In 1968 I was 12 years old. My mother was ill, and I decided I could make Thanksgiving dinner myself. Soup , 2 salads, a 15 lb turkey, rice dressing, potatos, yams, and apple pie. I set a nice table. No formal training, I learned by spending time in the kitchen with my mother. If you want to do it, more than likely you can. It doesn't matter where in the world, and what era you live in.
You almost certainly mean sweet potatoes. Yams and sweet potatoes are different vegetables. It is highly unlikely that anyone has yams for Thanksgiving or Christmas, as they're hard to find in most places. The gross bright reddish orange things people for some reason eat are always sweet potatoes that they mistakenly call "yams" because the company that sells the canned variety brainwashed people into thinking they're yams because of their logo. But they're not yams, I can promise you that.
❤😂 ok it's 1973. My Mom is up at 5 am to put the stuffing in the bird and pop it in the oven. The aroma while watching the parade was heavenly. My grandparents arrive at 11:30. We eat at noon. And again at 5. Did I ever thank my parents for everything they gave? Their hearts, their love, their money...
Mine too, why did they have to cook it so long ? I'm thinking the oven must have been set to 175 degrees, because even a big turkey only takes around 3 hours at 275 - 325
It was all about the Turkey sandwiches after. Lots of mayo and canned jelly cranberry sauce on Wonderbread, only Wonderbread. Now I have Thanksgiving alone. What I wouldn’t give for just one more with my Mom, Dad and brother.
Shandra9000mail That's racist. This's only a demonstration of family values and home cooked meals on Thanksgiving. I for one like my food to be seasoned well. And I love collard greens.
Isn't gravy the seasoning for turkey sometimes. I haven't finished the video to know if she made any but maybe that was the seasoning for this example. And I'm sure it's just the basics plenty of other recipes were available at the time probably.
My beautiful grandmother taught me to cook the entire Thanksgiving meal. From turkey with giblets gravy, to sweet potato pies made with the zest of an orange. Ill never forget it. Such nice memories. I passed that on to my sister, who to this day, calls me from new jersey for step by step instructions. ❤
What we think of as seasonings weren't that popular until the 60's. Consider how many of our spice cabinet seasonings are actually pretty international, which weren't yet widely used in American cuisine. Sage, rosemary, thyme, fennel, garlic are Mediterranean. Nutmeg, cinnamon, allspice are from the Asian and American tropics.
The reason people weren't land whales back then was because people didn't eat so many carbs and sugars and processed foods. The amount of seasoning you put on your food is merely a personal preference.
One large turkey, one medium glazed ham, huge pan of chicken & dressing (my grandma always pulled the chicken off the bone to chop and mix in the dressing), real mashed potatoes, sweet potato casserole with brown sugar, melted butter, and pecans, my offering of corn casserole with green chilies, butter, and crene cheese, my three sisters offered green bean casserole with dried onions and bacon, two trays of deviled eggs, and homemade chicken/turkey gravy. And yes it's true, Mom always forgot to brown the rolls at the proper time or burned them completely. It was a delicious dinner every Thanksgiving. I'll never have another one like it again but thanks for allowing me a place to remember and comment. Happy Thanksgiving!
@@1419onthebayou I didn't even begin with deserts because my comment was so long. I will mention my mom's fudge though, with various nuts, smooth with peanut butter, or just plain. It was a must on Thanksgiving. I never told her but I preferred neighbor lady, Ms Margie's Divinity. A whole tin can just for myself! I loved that sweet woman.
@@1419onthebayou I think that leftover plate the day after Thanksgiving, the one where the coconut cake or sweet desert is all mixed with the green bean casserole and we don't even care, that's the best plate of all! I believe this year my younger sister is planning a Saturday dinner, rented pavilion in a park, prime rib, and probably a nasty three bean salad. No desert. She's become a grandma and has taken over such family gatherings since our mom passed away a couple years ago. I'm not complaining really, family is important. It just ain't the same.
Forgot homemade stuffing, my mom made it every year and I still do. It's so sad that these recipes of yesterday are being forgotten by so many. I still cook all of them.
Blame the sjw's since you can't say Merry Christmas" anymore,because someone who doesn't celebrate that particular holiday will get their feelings hurt 🥺 🙄
I dont think people realize why Thanksgiving isn't "magical" anymore its because of the internet... back then people haven't seen their family in months/years (beside like letters) now although it kinda the same, now traveling is more easier you can do once every few months if you want, you can video call/call family, etc. So if you want the thanks giving "magic" back, say by to videocall/call/easy transportation etc. 1st world problem i guess 😅
Saturdays were my moms baking days , we would get up eat breakfast then clean, then she would make us go outside to play i remember the smell of cake as we played with our dogs and ran around
@@user-gc9hj1oi4d my husband has been battling double hit large b cell lymphoma, inpatient for 8 months my job has cut back hours ,I'm loosing everything fixing to be evicted, havent got the 1st or second stimulas cant qualify for food stamps, health ins ,mabey I can get tht when I do my taxes ,I'm stressed out to the max ,I have 2 dollars to live on for 5 days, til I get paid ,I got 1 pk bologna and half loaf of bread ,just keep me in your prayers plz,thank you for asking about me
I watch this every single Thanksgiving. I recognize that today is not thanksgiving but sometimes I have to come back and marvel at the zeroes of times this lovely lady washes her paws
Did people back in the 1950s really have only one income, two children, a mortgage, and still be able to afford all these fresh ingredients for all these dishes???
In some cases they did. Turkey was not eaten often. This film was a marketing effort to get them to eat more turkey throughout the year. As for the appearance of affluence, remember these are actors who are dressed up and groomed for the occasion.
Yes, my father worked at Campbell Soup Co in Sac.,Ca. Hesupported a wife,4 children,a house pàyment,a car payment3 -later 4 catholic tuitions plus bills & buy food on his 1 income!
My mom was born in 58 but her cooking is still very much like this. We never truly understood the struggles my mom faced as a single married woman (love ya daddy but mom was the superstar) she made sure we had veggies and protein at every dinner, a good breakfast and great lunch. She still, with grown children and grandkids and greats makes dinner the most fantastic way, all by scratch. Cant wait to come down and see ya for xmas mama ❤
Mom would cook a huge bird, and for a week afterwards, every frigging meal was turkey -- turkey soup, turkey salad, turkey sandwiches, turkey platters, etc. Not that I'm complaining though. She always made sure one of the side dishes was lima beans, which I very much appreciated. Her stuffing is to die for -- she used Italian sausage instead of giblets.
@@feingetarntesfischfilet4841 it's the insides of the bird. When you buy a dressed turkey or chicken the "giblets" are usually inside the cavity of the bird. Usually their liver, heart, neck, gizzards.
Turkey sandwiches, turkey enchiladas, turkey salads the list could go on and on thats how it was in our home as well! I was glad it was a whole year before we had turkey again!! lol
Life seemed more laidback back then, but of course depending on where you're at. It's always relaxing watching nostalgic videos, people back then seem more happy and grateful over the smallest things. Much more simple times. I heard it was easier starting conversations back then with random people even during traffic or out walking on the streets. Sorry to go off topic, it's just the stories I've heard from the older generation, so many people were friendly.
@@jenniferloftus2363 Maybe, it varies per region. I have lived in different states in The US, some are friendlier than others. I literally had a couple people in California who got offended when I said hello to them. Other states never had a problem.
It was!I was born in 1957 so ballpoint were a thing when I started school,but from 3rd to 8th grade we had an actual class for handwriting,which we got graded on,it was called "penmanship".
I love reading the comments and thinking about warm family houses with beautiful smells and everyone talking with each other and how different the world used to be. And those traditions can still be practiced today if you are willing.
A warm family house with beautiful smells and everyone talking is still very commonplace. That's not a rare thing of the past. Life hasn't changed that much.
my kitchen stays clean when I'm cooking, I was raised to wash dishes as you go. finish with a pot? wash it. I was also told to wash my hands between touching food cause nobody wants salmonella. lol
@@Maestro-gh2ei No, it comes out very juicy. I learned this trick watching a late night talk show more than 20 years ago. An American actress who had spent a lot of time in Europe and said that's how they do it there.
Yeah especially seeing as such production is dictated by what the consumers want... 🤦 Does the concept of supply and demand escape people nowadays or something
Accutally by genetics engineering they just mean selective breeding. The bigger turkey's are bred with bigger turkey's so the meat is bigger. Smaller turkey's are bred with smaller turkey's. Or they simply harvest it younger.
