Oh how wonderful those cocktail parties were. There was finger food that covered our dining room table. A big glass Anchor Hocking chip and dip set. A tray of cocktail wieners with grape BBQ sauce, cake squares, big cheese ball with Captain wafers, and other homemade delights. I was a young man then, but miss all the people and fun we had. People loved the food and loved one another. Miss those times.
😂 I’m 69. I make Lipton onion soup dip probably 4-6 times a year. My kids and now grandkids still love it. Funny story…23 years ago my daughter told her boyfriend, now husband of 21 years, that I made a secret recipe onion dip. She actually thought it was a secret recipe. He asked me what the secret was. I laughed so much. Everyone would probably have a fit if I didn’t make it at Christmas time. Best of all I use my mom’s chip and dip bowl set. It must be about 40 years old. She passed away when I was 38.
I used to make that but discovered Dean's dips at the store and their onion dip is delicious and cheaper to buy than to make French onion dip and not as salty as that old dip was
I was a Baptist but went to Midnight Mass with my Catholic friends. Mostly for the all night food! Mr. Ailor turned me on to smoked oysters. And Mrs. Davis turned me on to scalloped corn and oysters. Thank you both and see you in heaven.
I always liked going to midnight mass when it was actually at midnight. In my area we would go in to church in the cold and by the time we got out it would be snowing. Great memory of great times. And yes, the food!
THIS was my childhood. The only thing missing is Dean Martin or Frank Sinatra records playing in the bavkground. My grandmother's both had mutual friends and of course our families were all close. Many cocktail parties with our favorite saying: Friday Night Finger Food Party: Potluck. That was the best way. And we all dressed up. Not fancy, just nice and pretty and loved every second of it. Everyone ALWAYS showed up. Great video!
@@Sacred_Fire Jesus Murphy that's a new one on me, if we didn't buy one ma would use Win Schuyler cheese, cream cheese and cheddar cheese, green onion, dash Worstershire and roll it in pecans. Very late 60s until today family still makes this. SOS was creamed chipped beef on toast and that was really good. Again very 60s
I was growing up in the 60’s and remember my patents having cocktail parties. My mom would fill the dinning room table with nothing but finger foods and small plates. One thing that was big was cocktail meatballs in small chafer, little sausages in BQ sauce in small chafer, hot crab dip in small fondue pot. The ever famous cheese balls, and ahead of her time she baked artichoke squares cut into small squares. Her close friends would also contribute a dish! A fruit centerpiece with sour cream brown sugar dip. I got paid to pick up plates, and restock the buffet and put glasses in the dishwasher. They grazed all night and had drinks. I thought it was great fun, because my allowance was .50 cents a week, and I’d make a whopping $3.00 more.😮 .
Hahaha! I know you meant to say "hot crab dip," (hopefully?) but you said "hot crap dip" 😂 and it cracked me up! 🦀💩 Thank you for the laugh! It was much needed today. ❤😂😂😂
I'm 62, remembering all of the women of my childhood being very adept at making most of these culinary creations. A lot more time was spent working in the kitchen. I remember a lot of dinners together as a family and parties with neighbors or other friends. It was a very social decade.
My family, who entertained in the 60s and 70s, wrapped water chestnuts in bacon, as a fake rumanki. They were a delicious and crunchy bite. And, deviled eggs on the buffet!
@@loriduffecy9205 it’s a good thing too-those dips they sell in the grocery stores labeled French onion dip taste nothing like the one you make with the onion soup.
We used to have B&M baked beans and hotdogs AND the B & M Brown Bread that came in the can and which was steamed...!! And,, then we also ate the bread with cream cheese!!
I remember cocktail weenies in bbq sauce at parties, ants on a log, hot dips like artichoke or spinach with cheese melted on top. My mom used to stuff dates with almonds, wrap them in bacon, the bake them until the bacon got crispy. Frankly, if you could put it on a toothpick, my mom made it.
@@AbigailGerlach-zt1sh Did you see the movie Mermaids with Cher as a single mother with 2 daughters in the 1960s. Everything she cooked was bite-sized or served on a skewer. Too funny.
Cocktail weenies are easy. One jar of chili sauce, one jar of grape jelly. Heat and stir until combined. Pour over hot weenies or meatballs, and you're done. Serve in a chafing dish with frilly toothpicks.
Right? And baked Alaska. I grew up in the 50’s and 60’s here in SoCal and I remember each one of these. There were always cheese balls too. Oh, the memories.
@@avalerie4467 So nice to hear someone mention cream cheese & olives. My mom used to make us that for our school lunches. Wrapped in wax paper before all these plastic sandwich bags. Wax paper is much more environmentally sound. Sigh ....
Using a loaf of French bread. The loaf was cut almost in half then cross slices. The chicken or ham salad filled in one side. Then the olive pimento was spread on the other side. It was then baked in the oven. Yum!
I dunno...I remember mixed drinks, cigarettes, olives, cheese, crackers, sliced veggies, dips, mixed nuts. That's called a cocktail party. Many of the dishes listed here would be for dinner party.
@@1ACL not at our house. They stayed all night, stereo playing Sinatra. 😂🤣😂🤣😂 In the late 50’s and 60’s it was not unusual to put out spreads like this. Even spiral sliced ham with little buns. The kids were welcome to eat , then all herded to the basement TV Room. Depends on what region of the country you live in.
Every Sunday i make pot roast, potatoes and carrots. And a condiment platter with cream cheese stuffed celery, olives, baby gherkins, sliced tomatoes and quartered onions. Its always polished off.
My mother used to make that in the ‘70’s. She called it a relish plate and had a pretty plate just for that. She would always take one to special occasions at her job. She could really do one up ya’ll!❤❤❤
My mom would put a slice of cheddar cheese over the 'pig' first and then wrap it in the blanket. The melted cheese took it from a finger food to an inexpensive dinner!
In the UK “Pigs in blankets” are wrapped in bacon. Sausages wrapped in pastry are called “sausage rolls”. Both these foods are still very popular, even with young people, in the UK.
@@traceyd.833 not that hard to do. Get some sausages, remove them from their casings, have a sheet of ready made puff pastry, wrap each sausage and egg wash the pastry, pop them in the oven. If you Google sausage rolls, you are bound to come up with a couple of recipes. 😁
This video really took me back to good times. As a kid, my Aunt had a party and it was the first time I had French Onion Dip. She served them with Bugles and from then on, I have this every now and then.
I am 63 and _Green Bean Casserole_ is *STILL* my dish for potlucks and family holiday dinners. The original too, the _Campbell's Cream of Mushroom Soup_ and crispy onions version. Although today, I added some _Crispy Jalepenos_ to the topping.
Pigs in a blanket are a regular during football season. I sometimes use phyllo dough and some extra sharp cheese along with a chipotle cranberry sauce.
👩🏻💻Stouffer's make the best Chicken Ala King. The frozen meal tastes just like the stuff served in my elementary, junior, and high schools; 1962 to 1974. Yummy!
