him maybe bread, peanut butter, perhaps cheese.) My friend does not partake of chicken wings for some strange reason... View Quote |
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Quoted: When generic macaroni and cheese came in a plastic bag with a twist tie, it cost $.17. If me and my brothers and sisters could find two pop bottles, we got to eat that night. If we could find four pop bottles we got to eat enough to not be hungry anymore. Of course we had to make it with just water because we didn't have any butter or milk. But I suppose it was better than starving. The local bakery in town threw away their unsold donuts every afternoon, so we fished those out of the garbage to eat as well. Free lunch was the best part of school, so snow days sucked for us. That meant we didn't get to eat. View Quote |
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Potato soup. Pinto beans. Real dinners at my house when I was a boy.
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My mother learned to cook from her parents who grew up during the great depression.
food was usually cooked in mass! And served over a couple of days. I have a potato soup recipe that has been in my family over 100 years. I hope to pass it on to my children. Usual weeknights were spaghetti hamburger helper sloppy joes TV dinners grilled cheese and soup chicken noodle soup Homemade chili straganoff poor mans striganoff (gr beef) tacos burgers with fast food about twice a month Every Sunday was family meal day where mom would cook a family meal. Fried chicken mashed taters n corn Chicken fried steak taters n corn Pot roast taters n corn Chicken n dumplings Potato soup Sausage n kraut corn would be substituted for canned greenbeans when we got tired of corn |
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I fed my family a whole lot of rabbits when my wife and I were young and poor. A box of .22 ammo was cheap then and I did pretty good with taking my beagle out and making head shots on the rabbits she flushed out.
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The food was good when I was a kid but my dad used to say he had to eat lard on bread a lot when he was a kid.
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Soup, lots of soup. Campbell's hungry man soups mostly, or ramen noodles with mixed vegetables in it. Banquet chicken patties, fried squirrel, fried rabbit, duck, goose, the rare turkey.
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Y’all are lying. Everyone knows there is no such thing as a poor white person.
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All you rich kids bragging about your salmon patties, we had mackerel patties because canned mackerel was half the price of canned salmon.
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Quoted: Cornbread crumbled up in a glass of milk. View Quote My grandpa did that and bread in a glass of milk. He and my grandma were just into their 20's when The Depression hit, so things like that stuck with them. I had tried it a few times and it was just too bland. Maybe if it had some sugar or cinnamon sprinkled in, then it would be tasty but would start to get out of the poor-food category. |
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View Quote Y'all were rich enough to have a freezer? |
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View Quote I would eat that with no second thought. |
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I remember an occasional Saturday night treat of pizza made fom a Chef Boyardee kit. Mom would mix the dough, let it rise then add the can of sauce and top with the can of powdered cheese. We liked it.
We would have a snack in the evening while watching tv... usually a banana or orange. When us younger kids were shooed off to bed, my older brother would arrive to take over the tv. He would have a small bag of chips, a 16 oz pepsi and assorted slim jims and little planters peanut packs. He had a paper delivery route and was considered to be wealthy. |
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Quoted: Fuck ya, tunamac! That was my dads specialty. We also had sauce and rice basically rice with whatever caned goods we had poured over it. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: White trash casserole 2 cans of tuna 2 boxes cheapest mac and cheese Some crackers Now do whatever the fuck you feel like with that shit. Fuck ya, tunamac! That was my dads specialty. We also had sauce and rice basically rice with whatever caned goods we had poured over it. Your dad cooked? Man, my mom had better have that supper ready when he got home. |
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Quoted: My grandpa did that and bread in a glass of milk. He and my grandma were just into their 20's when The Depression hit, so things like that stuck with them. I had tried it a few times and it was just too bland. Maybe if it had some sugar or cinnamon sprinkled in, then it would be tasty but would start to get out of the poor-food category. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Cornbread crumbled up in a glass of milk. My grandpa did that and bread in a glass of milk. He and my grandma were just into their 20's when The Depression hit, so things like that stuck with them. I had tried it a few times and it was just too bland. Maybe if it had some sugar or cinnamon sprinkled in, then it would be tasty but would start to get out of the poor-food category. Dad's hillbilly second wife would add chopped onions to it, but that evil bitch added chopped onions to everything. She could fry the fuck out of some chicken, though. |
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Quoted: Lived poor as as kid, Kraft single cheese sandwiches were the best. What was your poor peep food? https://www.southernplate.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/grilledcheese-058-400x300.jpg View Quote Kraft? AHAHAHAHHA you rich kid! Hey everyone! Look at Richy Rich with his Kraft Singles. HAHAHAHAHAHHAAHA! Rich kid! |
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Breakfast was cornflakes or raisin bran, I don't know the prices but I'm assuming it was cheap. A couple of spoons of sugar made it good.
Lunch was peanut butter and jelly - almost always grape as it was cheapest - apple was good though, and strawberry super rare. Tuna sandwiches was what I made myself when I fixed my own food. Supper was rice and beans, perhaps a little meat to flavor it. Mashed potatoes was popular also. Most of this stuff we still eat. |
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Sunday family dinner formed the basis of the majority of the upcoming days' meals.
Sunday meal would have been beef roast, or pork of some cut, to include potatoes, onions, carrots, gravy. Sunday meal of this, then for the next several days (until consumed) would be hot sandwiches with gravy, then hot BBQ sandwiches -think add bottled chili sauce-, and lastly cold sliced sandwiches. Food did not go to waste. |
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Quoted: Sloppy Joe Steak-ums Beans and franks View Quote This plus Cinnamon toast If we wanted meat we had to hunt if for the most part. Family would help slaughter neighbors hogs and we would get the heads. Not bad eating all things considered. Canned vegetables from summer gardens. All the stuff that is better for you looking back. Canned sour Kraut from our garden with regular hot dog weenies as our “sausages” , chow chow |
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Beans and cornbread. The beans were pinto, or white. Comfort food for the kids to this day.
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Boiled cow tongue with vegetables, followed the next day with cow tongue sandwiches. That, and an endless opportunity to gag down corn fritters slathered in Aunt Jemima sugar-water "syrup".
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Potatoes tomatoes and cheese.
For two servings, a couple of russets, peeled and boiled until done. I can stewed tomoatoes American cheese slices Heat the stewed tomatoes while the potatoes are cooking. Cut the drained cooked potatoess into large cubes, put into a bowl. Using a fork break the potato, into a rough textures, place slides of American cheese onto the potatoes. Then place the stewed tomatoes on top of the cheese, and more American cheese on top. Let the cheese on top melt in, then dig in. Seasonings, salt and pepper are left to your discretion. |
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I'm starting to suspect cornbread with applesauce night wasn't just for fun. I also loved and still love tuna cassarole, it's really easy to make and doesn't cost too much.
I never went hungry as a kid and thankfully there was pretty much always nutritious food available. There is a difference between being dirt poor and being thrifty. I was fortunate to never have to experience the former. I will never touch another lima bean or piece of asparagus if I can help it though. |
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