DawnDreams 26 Genetic engineering, sometimes called genetic modification, is the process of altering the DNA in an organism’s genome- that’s seems a lot different then selective breeding , still I hope your right though lol
sheepbeepbeep not really everything is from a box these days? Where's the charm in that? Back then almost everything was made by hand especially women with the motherly touch. I'm a wife and mother now and I make meals at home even started baking ❤️ my husband's mom wasn't the cook but at least with me he can get to know what it feels like to have a woman cook foods with love. Yes I get a kick out of that!
@@sofiabravo1994 Please stop romanticizing these time periods. Women were oppressed and minorities were treated horribly. Nothing to miss there. We've come so far as a society.
@@mellowjello5411 I don’t know why people think that happened all the time. If your an asshole,your gunna be one but most people didn’t beat their spouses
Oh My Goodness, I have seen old movies where the ladies never left home without a hat on, gloves and the ladies that didn't wear hats wore a scarf on their hair in the car. I always thought that was so elegant. Houseshoes, flip flops and sweatpants were unheard of in public.
@@miraclesblessings5044 I love my house clothes. And it never fails whenever I’m wearing good clothes in the kitchen something ruins them. I grew up in an Italian family. I was born in 68 and my grandmother and my aunt cooked in November with shorts, sleeveless blouses, house slippers, and the house shirt house coat with the pockets and snaps in place of buttons. Having a family of my own and cooking holiday meals for 20+ years I now understand WHY my grandmother and aunt dressed like comfortable summer .., when everyone else was dressed for the holiday. IT GETS REALLY HOT working all day in that kitchen even if it is a New York Winter 🤣🤗 They were happy to cook for us and we were all appreciative of their hard work and delicious food! Great memories for sure. Family times are just not the same nowadays with cell phones and Internet. The football game on was MORE than enough 😅
@@Kim-ri1hg Oh yes, my great grandmother used to dress that way around the house. I remember the flowered house dresses and she always had a paper towel in one pocket and a handkerchief in the other. But they never dressed that way in public. And cooking with my aunts was a kitchen full of music, loud laughter and whispering things that kids weren't supposed to hear. Sipping liquor in tea cups, and children couldn't run in the house especially when they were making cakes.We also had to stay out of the kitchen. It was gr8! Most of them are gone now and the one's that are left are too elderly to help out but they definitely give orders and suggestions and lots of complaints about the kids, your stove, your seasoning and everything else. I wouldn't trade them for the world!
my mom had one aunt that every year would bring this 'jello mold', it was mostly some kind of raspberry jello with cool whip mixed in, pieces of moist fruit and walnuts in it. It was awesome!
Yes, my mum makes that still. We use strawberry gelatin, sour cream for the filling and strawberries, pineapple chunks, walnuts, and sometimes banana slices in the gelatin. Ring mold. Ta da.
@@echofoxtrot2.051 sour cream or cool whip? our recipe (and most) calls for mixing cool whip into the liquid jello, then it's an opaque pink type of color. I miss that jello mold. It was like getting to have dessert as part of dinner.
My grandpa still serves cranberry jello with nuts at thanksgiving Its strawberry or cherry jello mixed with canned cranberries and walnuts and set in the fridge It is delicious I should get the recipe as soon as I can
Despite what we’re told today about not stuffing the turkey because of salmonella, we still do it anyway and no one in our Thanksgiving gathering has ever become ill. Cooking stuffing inside the bird results in the best tasting dressing ever! Nothing beats it!
This was soothing to watch. Especially when everyone ate around the table. I really do appreciate videos like these. The narrator sounds so classy and elegant.
@@eileenlester4342 I miss those days also, folks from that period of time utilized and ate everything no waste. Day's of hard work and very little to show for it. Great memories thought.
I’m sad to say that my son commented that we both sat at the table to eat dinner the last couple of nights. He said how much he liked it. How far we’ve fallenZ I was one of five & we had dinner that way every night. He’s my only & I haven’t managed very well.
I was born in 1953 and treasure that time. I was a stay home mom in the 1980's. We had one car and budgeted everything. It can be done. All I ever wanted to be was a homemaker and was lucky that is what I was able to do. My kids and grandkids all live close by. Life is good. You can embrace a simple life if that is what you really want.
Where I used to work we made a chicken salad with grapes and nuts. The mix for it had onions and celery and other ingredients. It tasted great. We used to put it in Crossants for trays. We sold a lot of that chicken salad.
I am now 76 and grew up in the 50s but we only had turkey at Thanksgiving and it never came frozen and it still doesn't in my family. What this video does not offer is the making of the essential gravy as this was what cinched the whole thing together along with cranberry sauce ( still an elusive art for many)....What is most nostalgic to me is the wonderful old Revere Ware and the fridge (still called an ice-box by my grandparents) with the tiny freezer compartment that had to be thawed out with hot water every few months or the door wouldn't close! It was often a child's chore to do this...
@@maxsteele3359: Yes it was! The one my family had lasted almost forty years! Never had a problem. But like My Grandfather’s Clock, “it stopped, short, never to go again when the old man died.”
@@nativevirginian8344Few folks today know the icebox’s meaning. I remember the delivery of ice to my folk’s home. The ice man had big blocks of ice, covered with burlap, and with an ice pick, he chopped a piece to slide into the ice compartment of an icebox. It kept things cool but didn’t get cold enough to freeze ice. I don’t remember how long that lasted. But I do remember being ordered to “Close the icebox door, before everything’s spoiled!” Also remember Mother defrosting! We’ve come a long way, baby!😮
I just had flashbacks of my moms hairdryer defrosting the freezer in the ,60,s. Gravy making is a lost art. It’s badica😢a 1:1 ratio of fats to solids, then a 3 part amount of liquid.
Honestly this just reminds me of working in the kitchen with my great grandmother. She pretty much raised me. She was born in 1905. A teeny tiny old women that could hold a cast iron skillet full of oil and chicken with one hand!!!😮😅
I love watching these old videos and nostalgia. I was born in 67 and I remember my mom cooking the turkey and having it last a long time in different ways. I make a cornbread stuffing with Chestnut's and sweet Italian sausage or chorizo. Hope everyone has a wonderful Thanksgiving filled with good food, happiness and many blessings 🦃
My Grandma was the best cook everything from scratch. Homemade pumpkin pie, minced meat pie. She made everything with such love not just throwing it together. I miss those days
I was born late 70’s and it does the same to me. Reminds me of Thanksgiving at my grandparents house. I was lucky to get all their recipes copied and every year do my best to re-create it.
@blane6592 I was born in 81 and this absolutely reminds me of my grandparents and my mothers cooking. She very much still did things like this even though she was born in 58. Traditions last forever as long as someone keeps them going and in my family. We do!
My Dad was in charge of the Turkey in England when we were growing up in the 60/70's. He also kept the giblets back but only for the gravy. He used to stuff the neck and cavity with the most delicious stuffing made with good quality sausage meat, lots of onion and heaps of sage and thyme. The bird was the seasoned well and cooked to a turn. I still miss his Turkey dinner with all the trimmings. His stuffing was so popular with guests that he had to make big trays of it to serve with left over turkey for a cold supper and they would make a bee line for it when it was put on the buffet table. Thanks for these video's they make me smile.
Karen Fredericks Enjoyed reading your comments. I miss both of my Grandmother's turkeys and dressings. Both were completely different! We'd eat at my Mother's Mother's at noon and Father's Mother in the evening. By the end of the day we were more STUFFED than the turkey! Lol. Neither cooked the stuffing INSIDE the bird. Thanks for your nice story. We've got race wars going on in one of these threads. Geeze, what is this world coming to? Race wars from a 1950's turkey video. Ugh.
@@jacquelynking2184 yes, that's what facebook and twitter have given us: life ruined by dim-witted brats and their stupid commentary. I'm a child of the 50's, and I remember fondly the family turkey dinners we had. We all pitched in, even if only to set the table or wash the dishes. Kids nowadays don't know what they missed.
I'm South African. Swiss father, Portuguese mother, husband of Scottish descent. We don't have thanksgiving, it's a very American thing, but we eat Turkey at Christmas. 🍗
@Robert Kolakowski. I grew up in the 60's and 70's as a white person in Apartheid South Africa. In Cape Town. In some ways it was probably similar to American. I won't go onto the politics or human rights issues. That's a whole other story.
I am 72 so remember this when I was growing up. My mom was a housewife while my dad worked. She liked staying home, never wanted to work outside the home. My dad died at 50 so she had to go to work & hated it.