I had one of the Stouffer's Chicken Ala King frozen dinners last night, and I hit the jackpot... It had 12 large cubes of chicken.... You're right about it being the best chicken à la king... It might be the best frozen dinner out there.
@@LVVMCMLV 👩🏻💻I have never had any problem with not enough chicken in that frozen meal. I have the Chicken Ala King several times a month on my retirement grocery budget. Worth every cent.
@@dolldoll2914 Am I misremembering , or did the chicken a la King not have a thickened CLEAR sauce , not a white cream sauce ? Maybe I'm confusing it with Chung King Chop Suey , but I remember Chicken a la King in a clear chicken based sauce . I've only had it homade as a guest ,or at the elementary school cafeteria , or maybe other lunch cafeterias or restaurants , never frozen .
I grew up on Underwood Devils Ham the tin can wrapped in paper, which I found odd as a kid. But, we never had Spam that I recall. I learned about Spam in the late 70s visiting an American friend house.
@@phthartic That's ridiculous. If someone says they are allergic, they've probably had confirmation. I think the way our lifestyles have changed, through processed foods and products containing contaminants, we have altered our genetics that cause certain conditions. I do no buy that people are crying "wolf" over something like that.
@@sandraleigh4023 Well lets just say I would never want to be the one to “test” someone making a claim of allergy by secretly feeding them their “allergen” but I sure wish there would be some objective medical studies with blind skin patch tests to verify that allergies have increased over time. But now I sometimes have to actually search a bit to find normal food in the grocery store hidden amongst all the non dairy milks and the gluten free breads and the meat free meats, etc. All the people worried about “processed” foods and funny additives are the same ones gobbling up all these weird ingredient laden fake foods. Just because these days half the country (lets not go into which half) wants to be special in some way and insist that everyone cater to all their “special” requirements.
Went to someone's house often for parties as a teenager. They had food but I have no idea what they served. Too busy thinking about the opposite sex. I wish I had been more appreciative of the family who threw the parties. I'm very appreciative now! Wish I could tell them but sadly the parents have passed away.
I still do. My kids and neighbors depend on it to get us through the holiday season! Love to make it and give the little red wrapped gifts of Chex Mix to as many as I can. It's fun!
I made some not long ago - I LOVE rumaki!! But over the last few years, I had a very hard time finding chicken livers!! I also like making a pate' with onions and Grand Marnier, and may take a couple and toss them into my scrambled eggs for breakfast!
I recall beef stroganoff -- usually we had it on Christmas Eve. Sheet on a shingle -- mystery meat in white sauce served on toast - antipasto if you knew Italians -- Peticia a honey walnut and very light pastry -- Onion dip was always a go to -- shrimp cocktail -- Chex cereal mixed with cashews and forget what the sauce was - I used to work at Pillsbury in the home econ dept and got to try a lot of Bake Off recipes (at 18 I was the guinea pig as inexperienced housewife. A lot of Swedish and Norwegian dishes up in Minnesota like pickled herring with onions - apple kuchen - springle -- quick fried snow flake pastry covered with powdered sugar - Swedish snowball cookies very simple and very good.
I made deviled eggs tonight to have with dinner. Made some last week too. They are low carb and are a great filling snack if your just a little bit hungry.
My mom hosted bridge games at our house and always had clam dip with chips, too. She used to make big pans of lunch lady brownies and peanut butter bars. We would fight for any left over the next day.
@@lanebashford3982 The Aunt who made our holiday Clam dip has dementia now. We have tried to reproduce it but hers was the best. We used to kid her that she wasn't invited unless she brought her Clam dip. Lol.
@@smorgasbroad1132 My mother's dip recipe is lost, too. We have looked everywhere for it and I haven't found one yet that is as good. We'll have to keep trying LOL
@@lanebashford3982 There ya go, keep trying. I'm sure we know the ingredients but are unsure of the ratios and amts. that made hers so special. Or was it because it was made with love? 🤷🏼
I never heard of ants on a log and I grew up in the 60s. Of course the only Latino family in a white neighborhood at the time. My mother was a social bug and loved to cook. So swapping recipes was common in the neighborhood wives. My mother was the queen bee of the Tupperware parties with cocktails and music. What she calls an excuse to party. Punchbowl with matching glass cups hanging on the side served with ginger ale and Sherbert for kids party.
@@camilochavez6982 Born in '64, never had heard of "Ants on a log" either (til much later) but my mother was a German , Army wife so... Your Mother sounds like a fun Mom and woman! 🥂
With all the drama happening today, I'd go back in a heartbeat. I miss a lot of the things on your list and I'd have to put up with cigarettes again but it all outweighs the PC of today.
Party foods still popular in the South from this list - Pigs in a Blanket - Ants on a Log - Onion Dip - Cheese Ball ( no Christmas is complete without one)
@@MildredGlutz Mom made the tunnel of fudge cake all the time, after it won the bake-off that year. It called for a boxed chocolate frosting that created the tunnel along with walnuts. They have created a modified recipe where you can still make it successfully, but I haven’t tried it.
@@DebraCaraballo Where did you find the recipe? I thought Tunnel of Fudge was a goner since they no longer make the boxed chocolate frosting (and it won't work with canned frosting).
When I was very young mother would have friends over to play cards. She always had a beautiful table of finger foods and desert was usually jello parfait.
My mom used to participate in weekly Bunco parties; all the ladies took turns hosting. Cheese & crackers, sliced celery, green olives w/pimentos, pretzel sticks. Metro Denver in the 1970's.
I wasn't born during the 60's but after watching "Don't Worry Darling" I REALLY, REALLY TRULY with that was real. Like, to go to bed and just suddenly wake up back in that era, and just to live in that simulation would be so wonderful ❤❤❤❤
It was a great time for smart women, wanting to go to college. Great opportunities without companies feeling like they had to pick because of gender, race, or other groups. They could actually pick what was best for the company.
@@therealJamieJoy my mom and dad both worked, and we all shared the house and yard work. The 60's was what you made of it. Like today, but without all the ridiculous angst.
Most people DON'T wanna do any REAL COOKING anymore. USA, CAN & UK. People WONDER WHY people today are SUPER-CHUNKY. People were CONvinced NOT to FARM their OWN Food. Move to the Cities and PURCHASE TV Dinners now turned into Microwaveable CheMYSTERY Pax. Babies are DEPRIVED of their MOTHER'S MILK and REAL FOOD when they're ready for foods. All so-called store-bought Food is FAKE. Making people CHUNKY from CHEMICALS and SICKENED with Cancer, Diabetes, Insanity, Etc.
My mother would make small hors d'oeuvres with egg salad, chopped ham and chopped chicken. Sometimes she would put all three in a sandwich loaf and frost it with cream cheese. It looked like a frosted cake when it was done. Radishes were cut into roses to make it look pretty. When you sliced into it, you could see the three layers of filling. Always a family favorite.