My maternal grandmother had to go to work at 38, after my grandpa had a stroke at 44. A second stroke forced my grandpa to go on disability, and close down his business. It was als o around that time that she had to learn how to drive, because she was never taught to drive. Luckily my Aunt Nancy stayed home to help out the family, while she also worked. On my dad's side, my grandparents were poor, that both grandparents had to work. My grandpa was a mechanic, and my step grandma worked a number of jobs, including being a dispatcher for a taxi service, doing over 20 years working as a waitress (with this job, she sometimes brought in more money than my grandpa), working as a cashier at a grocery store, and just before retiring in 1993, she worked at a Walgreens distribution center. Most of her jobs were in the overnight hours, while my grandpa worked during the daytime, and feeding the kids, and getting them ready for school. My step grandma's struggles paid off in the end, because unlike my maternal grandmother, my step grandmother saved up enough for her own retirement, and my grandpa's pension, help her live comfortably in retirement.
Kathleen McKinney My dad died young so my mom had to go back to work at age 46 after being home for 25 years raising kids. She ended up loving her job and got remarried at age 50. She has been married 30 years to my stepfather. She even got a small pension from her job and medical benefits for their old age!
WOW. What a reverie. I miss my Mother's Thanksgiving's from the fifties and sixties. Funny how everyway this infomercial described how to make items is how my Mother taught us girls. How I wish I could have another of my Mother's Thanksgiving from scratch.
Been vegetarian for decades but I can still smell and taste my German Oma's big turkey and gravy feast which she made every Sunday ... omg ...It was delicious! After supper we kids sat on the living room floor and watched The Wonderful World of Disney on my grandparents' huge COLOUR TV!!! the 1960s and 1970s .... amazing simpler times gone forever.
I can only speak from the standpoint of chicken processing, but there are so many factors that go into poultry these days. Smaller family farms have given way to bigger factory farms, specialty breeding, feed, and changes in processing habits as well. Many birds you buy are injected with a flavored brine that also helps to keep the meat moist during cooking. The domestic oven has also evolved greatly over the decades along with other cooking techniques. I'm curious about what the next 30 years might bring.
You dumbass. Today's turkeys are filled with hormones antibiotics and chemilcals. The turkeys are tightly packed so they get no exercise. Back then the turkey was free range. Just because you didn't know how to cook the damn thing.
Wow, just to think that back then you could have a nice wedding reception (with a home-made turkey) in the home. There was no wedding planners, no bridezillas, no 50k budget that plunged the newlyweds (or their parents) in to debt for years. Just a nice simple wedding to celebrate the pretty bride and handsome groom. Now they can start their life. Simple really is better.
I'm curious when all the big reception parties started too. I watched several movies lately from the 40's 50's & early 60's and even the well-to-do had the after wedding ceremony party at the bride's home.
My husband and I got married in 2020 in the living room with masks on, a little man came in and married us while his wife sat in the truck as a witness we spent 50 bucks for the liscence I think and the guy that married us charged 80.Boom Boom
Lolll watching real America going to school from home and wondering what it looked like when America wasn’t run by a buncha pussies and kids played with m80s and safety was coming home with all your fingers and toes
Although I was born in the 70’s, this still reminds me of my childhood with my great grandmother 😢, everything could have been going wrong but I never knew it ♥️, this video is very soothing to me and good to my soul
In the 70s a lot of 50s culture was still prevalent since it was only 20 years behind. When you watched tv back then, a lot of tv stations still ran 50s tv shows and movies since there was not many other choices back then.
@@bmtziii640 Seriously? I know its part of history and we shouldn't forget it, but that had nothing to do with the video or this comment. No need to rain on the parade.
I love the way these old 50s Kitchens look, well the whole house of the 50s really, but the kitchen especially. I never lived the 50s, but it still makes me nostalgic somehow.
My Mom would start the turkey early in the morning. She made the dressing from scratch and, get this, she packed the dressing into the turkey. It always came out so great. We had family over and it was a special time. Also back then Thanksgiving was it’s own holiday. I miss those days.
I grew up in this era and my mom certainly seasoned... fresh sage, parsley, onions,celery. Tons of salt and fresh ground pepper. Either sausage or oysters in the stuffing.
I grew up in the '80's with the same ingredients in the stuffing and also dressing, all kinds of side dishes and pies. I still reproduce the same dinners now. Tasty.
We make our own dressing bread, herbs baked right in. We take the dough and spread it about 1 inch thick on a large sheet, so you have LOTS of crust, which makes the dressing so great.
@@robertpryor7225 My sister made an oyster stuffing one Thanksgiving and it was SO good. I'm a pescetarian and stuffing usually had chicken broth but this stuffing used the juice from canned oysters. Give it a try, it's really tasty.
omg you have no idea how helpful that is. I've been doing it for a while myself and another thing it does is help prevent cross contamination from happening to the spices. People are always cleaning up but they never clean the spice bottles.
I’m so glad this video was recommended to me, it actually made me cry missing my mama so much.....she was one of these 1950s homemakers , she was also a nurse and she and my father ADORED one another and they embraced family life. She loved making a nice home and looking pretty for her family. It was a given that we ate together daily, sitting at the table was mandatory and how we looked in on one another and connected. I was taught to help out even as a small child and I learned so much during these times. I remember holidays being a time when you wore your special dressy outfit And you were on your best behavior.I know life was not perfect back then but people actually looked at one another and spoke to one another , they weren’t staring down into their phones ignoring each other. . Yes there was a lot that wasn’t great back then but the way families interacted and spent time together was so much better than what we have now. We have too many distractions and things that keep us from one another to the point where people go online to meet others instead of just talking to someone standing next to them in the grocery store. I miss these people and I miss these times…
Maybe the person standing next to them in the grocery store is not interesting enough. Maybe people want a better connection. Not trying to be obnoxious, just stating another perspective.
lalagonegaga Everyone has something interesting about them. Problem is people want instant gratification and many lack basic, civil conversational skills these days.
Don’t worry, not all people are glued to their phones these days. I’m a millennial, but still get out to garden with my older neighbors, volunteer at my community center, and spend lots of quality time with my friends and family doing involved activities. There are plenty of people in the world who share your values! ♥️♥️♥️!
I'm going to take the week off work (vacation time) this Thanskgiving and do all the cooking for my elderly parents. It's the one big family get together we have every year, and my mom can't do the cooking anymore. I'll be cooking for 3 days. LOL
Reminds me of a funny Thanksgiving dinner many years ago. My dad was slicing the turkey at the dinner table. He yelled ‘Where is the meat on this damn bird Carolyn?!’ Mother had inadvertently cooked it upside down! 😂 Needless to say, that white meat was the juiciest turkey ever! Mom and Dad have both passed on, so this video brought back happier times growing up. 😌
I swear I do that every year lol I, myself, purposely cook it upside down and then every year I complain that there's not much meat on it and remember to flip it over lol
Your dad’s first thought was to blame your mother that spent 4 hours dressing and cooking a turkey. I would have a hard time being married to that person.
@@namedrop721 No, no, no. Mom had 2 strokes back in 1968. We kids were 4, 6, and 8. Her right side was paralyzed and it did a lot of brain damage. Mom learned to walk again but had to quit teaching. Dad stayed by her side until his death at age 74. Mom’s gone now too. They had been married 45 years when he passed away. Best man I ever knew. My one story about the upside down turkey does not define this wonderful husband, father, and high school principal. ☺️
Funny you should say that,as we have zero sidewalks or street lamps and we are in a decent area. Next summer we might be mowing the road in front of our house as the grass is greener in the asphalt cracks. Oh wait let the turkey's run free here, might not have many farms left if Bill Gates keeps buying up the country.🤷🏻♀️
I dont think sloth was the intention. Why spend 10 hours doing laundry by hand when you can do it in 2 hours and spend the remaining 8 gardening or being involved in a civic club.
You do realize that Indians were murdered, slaves were imported, emancipated and Jim Crow reigned. This is Madison Avenue marketing showing white people of a specific way to be. They taught us to be consumers wrapped up in cozy visions of a new modern world. A world that drove us to the edge.
@@marjoriedevine9051, Yup all those jim crow laws and slave plantations were brought to us by the democrats or better yet demon👹crats. Then came the Republicans to the rescue.
I love when my turkey comes fresh from the Department of Agriculture Experiment division.
6 drumsticks! Good eatin'!
Lmao
OMG I have tears in my eyes!🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
😂
Lol
In 1968 I was 12 years old. My mother was ill, and I decided I could make Thanksgiving dinner myself. Soup , 2 salads, a 15 lb turkey, rice dressing, potatos, yams, and apple pie. I set a nice table. No formal training, I learned by spending time in the kitchen with my mother. If you want to do it, more than likely you can. It doesn't matter where in the world, and what era you live in.
i love that
You almost certainly mean sweet potatoes. Yams and sweet potatoes are different vegetables. It is highly unlikely that anyone has yams for Thanksgiving or Christmas, as they're hard to find in most places. The gross bright reddish orange things people for some reason eat are always sweet potatoes that they mistakenly call "yams" because the company that sells the canned variety brainwashed people into thinking they're yams because of their logo. But they're not yams, I can promise you that.
@@englishatheartsigh…bet you’re a blast at parties, huh
@@englishatheartseriously? You’re coming across as arrogant with a need to be right. Why do you care?
Awesome!! That's great you did that meal. I'm sure your Mom was impressed!
❤😂
ok it's 1973. My Mom is up at 5 am to put the stuffing in the bird and pop it in the oven. The aroma while watching the parade was heavenly. My grandparents arrive at 11:30. We eat at noon. And again at 5. Did I ever thank my parents for everything they gave? Their hearts, their love, their money...
All of this!!!
Mine too, why did they have to cook it so long ? I'm thinking the oven must have been set to 175 degrees, because even a big turkey only takes around 3 hours at 275 - 325
@@ericschulze5641 exactly, it took less time to build the Space Station.😲😆
Things were much better before feminism and that bs. Women shouldn't vote!
1993 for me. I miss Christmas and Thanksgiving with my Dad and grandparents. I lost them years ago. It's funny the stuff you take for granted.
It was all about the Turkey sandwiches after. Lots of mayo and canned jelly cranberry sauce on Wonderbread, only Wonderbread. Now I have Thanksgiving alone. What I wouldn’t give for just one more with my Mom, Dad and brother.
If you lived in Idaho we'd be having you over for Thanksgiving
@@optitom9033thank you….❤️
No marriage no kids?😢❤
@@queendaily3648 No. never married and unable to have kids.
É atrasado, mas boas festas e que você conheça pessoas para que possa dividir novas lembranças . um abraço para você aqui do Brasil,
People were so obsessed with everything being instant and modern. Now look where that got us...
Clorox Bleach Dad?!?!?!?!?!
@@elisabethpearson2755 17 year old girl actually.
Clorox Bleach daughter!?!??!?!
Very true
ok boomer
Not a lick of seasoning on the turkey
bulejuicee I was thinking the same thing!!!!! Like damn where's the seasoning for that damn turkey???! 🤔
"melted fat" is all the seasoning we need apparently
Thank you lol I was saying the same thing 😂
Shandra9000mail That's racist. This's only a demonstration of family values and home cooked meals on Thanksgiving.
I for one like my food to be seasoned well. And I love collard greens.
Isn't gravy the seasoning for turkey sometimes. I haven't finished the video to know if she made any but maybe that was the seasoning for this example. And I'm sure it's just the basics plenty of other recipes were available at the time probably.
I miss my family. I miss those huge holiday dinners and memories 😔
My beautiful grandmother taught me to cook the entire Thanksgiving meal. From turkey with giblets gravy, to sweet potato pies made with the zest of an orange. Ill never forget it. Such nice memories. I passed that on to my sister, who to this day, calls me from new jersey for step by step instructions. ❤
@veronicaBolanos-mc4fc if you taught your sister, why is she calling you for instructions? You people just make anything up. 😂
I suppose your sister must forget how to cook thanksgiving dinner xD
I'm sorry
Its just so odd she'd have to call for instructions every year
I am 41 and I can still remember the smell of my Grandmother's home the she cooked everything from scratch she was an truly beautiful amazing woman
Saints Fan ok boomer
She's Gen X, not boomer
whodat!
Amen!!!!
Saints Fan 🧡
Listening to the background music, I don't know whether to eat the turkey or waltz with it.
LOL :)
Lol!
😳😁🤨🧐🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂
Lol
Hahahaha
I'm still using my grandmothers Pyrex, damn near 70 years old, practically invincible.
Pyrex is the cookware equivalent of those old Nokia phones
Thats why vintage pyrex is in such high demand
Pyrex will last forever! Family heirloom 👍😂
That's how old my cast iron cookware is. It used to be my grandmother's. Things used to be built to last.
That’s precious though, family heirlooms.
I envy the people who got to experience those days of old.
Apparently, seasonings were optional in the 50s.
ACultured - LMAO!!!
What we think of as seasonings weren't that popular until the 60's. Consider how many of our spice cabinet seasonings are actually pretty international, which weren't yet widely used in American cuisine. Sage, rosemary, thyme, fennel, garlic are Mediterranean. Nutmeg, cinnamon, allspice are from the Asian and American tropics.
ACultured LoL...
ACultured that’s why people in the 50s weren’t fat.
The reason people weren't land whales back then was because people didn't eat so many carbs and sugars and processed foods. The amount of seasoning you put on your food is merely a personal preference.
“That stuffing will swell so give it room”- the pep talk I give my pants every thanksgiving.
😄😄😄 you win, funniest comment!
Everything was swell in the 50s.
Yes
😂😂😂
Not only Thanksgiving but , Christmas and New years🤣
I love these old fashioned videos 😊
One large turkey, one medium glazed ham, huge pan of chicken & dressing (my grandma always pulled the chicken off the bone to chop and mix in the dressing), real mashed potatoes, sweet potato casserole with brown sugar, melted butter, and pecans, my offering of corn casserole with green chilies, butter, and crene cheese, my three sisters offered green bean casserole with dried onions and bacon, two trays of deviled eggs, and homemade chicken/turkey gravy. And yes it's true, Mom always forgot to brown the rolls at the proper time or burned them completely. It was a delicious dinner every Thanksgiving. I'll never have another one like it again but thanks for allowing me a place to remember and comment. Happy Thanksgiving!
@ Rocky Moore Same menu I grew up with here in Louisiana, plus always potato salad and lots of sweet desserts.
@@1419onthebayou I didn't even begin with deserts because my comment was so long. I will mention my mom's fudge though, with various nuts, smooth with peanut butter, or just plain. It was a must on Thanksgiving. I never told her but I preferred neighbor lady, Ms Margie's Divinity. A whole tin can just for myself! I loved that sweet woman.
@@rockymoore6859 Yum! My family too. I grew up in the 50s. We went all out. Sometimes as many desserts as sides.🥴😁🦃
@@1419onthebayou I think that leftover plate the day after Thanksgiving, the one where the coconut cake or sweet desert is all mixed with the green bean casserole and we don't even care, that's the best plate of all!
I believe this year my younger sister is planning a Saturday dinner, rented pavilion in a park, prime rib, and probably a nasty three bean salad. No desert. She's become a grandma and has taken over such family gatherings since our mom passed away a couple years ago. I'm not complaining really, family is important. It just ain't the same.
Forgot homemade stuffing, my mom made it every year and I still do. It's so sad that these recipes of yesterday are being forgotten by so many. I still cook all of them.
I'm addicted to these videos
Jenn Ben me too!!
Me three!
Jenn Ben Four!
I love old movies and vintage films. It brings back the good old days. I miss my childhood so much.
J Williams I love watching these videos too. Very interesting.
This is my escape from reality
Chris Tree reality is not reality. It’s a fantasy 😉
Chris Tree ...mine, too
Same
Me too. Fuck today.
Me too
This was filmed in the very early 50s.
You can tell by the color choices, the decor, and the fountain pens. (Ballpoint pens were invented in 1954.)
The fact she did all that with long sleeves is the most impressive
Along with high heels and pearl necklace... I would have had a broken ankle or two 👍😂
@@mariap.thisislife8735 i could cook in pearls, but I can't even stand in heels. I can't understand how anyone ever thought heels were a good idea
And heels
True housewife 8:15
Did did what you delusional dingbat this looks like a horror movie
when people were happy and the holidays were magical ,,🎄🎄🎇🎇
Sanitizing counters after raw poultry really ruined everything huh
Blame the sjw's since you can't say Merry Christmas" anymore,because someone who doesn't celebrate that particular holiday will get their feelings hurt 🥺 🙄
Which people were happy? Everybody????