Chicken a la king, fortunately, is making a big comeback in recent years. Especially when cooks figured out they could be ladled over toast, biscuits, English muffins, noodles, rice and even certain types of pasta.
My mom went thru a tunneling phase as us kids called it. She took out the insides of cantaloupe & honey dew melons and put in Jello with cottage cheese or sometimes it was cool whip with pineapple and frozen then sliced. We had lots of "pockets", tunneled out rolls with some kind of meat filling, that got foiled up and put into the coals of the bbq. The rolls got crusty on the outside but the inside was goo-ey. Potatoes were tunneled out and stuffed with cheese. It was that kraft stuff in the jars with pimentos. Sandwich logs...tunneled out french bread loaves, stuffed with egg salad, or chicken salad, or deviled ham. served sliced. Anything tunneled out was then cubed, shoved in melted butter and made into croutons or stuffing. .Our eggs were served in a piece of bread, fried, and the egg filled in the hole. Our meatloaves always had veggie filling. Like spinach or bell peppers. I think mom was part mole. She liked to serve everything with a different inside/center. I miss those concoctions so much cuz they were fun and tasty.
SW.England. Our 1960's buffets definitely weren't like this! We thought egg mayonnaise vol-au-vents were posh - and if you could run to prawns in a pink sauce, you were really living. 😄
Here in Louisiana we still eat pigs in blankets all the time, either as a party favor or just dinner. We use lil' smokies and croissant dough or just make our own biscuit dough. I also used to get the full size ones both at school and at home.
Almond Roca?? Where did you grow up?! I'm from the hometown of Almond Roca. I know they do ship it out of Tacoma, but it's kinda cool to me to hear it was part of someone's memories!
@@trudygreer2491 I grew up in L.A. My dad loved anything with almonds, and some of my earliest memories in the early 1960s are of Roca and the foil wrap. He had a big sweet tooth, so there was always something in the house.
@@jeffsilverman6104 Great story! But too bad you didn't live in Tacoma.. Dad could've gone to the factory store and picked up bags of the seconds for cheap.. no gold wrapper, but lotsa Roca!
As for the carrots- I steam them until just tender, then add a couple of teaspoons of butter and a tablespoon of maple syrup. Cook a couple of minutes while the sauce bubbles (be careful not to burn), turning and coating the carrots. Turn off and after a minute, sprinkle with a bit of salt. Super quick and easy side dish that takes very little time or effort while you're cooking the rest of the meal. You can basically steam while everything else is on it's last 10 minutes then do the glaze within a minute or 2.
We sell boxes of pigs in a blanket in the freezer section of our store, also lipton soup mix with the dip recipe. Ants on a log was a fun memory. It reminded me of the relish tray on Thanksgiving. Thank you!
Great job. I always love a trip down memory lane. I used to make my nieces and nephews the _Pigs in a Blanket_ when I cooked for family gatherings. I also made them help make them sometimes. _Chicken-a-la-King_ is part of my culinary canon. I make it several times a year. Never been a fan of chicken livers, but we always had a sausage or shrimp version at my parents cocktail parties. Along with the _Onion Soup_ dip and the _Cheese Ball._ In 1967 one of the mega-grocery corporations published a _Guide to Entertaining at home._ It's a bunch of recipe cards; on the front was a cocktail and on the back was an _hors d'oeuvre._ It was part of a subscription, to what I don't remember, nor do I remember how long it lasted, but it was a while. The cards, there were three or four per month, were full color and printed on 5x8 card stock and when it was completed, the stack was eight and a half inches tall. I still have that collection. I am essentially and expert on all foods that can be served with a toothpick.
Being raised in that era…….wish my mother (& father) could have cooked that well!😂😂😂 I remember other families who ate these array of goodies! Well presented!🌟🌟🌟
I'm from 1960s California. I remember the celery with peanut butter (very popular with moms, for kids snacks) but I never saw it with raisins. My mom mixed cream cheese with pimentos per a recipe a couple of times, in place of the peanut butter.
Lol! I am a bit disappointed that those bizarre molded Jello salads didn’t make the list. You know the kind that had celery and pimento stuffed olives in them? Did anyone actually ever eat that? Any fans out there? I’d love to know.
My mom brought a lime jello mold to my wedding pot luck. I eloped so had a party week later. My dad brought tacos( I'm from orange county). There was also ham rolled over cream cheese. Lol, it was 1988. I had morning sickness, hence the elopement I didn't eat anything.
@@michellebowers8652 nope. They may call them kolaches in some shops, but as my hill country bestie and her Czech-descended family like to point out, real kolaches are a very different thing. If you’re ever driving up 35 and go through West, stop off at the Czech bakery and you will see an amazing variety of delicious kolaches, no Pigs in sight.
Pigs in a blanket are made with those tiny cocktail sausages. Kolaches have a variety of interpretations, Czech and Bohemians in Texas have specific expectations for legit kolaches! All are very popular in Texas!
The raw, lean ground beef...usually freshly ground sirloin...served on bread (especially rye cocktail bread) with sliced onions, salt and pepper was a favorite of ours
I got you beat, we had government surplus food treats, dried beans,cheese, powered milk, peanut butter with expired bread,..although we had cows and we lived on a windy hill top and i would throw the powered milk into the wind for fun and used the dried beans in a home made sling shot .. cuz my dad behaved like he was half retarded ,never bathed he chewed tobacco and had 8 kids he didnt plan or want.. no joking ,this is a true story
According to family photos, a cigarette and a high ball were everyone's favorite.
😅😅 so true!!
Are we related!? 😉👍🏻
Looks that way to me, too.
Yep
lol, did you grow up in an episode of Mad Men?
Oh how wonderful those cocktail parties were. There was finger food that covered our dining room table. A big glass Anchor Hocking chip and dip set. A tray of cocktail wieners with grape BBQ sauce, cake squares, big cheese ball with Captain wafers, and other homemade delights. I was a young man then, but miss all the people and fun we had. People loved the food and loved one another. Miss those times.
Nothing beats a good deviled egg.
Angel eggs😉
and quail eggs accompanied by a pink sauce dip (ketchup and mayonnaise)
... recently I found a little horse reddish ind chopped spinach in the mixes very good as well ....
@@willgaukler8979 that sounds very good thx
Going to make Onion soup dip again. I am 74 and this was a total recall
Thanks 😋
😂 I’m 69. I make Lipton onion soup dip probably 4-6 times a year. My kids and now grandkids still love it. Funny story…23 years ago my daughter told her boyfriend, now husband of 21 years, that I made a secret recipe onion dip. She actually thought it was a secret recipe. He asked me what the secret was. I laughed so much. Everyone would probably have a fit if I didn’t make it at Christmas time. Best of all I use my mom’s chip and dip bowl set. It must be about 40 years old. She passed away when I was 38.
@@ritaroad Not only a funny story but also a nice memory of your mom. This is what family should be 🤍
Me too!
@@ritaroadthat is ADORABLE ❤❤❤
I used to make that but discovered Dean's dips at the store and their onion dip is delicious and cheaper to buy than to make French onion dip and not as salty as that old dip was
I was a Baptist but went to Midnight Mass with my Catholic friends. Mostly for the all night food! Mr. Ailor turned me on to smoked oysters. And Mrs. Davis turned me on to scalloped corn and oysters. Thank you both and see you in heaven.
Not if you go to worship to eat unclean food
I can't even drag my family to midnight mass.
I always liked going to midnight mass when it was actually at midnight. In my area we would go in to church in the cold and by the time we got out it would be snowing. Great memory of great times. And yes, the food!
@katjay3125 what's unclean ? The type of church, the type of food , how its cooked? or what? What makes the food unclean?
I still like smoked oysters
THIS was my childhood. The only thing missing is Dean Martin or Frank Sinatra records playing in the bavkground. My grandmother's both had mutual friends and of course our families were all close. Many cocktail parties with our favorite saying: Friday Night Finger Food Party: Potluck. That was the best way. And we all dressed up. Not fancy, just nice and pretty and loved every second of it. Everyone ALWAYS showed up. Great video!
That sounds delightful!
My parents never owned a stereo. They simply didn't have much interest in music.
There's always a cheese ball at my Christmas Eve celebration.
Always
I was always told the chipped beef cheese ball was called SOS.
@@Sacred_Fire Jesus Murphy that's a new one on me, if we didn't buy one ma would use Win Schuyler cheese, cream cheese and cheddar cheese, green onion, dash Worstershire and roll it in pecans. Very late 60s until today family still makes this. SOS was creamed chipped beef on toast and that was really good. Again very 60s
@@Sacred_FireI think that was chipped beef in gravy (creamed) served over toast. SOS stood for $h!+ On a shingle.
@@judyl.7234 Yes. That's what I meant 🤩
A lot of these foods are still around and are still eaten from time to time in certain parts of the US and thanks for the delicious memories.🇺🇲🍔🥨🍪🇺🇲
Uh huh. The MAGA parts. 😂
@@yvonneplant9434Wrong.
@@barbaramonaco105+
@@yvonneplant9434I'm a democrat who loves pigs in blankets and rumaki. Get out more.
Never had pigs I blankets either.
I was growing up in the 60’s and remember my patents having cocktail parties. My mom would fill the dinning room table with nothing but finger foods and small plates. One thing that was big was cocktail meatballs in small chafer, little sausages in BQ sauce in small chafer, hot crab dip in small fondue pot. The ever famous cheese balls, and ahead of her time she baked artichoke squares cut into small squares. Her close friends would also contribute a dish!
A fruit centerpiece with sour cream brown sugar dip.
I got paid to pick up plates, and restock the buffet and put glasses in the dishwasher. They grazed all night and had drinks. I thought it was great fun, because my allowance was .50 cents a week, and I’d make a whopping $3.00 more.😮
.
Hahaha! I know you meant to say "hot crab dip," (hopefully?) but you said "hot crap dip" 😂 and it cracked me up! 🦀💩 Thank you for the laugh! It was much needed today. ❤😂😂😂
@@minnienoodle8552 oh Goodness! I’m laughing too. Old lady eyes and fingers 🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂
I still make that hot CRAB dip on New Year's Eve. Yum
@@maryannfoegen1709 it is SO good and people stand around it enjoying every bite 💖
I've never heard of sour cream brown sugar dip for fruit, but it sounds delicious!
I'm 62, remembering all of the women of my childhood being very adept at making most of these culinary creations. A lot more time was spent working in the kitchen. I remember a lot of dinners together as a family and parties with neighbors or other friends. It was a very social decade.
The onion soup mix is still going strong.😅
Yes, but really when was the last time you had pigs in a blanket??
It’s the only good in in the video!
@@lindadouglass4692 It has probably been 10 years. Now I want some. I wonder if they still sell Little Smokies (that was my preferred sausage to use)?
@@carolmelancon Yes, they still sell Lil Smokies, we have them every New Year's Eve, along with other snacks!
Amen! Still make dip with it today. I see my kids continuing the tradition
My family, who entertained in the 60s and 70s, wrapped water chestnuts in bacon, as a fake rumanki. They were a delicious and crunchy bite.
And, deviled eggs on the buffet!
Try the water chestnuts wrapped in bacon, but served with a dish of brown sugar for dipping!
I worked at a restaurant in the 80's that served that as a pupu. They are delicious! 😋
Deviled eggs 🤤😌
I loved those times.
My mom marinated her water chestnuts and soy sauce with bacon wrapped
We had celery filled with kraft pimento cheese spread on a tray for Thanksgiving
We’d have celery with cheez whiz. A big hit in our house.
Yum!
@@cindirichmond9477 Us too! The one that came in the little juice glass that my Dad used as a shot glass when it was empty. Lol
Ants on a log!!
I loved that little glass left over from the filling 😊
Onion soup dip still is around
@@loriduffecy9205 it’s a good thing too-those dips they sell in the grocery stores labeled French onion dip taste nothing like the one you make with the onion soup.
@@DebraCaraballoand the texture is really off too. It’s so easy to make it right, why buy that fake stuff
It's still a party saver! And, a good excuse for eating chips!
Just had it for dinner. It was my 'Puddy' dinner
Made it for myself last week. Use crackers instead of chips.
Baked beans with sliced hot dogs was always great dinner !🤗
Made that yesterday.
@@InnocentPotato-pd7wi Still one of my favorite dinners. Yummy
Beanie Wienies ❤
We used to have B&M baked beans and hotdogs AND the B & M Brown Bread that came in the can and which was steamed...!! And,, then we also ate the bread with cream cheese!!
Sounds like an upscaled beans on toast.
Chex mix was always one of my favorites
Still enjoy chex mix.
Still eat the hell out of it
Oh yeah !
Ohhh golly yes! Good stuff!
I make it every Christmas.
I remember cocktail weenies in bbq sauce at parties, ants on a log, hot dips like artichoke or spinach with cheese melted on top. My mom used to stuff dates with almonds, wrap them in bacon, the bake them until the bacon got crispy. Frankly, if you could put it on a toothpick, my mom made it.
@@AbigailGerlach-zt1sh Did you see the movie Mermaids with Cher as a single mother with 2 daughters in the 1960s. Everything she cooked was bite-sized or served on a skewer. Too funny.
😂
Cocktail weenies are easy. One jar of chili sauce, one jar of grape jelly. Heat and stir until combined. Pour over hot weenies or meatballs, and you're done. Serve in a chafing dish with frilly toothpicks.
Those dates sound delicious.
wheres the fondue ?? That was big in the 60's
Lol I was thinking that.😊no fondue...that's crazy ❤
I think it was more the 70s
I’ve never had fondue.