I dont think people realize why Thanksgiving isn't "magical" anymore its because of the internet... back then people haven't seen their family in months/years (beside like letters) now although it kinda the same, now traveling is more easier you can do once every few months if you want, you can video call/call family, etc. So if you want the thanks giving "magic" back, say by to videocall/call/easy transportation etc. 1st world problem i guess 😅
@@vladimir-savage72 you can say merry Christmas are you dumb?? And no other religion would get offended
Saturdays were my moms baking days , we would get up eat breakfast then clean, then she would make us go outside to play i remember the smell of cake as we played with our dogs and ran around
puffalump76 What a lovely memory to have!
That's so sweet
Lol on your inappropriate avatar!
A nice wholesome story. From a name and picture that is offensive. Yet rules the world. Modesty is something she forgot to show you.
cheers for that clitoral hood
Things seemed more relaxed back then. Everything is stressful now.
Because they only had 3 tv channels, a home phone, and no cell phones or social media.
Her stainless steel cookware looks beautiful. It could still be in use today!
most likely aluminum
@@jordanrichard1173 ? You think so? : ( aluminum isn’t healthy to use.
looks like copper bottom revereware
It looks like Revere Ware
Yes my mom and just about everyone we knew in the 50s had Revere ware - lasts forever!
this relaxes my nerves and depression
I hope you’re feeling better these days. ✨
it's been the worst year of my life ,but I try to keep happy minded
@@user-gc9hj1oi4d my husband has been battling double hit large b cell lymphoma, inpatient for 8 months my job has cut back hours ,I'm loosing everything fixing to be evicted, havent got the 1st or second stimulas cant qualify for food stamps, health ins ,mabey I can get tht when I do my taxes ,I'm stressed out to the max ,I have 2 dollars to live on for 5 days, til I get paid ,I got 1 pk bologna and half loaf of bread ,just keep me in your prayers plz,thank you for asking about me
God bless you darling..please see if you qualify for Medicaid and also check out local food banks for pantry staples.
@@chickasawstarrmountain9747 mine too 😔
“Leave the sink running for 2-3 hours”
The anxiety that line induced within me. lol
I was thinking it, you said it....
Back when the earth's resources weren't dwindling👀
🙄
@@prtybrneyez18 Wassup?🙂
🙄
The pot she was boiling the giblets in, brought a memory of my moms set of pots, she had the same ones.
Holly shit that was when 😊
I watch this every single Thanksgiving. I recognize that today is not thanksgiving but sometimes I have to come back and marvel at the zeroes of times this lovely lady washes her paws
LMAO
she’s just marinating everything she touches in raw turkey juice
Did people back in the 1950s really have only one income, two children, a mortgage, and still be able to afford all these fresh ingredients for all these dishes???
heatherwanderer777 No. Read Revolutionary Road.
Yes. Life was far better then.
yes but we only had one car, one bathroom, one phone and one tv for four people.
In some cases they did. Turkey was not eaten often. This film was a marketing effort to get them to eat more turkey throughout the year. As for the appearance of affluence, remember these are actors who are dressed up and groomed for the occasion.
1960s Feminism 'fixed' that for women ad families... in a jiffy! ;)
Watching this makes me miss my grandma 🥲
Me too...✌️♥️
Same ❤️❤️
Yes, my father worked at Campbell Soup Co in Sac.,Ca. Hesupported a wife,4 children,a house pàyment,a car payment3 -later 4 catholic tuitions plus bills & buy food on his 1 income!
My mom was born in 58 but her cooking is still very much like this. We never truly understood the struggles my mom faced as a single married woman (love ya daddy but mom was the superstar) she made sure we had veggies and protein at every dinner, a good breakfast and great lunch.
She still, with grown children and grandkids and greats makes dinner the most fantastic way, all by scratch.
Cant wait to come down and see ya for xmas mama ❤
cherish her every chance you get❤
i was so high that when this video stopped i was honestly shocked to be back in 2019
That's me rn buddy. What festivities
@@shewasastunner a cornucopia of wonderment
@@trillcollins7847 lmao
I died just now from this comment, actually😂😂😂
Dude I hear ya HAHAHAHA
Mom would cook a huge bird, and for a week afterwards, every frigging meal was turkey -- turkey soup, turkey salad, turkey sandwiches, turkey platters, etc. Not that I'm complaining though. She always made sure one of the side dishes was lima beans, which I very much appreciated. Her stuffing is to die for -- she used Italian sausage instead of giblets.
..what are gibblets?🥴
@@feingetarntesfischfilet4841 it's the insides of the bird. When you buy a dressed turkey or chicken the "giblets" are usually inside the cavity of the bird. Usually their liver, heart, neck, gizzards.
@@Carlie_flower Thank you! 😆
@@feingetarntesfischfilet4841 no problem! ❤️ I remember not being sure what giblets were too haha it's kind of a funny word 😂
Turkey sandwiches, turkey enchiladas, turkey salads the list could go on and on thats how it was in our home as well! I was glad it was a whole year before we had turkey again!! lol
Life seemed more laidback back then, but of course depending on where you're at. It's always relaxing watching nostalgic videos, people back then seem more happy and grateful over the smallest things. Much more simple times. I heard it was easier starting conversations back then with random people even during traffic or out walking on the streets. Sorry to go off topic, it's just the stories I've heard from the older generation, so many people were friendly.
I'm sorry but Mr. Angry Gorilla 2000, perhaps it's you that is making it tough to be friendly lol.
@@jenniferloftus2363 Maybe, it varies per region. I have lived in different states in The US, some are friendlier than others. I literally had a couple people in California who got offended when I said hello to them. Other states never had a problem.
Amazing how we take ball point pens for granted, as they were using fountain pens back then, I bet handwriting was a lot neater too!
It was!I was born in 1957 so ballpoint were a thing when I started school,but from 3rd to 8th grade we had an actual class for handwriting,which we got graded on,it was called "penmanship".
@@debra1363woah 😮
Ball point pens have been the standard for writing since the 1890s. The fountain pen being used in this video is just to be fancy.
“Leave the sink running for 2-3 hours” BRUH
lol-me too! (water bill)!
Well water! Still have our own well!
Ikr😅
My mom did that all the time to thaw out meat. I cringe now thinking about it😣
Why dads were so pissed about bills back in the day. Well nah that never changed
I love reading the comments and thinking about warm family houses with beautiful smells and everyone talking with each other and how different the world used to be. And those traditions can still be practiced today if you are willing.
Me too!! Love good old fashion memories 💜🍁🍂🍁🍂
You mean like the guy talk about being high lol
They are practiced every day in my home. I'm old school
A warm family house with beautiful smells and everyone talking is still very commonplace. That's not a rare thing of the past. Life hasn't changed that much.
when many have to work 16 hours a day to make ends meet, i dont think theres time for family and traditions
It's amazing how remarkably clean her kitchen stays as she prepares the food and cooks.
Don't forget the cross contamination as she handles the raw bird and then other things in the kitchen without a care.
@@lauriepfantz6293 lmao seriously I was thinking "did salmonella not exist in the 50s?"
my kitchen stays clean when I'm cooking, I was raised to wash dishes as you go. finish with a pot? wash it. I was also told to wash my hands between touching food cause nobody wants salmonella. lol
I can't believe how fancy they dressed and everything formal. Nails done and digging into a turkey 🦃
The best advice here is to start roasting breast down. I learned this years ago and it makes a HUGE difference.
wont the breast become dry from the prologned direct heat?
@@Maestro-gh2ei No, it comes out very juicy. I learned this trick watching a late night talk show more than 20 years ago. An American actress who had spent a lot of time in Europe and said that's how they do it there.
@@guriausa Thank you Julie, very cool!
But won’t that hurt your back?
And your feelings?
I’ll see myself out now...
@@Maestro-gh2ei no, because all the juices that escape the turkey gather in the bottom of the baking tray, keeping the meat moist.
I like how the narrator proudly announces that the turkeys were genetically engineered by the us department of agriculture-EXPERIMENTS station.🤦🏾♂️
Yeah especially seeing as such production is dictated by what the consumers want... 🤦
Does the concept of supply and demand escape people nowadays or something
Accutally by genetics engineering they just mean selective breeding. The bigger turkey's are bred with bigger turkey's so the meat is bigger. Smaller turkey's are bred with smaller turkey's. Or they simply harvest it younger.
DawnDreams 26 Genetic engineering, sometimes called genetic modification, is the process of altering the DNA in an organism’s genome- that’s seems a lot different then selective breeding , still I hope your right though lol
DawnDreams 26 that’s not what GENETIC engineering is. That’s just selective breeding.