Right? And baked Alaska. I grew up in the 50’s and 60’s here in SoCal and I remember each one of these. There were always cheese balls too. Oh, the memories.
Fondue in the seventies. I made it then and still do occasionally ❤
Our pigs in a blanket were full size hot dogs as we were not party people but had them for dinner.
Ours were sausages wrapped in a pancakes for breakfast.
Yes, my mom would make hotdog pigs in blankets every so often for a weekend dinner.
In school we used to get a hot dog completely encased in pastry, called a Pronto Pup..
My mom put a slice of cheese on the 'pig' and then wrapped it. Good inexpensive dinner for working class families like ours.
Sure. Very good 😊
I remember all these things way back in the day!❤
I remember home made cheese straws, cucumber canapés, celery stuffed w cream cheese and olives, and green goddess dip. Phenomenal !!
I loved green goddess dip and salad dressing.
@@avalerie4467 So nice to hear someone mention cream cheese & olives. My mom used to make us that for our school lunches. Wrapped in wax paper before all these plastic sandwich bags. Wax paper is much more environmentally sound. Sigh ....
My mom had Tupperware parties and served pimento cheese and chicken salad sandwiches! Good food ❤❤
Using a loaf of French bread. The loaf was cut almost in half then cross slices. The chicken or ham salad filled in one side. Then the olive pimento was spread on the other side. It was then baked in the oven. Yum!
I love the spinach dip in a sourdough bread bowl. Yum.
Me too. I still make it. 🎉
Love that! Have a cousin who would hollow out the sourdough loaf & fill it with spinach dip. Always brought it to the wedding or baby showers
I dunno...I remember mixed drinks, cigarettes, olives, cheese, crackers, sliced veggies, dips, mixed nuts. That's called a cocktail party.
Many of the dishes listed here would be for dinner party.
Tacco 7 layer dip
@@bearball49 "taco"
Aside from the beef bourguignon and the carrots, none of this stuff would ever appear on a dinner table of mine.
@@1ACL not at our house. They stayed all night, stereo playing Sinatra. 😂🤣😂🤣😂 In the late 50’s and 60’s it was not unusual to put out spreads like this. Even spiral sliced ham with little buns.
The kids were welcome to eat , then all herded to the basement TV Room.
Depends on what region of the country you live in.
@@VLind-uk6mb completely agree. Can’t run off the plate onto your fancy dress.
Every Sunday i make pot roast, potatoes and carrots.
And a condiment platter with cream cheese stuffed celery, olives, baby gherkins, sliced tomatoes and quartered onions. Its always polished off.
Yes! Cream cheese stuffing - with olives
Yummy 😋
@@jessiefrye3045 Celery stuffed with pimento cheese or peanut butter was on our table.
@@jessiefrye3045 oh yum! You are right, I forgot! And 4 different kind of homemade pickles.
My mother used to make that in the ‘70’s. She called it a relish plate and had a pretty plate just for that. She would always take one to special occasions at her job. She could really do one up ya’ll!❤❤❤
Thanks for reviving my childhood memories.
You nailed it! Thanks to our wonderful Mama who made almost all of these ❤
I was born in 1946, I remember all of these. They were delicious and inexpensive to make. Thanks for the memories. 🇺🇸
Give me pigs in a blanket over all of them you listed!
Remember chicken,pork,or turkey yuck!
@@terrybellar7661You can purchase all beef hot dogs!!! In every grocery store!
My mom would put a slice of cheddar cheese over the 'pig' first and then wrap it in the blanket. The melted cheese took it from a finger food to an inexpensive dinner!
I'll confess I love them but only very occasionally. So good. My mom used to make them from scratch. Yum. ❤😌
Pigs in blanket are wrapped in bacon - pastry is sausage rolls
Grew up in the 90s; most of these were a given at family holidays. Maybe because my parents grew up in the 60s?
This stuff was awful in 60s and is still awful.
Yes. We grew up in the 60's and still make these dishes. Sometimes just to remember the ladies who taught us to make it all so long ago.
@@blueberrypanquakes yup ..your parents were recalling their parents and so family tradition is born 😊
In the UK “Pigs in blankets” are wrapped in bacon. Sausages wrapped in pastry are called “sausage rolls”. Both these foods are still very popular, even with young people, in the UK.
I wish I had a recipe for Sausage Rolls. My Dad’s secretary was British and made the frequently for us. So yummy.
@@traceyd.833 Just google, there are loads of recipes online.
@@traceyd.833 not that hard to do. Get some sausages, remove them from their casings, have a sheet of ready made puff pastry, wrap each sausage and egg wash the pastry, pop them in the oven. If you Google sausage rolls, you are bound to come up with a couple of recipes. 😁
@@sarahhayse-gregson689 thank you❣️ I’ll try to make some
@@traceyd.833 don’t forget the tomato sauce 😁
This video really took me back to good times.
As a kid, my Aunt had a party and it was the first time I had French Onion Dip. She served them with Bugles and from then on, I have this every now and then.
Bugles were a treat! I liked them better than Fritos. I grab a bag every July 4th just for memories sake.
Oh man! I’ve demolished many,many bags of Bugels in my day lol!😂
Bugles. 😂
I still make onion dip regularly. Yum
I use the powdered Ranch dip mix (Kroger's is cheater than the name brand) and sour cream. Same idea, just different taste.
Slumber parties in the 70's always had onion dip and Frito brand bean dip. I sill like it.
Have you tried it with chunks of King's Hawaiian bread?
Onion dip is the best
@@janettamcgee8124 that’s what we had, every time!
I also remember clam dip. Just add chopped, cooked clams to the onion dip. ❤🎉
1955 was the beginning of the green bean casserole. 🤤
I am 63 and _Green Bean Casserole_ is *STILL* my dish for potlucks and family holiday dinners. The original too, the _Campbell's Cream of Mushroom Soup_ and crispy onions version. Although today, I added some _Crispy Jalepenos_ to the topping.
Great memories! That Lipton soup dip was soooo good.
Boeuf bourguignon is a classic, and will never be out of style.
definitely comfort food on a stormy night
I just wish I could pronounce it!
Pigs in a blanket are a regular during football season. I sometimes use phyllo dough and some extra sharp cheese along with a chipotle cranberry sauce.
In the south of USA we eat pigs in a blanket all the time
We eat it all the time in the Midwest too
@user-wh5ir4fo4rit's not an ethnicity...
My mom mixed grape jelly and chili sauce...to dip the little weiners.
Mom did .. and I still do ... Grandkids LOVE it !
Cooking meatballs in that sauce is delicious also.
@@OpheliaSees and cabbage rolls
@@OpheliaSees Oh absolutely! 👍🏻
@@OpheliaSees my mom made it with the meatballs too. Sounds gross but no one ever suspected Grape Jelly.
This lineup was definitely a trip down memory lane of ladies Church Socials and my mom's Tupperware party favourites.