So true man back then was the time for testing 😂
That oven had a nice heating chart on the inside, that would be nice to have that these days.
I love that my mum taught me well. We dont have Thanksgiving in the UK, but we do a big Christmas dinner. Best meal of the year!
Pegans.
Girlfriend didn't need to use a whole sheet of paper for that turkey math.
Turkey math 😂
Bookmarks & Bookshelves c
Relaxing😴
lol, She had that turkey down to a science, literally!
She wrote big so the viewers could see
there's so much charm in these vintage vids. it's lost in these days
sheepbeepbeep truth
sheepbeepbeep not really everything is from a box these days? Where's the charm in that? Back then almost everything was made by hand especially women with the motherly touch. I'm a wife and mother now and I make meals at home even started baking ❤️ my husband's mom wasn't the cook but at least with me he can get to know what it feels like to have a woman cook foods with love. Yes I get a kick out of that!
That is why the only channel I watch is Turner Classic Movies - today's culture is caca
True nowadays you have annoying women rambling about shit no one cares about while on a cooking show
@@sofiabravo1994 Please stop romanticizing these time periods. Women were oppressed and minorities were treated horribly. Nothing to miss there. We've come so far as a society.
Times were much simpler back then. I wish the world would still continue to carry the values and traditions like our grandparents did.
U forgot to mention when grandpa beat the hell out of Grandma for leaving the food too cold lmao
@@mellowjello5411 I don’t know why people think that happened all the time. If your an asshole,your gunna be one but most people didn’t beat their spouses
@@mellowjello5411some did, not all.
@@mellowjello5411 Or how a ton of housewives took drugs to null the boredom of their lives.
I’m fine ignoring my white Southern grandparents’ “values and traditions.”
I love watching this video. I’m in my 70’s now and remember how much flavor the turkeys and meat had in those days.
19:38 Glad she mentioned that I should serve my FAVORITE mushroom sauce, cause I've got like so many recipes for mushroom sauces.
Time to make my favorite turnips
Gonna go soften them up on the concrete first
🤣🤣🤣
Seems like mushroom sauce was popular during the 50s 😂
But what if I want to use my least favorite mushroom sauce recipe?
am FLA Yes, and Lord knows it's hard as hell to pick just one
1:12 I remember so clearly, me doing my grocery shopping wearing my hat, gloves and high heels. Life was beautiful then.
Oh My Goodness, I have seen old movies where the ladies never left home without a hat on, gloves and the ladies that didn't wear hats wore a scarf on their hair in the car. I always thought that was so elegant. Houseshoes, flip flops and sweatpants were unheard of in public.
@@miraclesblessings5044 and don't gorget the pearls.
@@miraclesblessings5044 I love my house clothes. And it never fails whenever I’m wearing good clothes in the kitchen something ruins them. I grew up in an Italian family. I was born in 68 and my grandmother and my aunt cooked in November with shorts, sleeveless blouses, house slippers, and the house shirt house coat with the pockets and snaps in place of buttons. Having a family of my own and cooking holiday meals for 20+ years I now understand WHY my grandmother and aunt dressed like comfortable summer .., when everyone else was dressed for the holiday. IT GETS REALLY HOT working all day in that kitchen even if it is a New York Winter 🤣🤗 They were happy to cook for us and we were all appreciative of their hard work and delicious food! Great memories for sure. Family times are just not the same nowadays with cell phones and Internet. The football game on was MORE than enough 😅
@@Kim-ri1hg Oh yes, my great grandmother used to dress that way around the house. I remember the flowered house dresses and she always had a paper towel in one pocket and a handkerchief in the other. But they never dressed that way in public. And cooking with my aunts was a kitchen full of music, loud laughter and whispering things that kids weren't supposed to hear. Sipping liquor in tea cups, and children couldn't run in the house especially when they were making cakes.We also had to stay out of the kitchen. It was gr8! Most of them are gone now and the one's that are left are too elderly to help out but they definitely give orders and suggestions and lots of complaints about the kids, your stove, your seasoning and everything else. I wouldn't trade them for the world!
@@Kim-ri1hg Get some Dawn. It'll get grease out of ANYTHING.
my mom had one aunt that every year would bring this 'jello mold', it was mostly some kind of raspberry jello with cool whip mixed in, pieces of moist fruit and walnuts in it. It was awesome!
Yes, my mum makes that still. We use strawberry gelatin, sour cream for the filling and strawberries, pineapple chunks, walnuts, and sometimes banana slices in the gelatin. Ring mold. Ta da.
@@echofoxtrot2.051 sour cream or cool whip? our recipe (and most) calls for mixing cool whip into the liquid jello, then it's an opaque pink type of color. I miss that jello mold. It was like getting to have dessert as part of dinner.
My grandpa still serves cranberry jello with nuts at thanksgiving
Its strawberry or cherry jello mixed with canned cranberries and walnuts and set in the fridge
It is delicious
I should get the recipe as soon as I can
Despite what we’re told today about not stuffing the turkey because of salmonella, we still do it anyway and no one in our Thanksgiving gathering has ever become ill. Cooking stuffing inside the bird results in the best tasting dressing ever! Nothing beats it!
the whole salmonella scaremongering is nothing but that.
Look how the family is all dressed up for dinner. That brings back memories. What a time 🙂
RetroGuy76 lol
RetroGuy76 They never would have been caught wearing a hoodie, pajama pants and slippers at the store or a diner like people do today.
RetroGuy76 I like to live in those times where people dressed in their finest not like a bunch of bums from the street!!
Seriously though! I'm 34 and my husband is 42 and we make sure that our kids are clean and dressed for supper. Maybe we're just old school lol.
Because they are paid actors
There’s something comforting about this 🤔
My My a loving family environment ❤️
What a gorgeous wedding table & scene!!
I have a cold right now and entertained myself by mimicking the narrator’s voice and accent. 🤭 Especially “aaaallllmmmonds”.
This was soothing to watch. Especially when everyone ate around the table. I really do appreciate videos like these. The narrator sounds so classy and elegant.
I miss those family times...My grandma loved the turkey neck...yuck. I give those things to my little dog.
@@eileenlester4342 I miss those days also, folks from that period of time utilized and ate everything no waste. Day's of hard work and very little to show for it. Great memories thought.
Her voice reminds me of Beaver’s mom, June Cleaver
For Thanksgiving, I had to sit at the kids' table until I was like 9.
I’m sad to say that my son commented that we both sat at the table to eat dinner the last couple of nights. He said how much he liked it. How far we’ve fallenZ I was one of five & we had dinner that way every night. He’s my only & I haven’t managed very well.
I was born in 1953 and treasure that time. I was a stay home mom in the 1980's. We had one car and budgeted everything. It can be done. All I ever wanted to be was a homemaker and was lucky that is what I was able to do. My kids and grandkids all live close by. Life is good. You can embrace a simple life if that is what you really want.
It's a better life. Quit buying stuff.
Patrice Young you’re white and straight, probably why things worked out for you.
Cleo M We worked hard and did without.
@@MoniqNkeila racist much?
@@MoniqNkeila OMG really victim.
I feel happy watching her videos, she makes preparing a Thanksgiving meal a pleasure. And the upbeat music adds that something extra.
Where I used to work we made a chicken salad with grapes and nuts. The mix for it had onions and celery and other ingredients. It tasted great. We used to put it in Crossants for trays. We sold a lot of that chicken salad.
I am now 76 and grew up in the 50s but we only had turkey at Thanksgiving and it never came frozen and it still doesn't in my family. What this video does not offer is the making of the essential gravy as this was what cinched the whole thing together along with cranberry sauce ( still an elusive art for many)....What is most nostalgic to me is the wonderful old Revere Ware and the fridge (still called an ice-box by my grandparents) with the tiny freezer compartment that had to be thawed out with hot water every few months or the door wouldn't close! It was often a child's chore to do this...
Yep, my grandparents had a refrigerator with the motor on top and the belt that ran the compressor. That thing was built like a tank!
I am 60, I still say ice box. :)
@@maxsteele3359: Yes it was! The one my family had lasted almost forty years! Never had a problem. But like My Grandfather’s Clock, “it stopped, short, never to go again when the old man died.”
@@nativevirginian8344Few folks today know the icebox’s meaning. I remember the delivery of ice to my folk’s home. The ice man had big blocks of ice, covered with burlap, and with an ice pick, he chopped a piece to slide into the ice compartment of an icebox. It kept things cool but didn’t get cold enough to freeze ice. I don’t remember how long that lasted. But I do remember being ordered to “Close the icebox door, before everything’s spoiled!” Also remember Mother defrosting! We’ve come a long way, baby!😮
I just had flashbacks of my moms hairdryer defrosting the freezer in the ,60,s. Gravy making is a lost art. It’s badica😢a 1:1 ratio of fats to solids, then a 3 part amount of liquid.
Me: Watches videos on video games/fighting games/disaster documentaries
TH-cam: heres a 1950s turkey dinner
and you watched it because they are in control of our minds now that we've eaten too much experimental turkey....
It counts as a disaster documentary.
Bruhhh. Why is this so true though?!
This would be part of fallout
@@arimewillow4278
Bruh u burned down da turkey, da waman, da kitchen, da narrator and da house
Honestly this just reminds me of working in the kitchen with my great grandmother. She pretty much raised me. She was born in 1905. A teeny tiny old women that could hold a cast iron skillet full of oil and chicken with one hand!!!😮😅
I love watching these old videos and nostalgia. I was born in 67 and I remember my mom cooking the turkey and having it last a long time in different ways. I make a cornbread stuffing with Chestnut's and sweet Italian sausage or chorizo. Hope everyone has a wonderful Thanksgiving filled with good food, happiness and many blessings 🦃
The magic time when these ovens could transform a square unedible dish into a round unedible dish...
LMAO!! Thanks for the chuckle
I noticed that too! :D
I believe inedible is the word you’re going for...I’m tying to figure out how you typed unedible without autocorrect calling you a dumb shit
Totally caught that
@@dicktracy3439 My autocorrect is autocensuring itself
I love when we pray before eating 💕❤️
What a great time to be alive. Sorry I missed it by a few decades
My Grandma was the best cook everything from scratch. Homemade pumpkin pie, minced meat pie. She made everything with such love not just throwing it together. I miss those days
Meat pies are amazing
I miss my grandma's cooking 😢 she made some delicious casseroles!
Omg minced meat pie
I was born in the 80's, but this stuff makes me nostalgic cuz it reminds me of my parents.
I was born late 70’s and it does the same to me. Reminds me of Thanksgiving at my grandparents house. I was lucky to get all their recipes copied and every year do my best to re-create it.
Chile if you were born in the 80’s this should NOT remind you of your parents…they were kids when this video was taken! 🤣🤣🤣
@blane6592 I was born in 81 and this absolutely reminds me of my grandparents and my mothers cooking. She very much still did things like this even though she was born in 58.
Traditions last forever as long as someone keeps them going and in my family. We do!
I was born in the 60s.
TOD: 12/31/69
My Dad was in charge of the Turkey in England when we were growing up in the 60/70's. He also kept the giblets back but only for the gravy. He used to stuff the neck and cavity with the most delicious stuffing made with good quality sausage meat, lots of onion and heaps of sage and thyme. The bird was the seasoned well and cooked to a turn. I still miss his Turkey dinner with all the trimmings. His stuffing was so popular with guests that he had to make big trays of it to serve with left over turkey for a cold supper and they would make a bee line for it when it was put on the buffet table. Thanks for these video's they make me smile.
Karen Fredericks Enjoyed reading your comments. I miss both of my Grandmother's turkeys and dressings. Both were completely different! We'd eat at my Mother's Mother's at noon and Father's Mother in the evening. By the end of the day we were more STUFFED than the turkey! Lol. Neither cooked the stuffing INSIDE the bird. Thanks for your nice story. We've got race wars going on in one of these threads. Geeze, what is this world coming to? Race wars from a 1950's turkey video. Ugh.
My his soul Rest In Peace and his memories live on. ❤️
@@PP2US /\ race war./\
@@jacquelynking2184 yes, that's what facebook and twitter have given us: life ruined by dim-witted brats and their stupid commentary. I'm a child of the 50's, and I remember fondly the family turkey dinners we had. We all pitched in, even if only to set the table or wash the dishes. Kids nowadays don't know what they missed.
@@paulengstrom432 And they probably know nothing about table manners either!
M too young to remember these things….but old enough to know that….YES!!!! Life was better!!!!!
Back when Thanksgiving was fulfilled with thankful people.
They were more thankful for the killing of all the natives back then.
The days when you can beat your wife and not have to deal with those “woke” colored folks
@@Jay-ut9ov And Communism was in full swing and had the country shitting
Unlike now it is mostly filled with entitled ungrateful empty souls storming malls on Black Fridays and internet on Cyber Mondays…
You don't sound very thankful yourself
I'm not American, but I love this and the fact that TH-cam makes it possible for me to watch.
Scotland I presume! How was it when you grew up?
You can be American if you want
I'm South African. Swiss father, Portuguese mother, husband of Scottish descent. We don't have thanksgiving, it's a very American thing, but we eat Turkey at Christmas. 🍗
@ryan. Thanks. Would I have to climb over a wall? 🤣😂
@Robert Kolakowski. I grew up in the 60's and 70's as a white person in Apartheid South Africa. In Cape Town. In some ways it was probably similar to American. I won't go onto the politics or human rights issues. That's a whole other story.
I am 72 so remember this when I was growing up. My mom was a housewife while my dad worked. She liked staying home, never wanted to work outside the home. My dad died at 50 so she had to go to work & hated it.
Sad to hear that.
My maternal grandmother had to go to work at 38, after my grandpa had a stroke at 44. A second stroke forced my grandpa to go on disability, and close down his business. It was als o around that time that she had to learn how to drive, because she was never taught to drive. Luckily my Aunt Nancy stayed home to help out the family, while she also worked.
On my dad's side, my grandparents were poor, that both grandparents had to work. My grandpa was a mechanic, and my step grandma worked a number of jobs, including being a dispatcher for a taxi service, doing over 20 years working as a waitress (with this job, she sometimes brought in more money than my grandpa), working as a cashier at a grocery store, and just before retiring in 1993, she worked at a Walgreens distribution center. Most of her jobs were in the overnight hours, while my grandpa worked during the daytime, and feeding the kids, and getting them ready for school. My step grandma's struggles paid off in the end, because unlike my maternal grandmother, my step grandmother saved up enough for her own retirement, and my grandpa's pension, help her live comfortably in retirement.
Kathleen McKinney My dad died young so my mom had to go back to work at age 46 after being home for 25 years raising kids. She ended up loving her job and got remarried at age 50. She has been married 30 years to my stepfather. She even got a small pension from her job and medical benefits for their old age!
Kathleen McKinney I’ve always wanted to be a house wife but since we’re in modern day , were forced to work lol
I love you
WOW. What a reverie. I miss my Mother's Thanksgiving's from the fifties and sixties. Funny how everyway this infomercial described how to make items is how my Mother taught us girls. How I wish I could have another of my Mother's Thanksgiving from scratch.
Been vegetarian for decades but I can still smell and taste my German Oma's big turkey and gravy feast which she made every Sunday ... omg ...It was delicious! After supper we kids sat on the living room floor and watched The Wonderful World of Disney on my grandparents' huge COLOUR TV!!! the 1960s and 1970s .... amazing simpler times gone forever.
I remember eating those turkeys from the 1950's and 60's. They were dry and as tough as shoe leather. The turkeys we have today taste much better.
I can only speak from the standpoint of chicken processing, but there are so many factors that go into poultry these days. Smaller family farms have given way to bigger factory farms, specialty breeding, feed, and changes in processing habits as well. Many birds you buy are injected with a flavored brine that also helps to keep the meat moist during cooking. The domestic oven has also evolved greatly over the decades along with other cooking techniques. I'm curious about what the next 30 years might bring.
I don't know who cooked your food but my mom and grsndma were excellent cooks. Turkey was never dry.
You dumbass. Today's turkeys are filled with hormones antibiotics and chemilcals. The turkeys are tightly packed so they get no exercise. Back then the turkey was free range. Just because you didn't know how to cook the damn thing.
OMG! Watching this pleasant video and reading these comments right here has made my night!!
I love you all!!
Ours were were never ever like that in early 60s.
Wow, just to think that back then you could have a nice wedding reception (with a home-made turkey) in the home. There was no wedding planners, no bridezillas, no 50k budget that plunged the newlyweds (or their parents) in to debt for years. Just a nice simple wedding to celebrate the pretty bride and handsome groom. Now they can start their life. Simple really is better.
I'm curious when all the big reception parties started too. I watched several movies lately from the 40's 50's & early 60's and even the well-to-do had the after wedding ceremony party at the bride's home.