The narrator is a riot!👍🏻😊
The narrator is a *BOT!*
I thought he sounded like the weird history guy! 😂whoops!
@@davegarfield9007 Well if so, it's the funniest bot around. Lol.
@@smorgasbroad1132 - Agreed.
@@davegarfield9007I think this is a real human. He’s narrated other videos from the 60’s and these videos were originally out years before BOTs
👩🏻💻Stouffer's make the best Chicken Ala King. The frozen meal tastes just like the stuff served in my elementary, junior, and high schools; 1962 to 1974. Yummy!
I had one of the Stouffer's Chicken Ala King frozen dinners last night, and I hit the jackpot... It had 12 large cubes of chicken....
You're right about it being the best chicken à la king... It might be the best frozen dinner out there.
@@LVVMCMLV 👩🏻💻I have never had any problem with not enough chicken in that frozen meal. I have the Chicken Ala King several times a month on my retirement grocery budget. Worth every cent.
@@dolldoll2914 Am I misremembering , or did the chicken a la King not have a thickened CLEAR sauce , not a white cream sauce ? Maybe I'm confusing it with Chung King Chop Suey , but I remember Chicken a la King in a clear chicken based sauce . I've only had it homade as a guest ,or at the elementary school cafeteria , or maybe other lunch cafeterias or restaurants , never frozen .
1964 to 1976 here and you are correct. I get nostalgic eating it now.
@@dolldoll2914 those were the exact years I went to school!
Deviled ham spread on tiny pumpernickel sandwich bread
Now that was a good one.
I had a deviled ham finger sandwich at a wedding recently. It was very good! I haven’t had one in many years.
@@KathyDay-i7z They still make that Underwood Deviled Ham in a small can, available on AMAZON. That is good on mini toast.
I grew up on Underwood Devils Ham the tin can wrapped in paper, which I found odd as a kid. But, we never had Spam that I recall. I learned about Spam in the late 70s visiting an American friend house.
@@camilochavez6982 In the Northeast and at the Jersey Shore a Spam Egg and Cheese
sandwich on a Kaiser roll was everywhere.
Why in the world do you think these are abandoned? Something yummy never goes away.
Looking at the Chicken Rumacki, there is NOTHING healthy about that. Organ meat inside bacon, wow, I can feel my arteries harden just saying it.
When I taught Kindergarten, we had Ants on a Log for snacks all the time before so many children were allergic to peanut butter.
isn't that odd, I don't remember growing up with any peers with that allergy. We had peanut butter sandwiches as a lunch staple.
@@savannahsmiles1797food additives
Probably only half the ones that claim they’re allergic actually are.
@@phthartic That's ridiculous. If someone says they are allergic, they've probably had confirmation. I think the way our lifestyles have changed, through processed foods and products containing contaminants, we have altered our genetics that cause certain conditions. I do no buy that people are crying "wolf" over something like that.
@@sandraleigh4023 Well lets just say I would never want to be the one to “test” someone making a claim of allergy by secretly feeding them their “allergen” but I sure wish there would be some objective medical studies with blind skin patch tests to verify that allergies have increased over time. But now I sometimes have to actually search a bit to find normal food in the grocery store hidden amongst all the non dairy milks and the gluten free breads and the meat free meats, etc. All the people worried about “processed” foods and funny additives are the same ones gobbling up all these weird ingredient laden fake foods. Just because these days half the country (lets not go into which half) wants to be special in some way and insist that everyone cater to all their “special” requirements.
I still make alot of these dishes. My kids love them!
Went to someone's house often for parties as a teenager. They had food but I have no idea what they served. Too busy thinking about the opposite sex. I wish I had been more appreciative of the family who threw the parties. I'm very appreciative now! Wish I could tell them but sadly the parents have passed away.
Remember when people used to make their own Chex mix? It was the best!
I still do. My kids and neighbors depend on it to get us through the holiday season! Love to make it and give the little red wrapped gifts of Chex Mix to as many as I can. It's fun!
I still do. Every year at Christmas, I generally make at least three double batches. I add Chees It’s and some Tabasco.
I just watched two vids on Chex Mix & Rice Krispie treats. Must be feeling nostalgic
Rumaki !!!! I loved when mom made it or it was served anywhere 🎉🎉❤❤😋😋
My mom always made rumaki & I hated it . I bet now though I would probably love it!
That sounds so yummy.
I made some not long ago - I LOVE rumaki!! But over the last few years, I had a very hard time finding chicken livers!! I also like making a pate' with onions and Grand Marnier, and may take a couple and toss them into my scrambled eggs for breakfast!
I recall beef stroganoff -- usually we had it on Christmas Eve. Sheet on a shingle -- mystery meat in white sauce served on toast - antipasto if you knew Italians -- Peticia a honey walnut and very light pastry -- Onion dip was always a go to -- shrimp cocktail -- Chex cereal mixed with cashews and forget what the sauce was - I used to work at Pillsbury in the home econ dept and got to try a lot of Bake Off recipes (at 18 I was the guinea pig as inexperienced housewife. A lot of Swedish and Norwegian dishes up in Minnesota like pickled herring with onions - apple kuchen - springle -- quick fried snow flake pastry covered with powdered sugar - Swedish snowball cookies very simple and very good.
Ok, I still eat some of these foods. Classics never go out of style…..lol 😋
No deviled eggs?
@@danaventura5998 Deviled eggs apparently haven't been abandoned, so..!
There always so popular even today 😊
Love them so tasty@@dolliemaesone
I made deviled eggs tonight to have with dinner. Made some last week too. They are low carb and are a great filling snack if your just a little bit hungry.
My mom hosted bridge games at our house and always had clam dip with chips, too. She used to make big pans of lunch lady brownies and peanut butter bars. We would fight for any left over the next day.
Wow clam dip! Loved that too!😊
We made clam dip, raw veggies, triscuits with bleu cheese and deviled eggs.
@@lanebashford3982 The Aunt who made our holiday Clam dip has dementia now. We have tried to reproduce it but hers was the best. We used to kid her that she wasn't invited unless she brought her Clam dip. Lol.
@@smorgasbroad1132 My mother's dip recipe is lost, too. We have looked everywhere for it and I haven't found one yet that is as good. We'll have to keep trying LOL
@@lanebashford3982 There ya go, keep trying. I'm sure we know the ingredients but are unsure of the ratios and amts. that made hers so special. Or was it because it was made with love? 🤷🏼
With the ants on a log we'd also have cherries in the snow with cream cheese and maraschino cherries. Lol
I always thought of ants on a log as an after-school snack, not cocktail party food! But cherries in the snow sounds fun..
I never heard of ants on a log and I grew up in the 60s. Of course the only Latino family in a white neighborhood at the time. My mother was a social bug and loved to cook. So swapping recipes was common in the neighborhood wives. My mother was the queen bee of the Tupperware parties with cocktails and music. What she calls an excuse to party. Punchbowl with matching glass cups hanging on the side served with ginger ale and Sherbert for kids party.