My husband and I got married in 2020 in the living room with masks on, a little man came in and married us while his wife sat in the truck as a witness we spent 50 bucks for the liscence I think and the guy that married us charged 80.Boom Boom
We asked for home made food from our guests, and plates and glasses to lend. We just bought the booze. It was a very relaxed day.
My parents had their wedding reception in her parent's house in the early 80's. Interesting to hear that use to be the norm.
@@reginafisher9919 Someone could have been ordained online (Universal Life?) and saved 80 bucks. Lol
That China pattern at the wedding table is Arcadia Green by Franciscan, that is my parent's China pattern and I still have it. ❤
I loved Thanksgiving in my mother's kitchen. We kids were lucky, most everything fromm scratch.
I could watch this American nostalgia series the whole day
Me, born in 2003: damn this takes me way back
Omg.. Shut up ... Lol . KIDDING
Lolll watching real America going to school from home and wondering what it looked like when America wasn’t run by a buncha pussies and kids played with m80s and safety was coming home with all your fingers and toes
I saw this video a couple of years ago and now make my stuffing like this. It's really good and everyone seems to like it.
Dressing
@@MeadeSkeltonMusic the dressing is what is mixed with the stuffing ingredients. She clearly states it that way.
Stuffing goes in the bird, dressing is on the side. I know this. Either way, I make it this way and we love it.
Now you can’t find a Turkey in the store unless it’s Thanksgiving or Christmas.
Although I was born in the 70’s, this still reminds me of my childhood with my great grandmother 😢, everything could have been going wrong but I never knew it ♥️, this video is very soothing to me and good to my soul
I wish I was born back then
I was born in 1970.. I know exactly what you mean..
In the 70s a lot of 50s culture was still prevalent since it was only 20 years behind. When you watched tv back then, a lot of tv stations still ran 50s tv shows and movies since there was not many other choices back then.
Such a good video you can almost smell the segregation... 😭
@@bmtziii640 Seriously? I know its part of history and we shouldn't forget it, but that had nothing to do with the video or this comment. No need to rain on the parade.
the oven even changed the shape of the casserole dish
Yup - everything was better back then.
not everything.
and back to electric again
the threat of nuclear annihilation was pretty cool
Hahahaha no kidding hahaa
I love the way these old 50s Kitchens look, well the whole house of the 50s really, but the kitchen especially. I never lived the 50s, but it still makes me nostalgic somehow.
My Mom would start the turkey early in the morning. She made the dressing from scratch and, get this, she packed the dressing into the turkey. It always came out so great. We had family over and it was a special time. Also back then Thanksgiving was it’s own holiday. I miss those days.
I grew up in this era and my mom certainly seasoned... fresh sage, parsley, onions,celery. Tons of salt and fresh ground pepper. Either sausage or oysters in the stuffing.
Oyster sounds so weird! We had sausage stuffing not my fave, I like the plain.
And never measured like in this video! Just a dash or pinch or splash of this & that.
I grew up in the '80's with the same ingredients in the stuffing and also dressing, all kinds of side dishes and pies. I still reproduce the same dinners now. Tasty.
We make our own dressing bread, herbs baked right in. We take the dough and spread it about 1 inch thick on a large sheet, so you have LOTS of crust, which makes the dressing so great.
@@robertpryor7225 My sister made an oyster stuffing one Thanksgiving and it was SO good. I'm a pescetarian and stuffing usually had chicken broth but this stuffing used the juice from canned oysters. Give it a try, it's really tasty.
good happy " nothing can go wrong" music in the background...
I love these vintage videos.
I love the idea of keeping the supplies you are working with on a handy tray, like she does in this video. I started implementing that in my kitchen.
omg you have no idea how helpful that is. I've been doing it for a while myself and another thing it does is help prevent cross contamination from happening to the spices. People are always cleaning up but they never clean the spice bottles.
I’m so glad this video was recommended to me, it actually made me cry missing my mama so much.....she was one of these 1950s homemakers , she was also a nurse and she and my father ADORED one another and they embraced family life. She loved making a nice home and looking pretty for her family. It was a given that we ate together daily, sitting at the table was mandatory and how we looked in on one another and connected. I was taught to help out even as a small child and I learned so much during these times. I remember holidays being a time when you wore your special dressy outfit And you were on your best behavior.I know life was not perfect back then but people actually looked at one another and spoke to one another , they weren’t staring down into their phones ignoring each other. . Yes there was a lot that wasn’t great back then but the way families interacted and spent time together was so much better than what we have now. We have too many distractions and things that keep us from one another to the point where people go online to meet others instead of just talking to someone standing next to them in the grocery store. I miss these people and I miss these times…
Maybe the person standing next to them in the grocery store is not interesting enough. Maybe people want a better connection. Not trying to be obnoxious, just stating another perspective.
lalagonegaga Everyone has something interesting about them. Problem is people want instant gratification and many lack basic, civil conversational skills these days.
Reminds me of my grandma :) RIP
Accept I think she cooked the turkey better... and I don't think she used the giblets that often. (nasty).
Don’t worry, not all people are glued to their phones these days. I’m a millennial, but still get out to garden with my older neighbors, volunteer at my community center, and spend lots of quality time with my friends and family doing involved activities.
There are plenty of people in the world who share your values! ♥️♥️♥️!
jmitterii2 yes I accept that. Why would you think we would not?
She done contaminated the entire kitchen with that turkey.
Sassy Cat you are more likely to get salmonella from cooked food especially from stores than at home.
@@SuperN1ntendoChalmers I think you meant former
Yes, and NO one died...🙄
Just what I was thinking. Her sleeves should have been rolled up, they were probably contaminated too. I know one cuff was
I hope you don't speak the way you write!!!!!!!!!
Love how the turkey casserole went in oven in a square dish and got put into basket a round crockery with lid dish!
Omg! I just caught that.
I'm going to take the week off work (vacation time) this Thanskgiving and do all the cooking for my elderly parents. It's the one big family get together we have every year, and my mom can't do the cooking anymore. I'll be cooking for 3 days. LOL
Reminds me of a funny Thanksgiving dinner many years ago. My dad was slicing the turkey at the dinner table. He yelled ‘Where is the meat on this damn bird Carolyn?!’ Mother had inadvertently cooked it upside down! 😂 Needless to say, that white meat was the juiciest turkey ever! Mom and Dad have both passed on, so this video brought back happier times growing up. 😌
I swear I do that every year lol I, myself, purposely cook it upside down and then every year I complain that there's not much meat on it and remember to flip it over lol
@@katenash1189😅
What a great memory of your mom, and dad, and all the funny things that happen when we try so hard for perfection!
Your dad’s first thought was to blame your mother that spent 4 hours dressing and cooking a turkey. I would have a hard time being married to that person.
@@namedrop721 No, no, no. Mom had 2 strokes back in 1968. We kids were 4, 6, and 8. Her right side was paralyzed and it did a lot of brain damage. Mom learned to walk again but had to quit teaching. Dad stayed by her side until his death at age 74. Mom’s gone now too. They had been married 45 years when he passed away. Best man I ever knew. My one story about the upside down turkey does not define this wonderful husband, father, and high school principal. ☺️
At the point where the husband and son had a middle of the night snack, I fell in love with this video. 😂💜
My wife hates if I eat anything in the night. She about had a fit when I got a piece of hard candy because my throat was dry.
those turkey nibblers!
@Steven...divorce her!
I wonder if they ever thought wanting things to be quicker would lead to us hardly having side walks 😭💀
I hate what it has become
Funny you should say that,as we have zero sidewalks or street lamps and we are in a decent area. Next summer we might be mowing the road in front of our house as the grass is greener in the asphalt cracks. Oh wait let the turkey's run free here, might not have many farms left if Bill Gates keeps buying up the country.🤷🏻♀️
pretty sure they had cars hun. definitely sure. you need help learning to drive?
I dont think sloth was the intention. Why spend 10 hours doing laundry by hand when you can do it in 2 hours and spend the remaining 8 gardening or being involved in a civic club.
What if we all agreed on bringing back the best of the 50s and live it again
You do realize that Indians were murdered, slaves were imported, emancipated and Jim Crow reigned. This is Madison Avenue marketing showing white people of a specific way to be. They taught us to be consumers wrapped up in cozy visions of a new modern world. A world that drove us to the edge.
I vote NO.
Hard pass.
Because it sucked.
@@marjoriedevine9051, Yup all those jim crow laws and slave plantations were brought to us by the democrats or better yet demon👹crats. Then came the Republicans to the rescue.