@@camilochavez6982 Born in '64, never had heard of "Ants on a log" either (til much later) but my mother was a German , Army wife so... Your Mother sounds like a fun Mom and woman! 🥂
Chicken a la king was a meal not an appetizer. We ate that often when I was little.
After Thanksgiving and Christmas we would come home from school for lunch. It was then that we ate Turkey Ala King, delicious.
With all the drama happening today, I'd go back in a heartbeat. I miss a lot of the things on your list and I'd have to put up with cigarettes again but it all outweighs the PC of today.
Once Boomers are gone no one will care about this stuff. I'm a Boomer so I can diss Boomers. 😂
Did you guys forget Vietnam?Riots.
@@dcongdon2294whatever is going on today is 1,000 times worse
@@dcongdon2294 Yes the 60's were turbulent, but so was WWII. People still remember the good times along with the sad. ❤
You can still make some of these foods, they were easy to make.
Party foods still popular in the South from this list
- Pigs in a Blanket
- Ants on a Log
- Onion Dip
- Cheese Ball ( no Christmas is complete without one)
Now I want onion dip! Haven’t had any in decades! Never heard of the Tunnel of Fudge Cake. How did I miss that one! Have to try it, now!
Mom baked molten lava cakes.
@@MildredGlutz Mom made the tunnel of fudge cake all the time, after it won the bake-off that year. It called for a boxed chocolate frosting that created the tunnel along with walnuts. They have created a modified recipe where you can still make it successfully, but I haven’t tried it.
@@DebraCaraballo Where did you find the recipe? I thought Tunnel of Fudge was a goner since they no longer make the boxed chocolate frosting (and it won't work with canned frosting).
The Tunnel of Fudge cake is simply wonderful, one of the best chocolate cakes ever created!
I had Chicken a la King for supper tonight!
When I was very young mother would have friends over to play cards. She always had a beautiful table of finger foods and desert was usually jello parfait.
Me too….the next day we got the leftovers.
My mom used to participate in weekly Bunco parties; all the ladies took turns hosting. Cheese & crackers, sliced celery, green olives w/pimentos, pretzel sticks. Metro Denver in the 1970's.
Does anyone remember the Kraft commercials? The man’s voice was so smooth!
I wasn't really around for that, but I do remember smoked oysters, Clanm dip, cocktail sausages, deviled ham spread, cheese coins, salmon mousse, cocktail shrimp, deviled eggs, Jezebel sauce over cream cheese, roasted tongue finger sandwiches, marinated mushrooms, salted nuts, seasoned oyster crackers and Bridge mix
Oh yes....bridge mix was a big family favourite. I miss it.
I wasn't born during the 60's but after watching "Don't Worry Darling" I REALLY, REALLY TRULY with that was real. Like, to go to bed and just suddenly wake up back in that era, and just to live in that simulation would be so wonderful ❤❤❤❤
Great for some reasons, but not so great for women and POC. Love the clothes and the home designs, though!
It was a great time for smart women, wanting to go to college. Great opportunities without companies feeling like they had to pick because of gender, race, or other groups. They could actually pick what was best for the company.
@@jamiebrandon8475 Hold up. You think it was a better time for "smart women wanting to go to college?" Are you a woman?
There was good and bad in that era. Just like all the rest. And lots of us from that era want to remember all the good, but never forget the past.
@@therealJamieJoy my mom and dad both worked, and we all shared the house and yard work. The 60's was what you made of it. Like today, but without all the ridiculous angst.
I think the chicken a la king is what we Brits call chicken supreme. I LOVED it when I was a kid but you never see it any more
Most people DON'T wanna do any REAL COOKING anymore. USA, CAN & UK. People WONDER WHY people today are SUPER-CHUNKY.
People were CONvinced NOT to FARM their OWN Food. Move to the Cities and PURCHASE TV Dinners now turned into Microwaveable CheMYSTERY Pax.
Babies are DEPRIVED of their MOTHER'S MILK and REAL FOOD when they're ready for foods.
All so-called store-bought Food is FAKE. Making people CHUNKY from CHEMICALS and SICKENED with Cancer, Diabetes, Insanity, Etc.
My mother would make small hors d'oeuvres with egg salad, chopped ham and chopped chicken. Sometimes she would put all three in a sandwich loaf and frost it with cream cheese. It looked like a frosted cake when it was done. Radishes were cut into roses to make it look pretty. When you sliced into it, you could see the three layers of filling. Always a family favorite.
Yes I remember that !
Ok 70's baby here & I remember all of these except the livers. But chicken alá king must have the pimento bits, yummy. 😊
Need peas 😅😂!
@catebannan7343 Absolutely, peas .
Chicken a la king, fortunately, is making a big comeback in recent years. Especially when cooks figured out they could be ladled over toast, biscuits, English muffins, noodles, rice and even certain types of pasta.
My mother always served it over freshly made biscuits. Yum!
I believe Swanson had a canned version that we used to eat. It was quite good. I don’t know if it’s still available now.
Yep. Bundt cakes were all the rage. Now I really want a wig just like the Pillsbury Bakeoff winner's hairdo!!
Yes! That big hair with the flip on the ends.😃 She was probably 28.
That’s how I wore my hair back in the 60’s I still love Bundt cakes. One of my favorite things to make.
Thank you for making me hungry.
I loved the video and remembering these appetizers ❤
These foods were fantastic. I have had most of them .
What about that huge round loaf of hollowed out rye bread with dill dip in the middle? I still do that. Always a favorite.
My mom went thru a tunneling phase as us kids called it. She took out the insides of cantaloupe & honey dew melons and put in Jello with cottage cheese or sometimes it was cool whip with pineapple and frozen then sliced. We had lots of "pockets", tunneled out rolls with some kind of meat filling, that got foiled up and put into the coals of the bbq. The rolls got crusty on the outside but the inside was goo-ey. Potatoes were tunneled out and stuffed with cheese. It was that kraft stuff in the jars with pimentos. Sandwich logs...tunneled out french bread loaves, stuffed with egg salad, or chicken salad, or deviled ham. served sliced. Anything tunneled out was then cubed, shoved in melted butter and made into croutons or stuffing. .Our eggs were served in a piece of bread, fried, and the egg filled in the hole. Our meatloaves always had veggie filling. Like spinach or bell peppers. I think mom was part mole. She liked to serve everything with a different inside/center. I miss those concoctions so much cuz they were fun and tasty.
@@savannahsmiles1797 Sounds amazing! Gotta love mole-moms!
Chips and onion dip was a huge treat in our home.
Should always let it set up in the fridge overnight for best results.
Friday night treat was chips and onion dip and a glass of RC cola.
SW.England. Our 1960's buffets definitely weren't like this! We thought egg mayonnaise vol-au-vents were posh - and if you could run to prawns in a pink sauce, you were really living. 😄
Wot! No coronation chicken vol-au-vents? My mother's drinks parties wouldn't have been the same without them and the cheese & pineapple hedgehog 😂
This is worth watching just for the pronunciations.
Here in Louisiana we still eat pigs in blankets all the time, either as a party favor or just dinner. We use lil' smokies and croissant dough or just make our own biscuit dough.
I also used to get the full size ones both at school and at home.
I remember all but the last two. And, yes, you had my tummy rumbling. My fav is the Chicken Ala King served on a bed of fluffy rice.
My husband's Frito casserole is always popular.
And everyone had the Sterno flame things to keep the dishes warm. No 60's party was complete without a supply of Almond Roca, and Chex Mix.
Almond Roca?? Where did you grow up?! I'm from the hometown of Almond Roca. I know they do ship it out of Tacoma, but it's kinda cool to me to hear it was part of someone's memories!
@@trudygreer2491 I grew up in L.A. My dad loved anything with almonds, and some of my earliest memories in the early 1960s are of Roca and the foil wrap. He had a big sweet tooth, so there was always something in the house.
@@jeffsilverman6104 Great story! But too bad you didn't live in Tacoma.. Dad could've gone to the factory store and picked up bags of the seconds for cheap.. no gold wrapper, but lotsa Roca!
@@trudygreer2491We were in the air force, lived in Japan, and my mother ALWAYS bought Almond Roca! Pink can, gold foil! ❤😂
@@LB-ec4uf That's wonderful! I'm guessing it would have come from the commissary or PX, rather than "on the economy"?! 😃
As for the carrots- I steam them until just tender, then add a couple of teaspoons of butter and a tablespoon of maple syrup. Cook a couple of minutes while the sauce bubbles (be careful not to burn), turning and coating the carrots. Turn off and after a minute, sprinkle with a bit of salt. Super quick and easy side dish that takes very little time or effort while you're cooking the rest of the meal. You can basically steam while everything else is on it's last 10 minutes then do the glaze within a minute or 2.
We love glazed carrots. My sister's favorite.
Sweet and salty Yum!
UK 🇬🇧 we had pineapple and cheese on cocktail sticks , these were stuck into a half grapefruit.
I was gonna say that my mum thought these were super posh 😂😂😂
We sell boxes of pigs in a blanket in the freezer section of our store, also lipton soup mix with the dip recipe. Ants on a log was a fun memory. It reminded me of the relish tray on Thanksgiving. Thank you!
Celery had cream cheese, no raisins for Thanksgiving, lol
The partyfoods are just great!!! I still make them!!! 😋😋😋😋....
Great job. I always love a trip down memory lane.
I used to make my nieces and nephews the _Pigs in a Blanket_ when I cooked for family gatherings. I also made them help make them sometimes.
_Chicken-a-la-King_ is part of my culinary canon. I make it several times a year.
Never been a fan of chicken livers, but we always had a sausage or shrimp version at my parents cocktail parties. Along with the _Onion Soup_ dip and the _Cheese Ball._
In 1967 one of the mega-grocery corporations published a _Guide to Entertaining at home._ It's a bunch of recipe cards; on the front was a cocktail and on the back was an _hors d'oeuvre._ It was part of a subscription, to what I don't remember, nor do I remember how long it lasted, but it was a while. The cards, there were three or four per month, were full color and printed on 5x8 card stock and when it was completed, the stack was eight and a half inches tall. I still have that collection.
I am essentially and expert on all foods that can be served with a toothpick.
Wore-chester? Woose-ter-sheer!! sauce LOL.
Wash your sister sauce
There is a southern cook who does youtube videos and he pronounces it "wash your sister" sauce!
Pigs in blanket are at every bar and bat mitzvah I have ever worked at. I love them.
"All-beef" pigs, I trust?! 😮😂
@@trudygreer2491I thought the same thing!😊
Yeah, Hebrew National makes 'em frozen. Costco!
The way this narrator pronounces some of the names and ingredients is hysterical.
I had that Betty Crocker kids cookbook! It was fun.
I did also. It taught us all how to cook as kids.
@@KatieKal-o8n
It's funny, my home-ec teacher I'm ninth grade seemed a little put out that I already knew how to make things 😉👍
Rumaki was the first thing that came to my mind when I saw the title! lol I don't thing the onion dip was ever abandoned, though.
Remarkably good work. And here I thought I was a foodie.
Being raised in that era…….wish my mother (& father) could have cooked that well!😂😂😂 I remember other families who ate these array of goodies! Well presented!🌟🌟🌟
I'm from 1960s California. I remember the celery with peanut butter (very popular with moms, for kids snacks) but I never saw it with raisins. My mom mixed cream cheese with pimentos per a recipe a couple of times, in place of the peanut butter.
Or even celery with cream cheese, which I still eat today.
@@donnav6219 It IS still good!!
I recall apple with peanut butter at the '60s house party in South Florida. I didn't see celery with peanut butter until I was an adult.
Lol! I am a bit disappointed that those bizarre molded Jello salads didn’t make the list. You know the kind that had celery and pimento stuffed olives in them? Did anyone actually ever eat that? Any fans out there? I’d love to know.
I never liked jello with any vegetables in them.
I grew up in the 70s. Jello Salads in my home were made with canned or fresh fruit and served as dessert.
My mom made such a jello salad. It was green lime jello with the above items plus cheese cubes. I hated as a kid, but enjoyed it when I was older.
My mother took lime jello with mixed vegetables to every family gathering. Always a hit. I hated it. I was the only one.
My mom brought a lime jello mold to my wedding pot luck. I eloped so had a party week later. My dad brought tacos( I'm from orange county). There was also ham rolled over cream cheese. Lol, it was 1988. I had morning sickness, hence the elopement I didn't eat anything.
OMG...hysterical. l remember tupperware parties and these goodies. I have to ask myself what we would be serving today.
In Texas Pigs in a Blanket are eaten regularly and sold at most donut shops. H-E-B sells them by the bag, frozen and ready to pop into the oven.
Ll
I think you mean kolaches
@@michellebowers8652 nope. They may call them kolaches in some shops, but as my hill country bestie and her Czech-descended family like to point out, real kolaches are a very different thing. If you’re ever driving up 35 and go through West, stop off at the Czech bakery and you will see an amazing variety of delicious kolaches, no Pigs in sight.
Pigs in a blanket are made with those tiny cocktail sausages. Kolaches have a variety of interpretations, Czech and Bohemians in Texas have specific expectations for legit kolaches! All are very popular in Texas!
I will never forget the red jello rabbit sitting on chopped green jello grass
“Tunnel of Fudge” cake!😂
The raw, lean ground beef...usually freshly ground sirloin...served on bread (especially rye cocktail bread) with sliced onions, salt and pepper was a favorite of ours
We never ate "steak tartar". Mom was always afraid of bacteria, etc. As an adult, I eat my steaks rare and I love suchi and sashimi.
Use to eat steak tartar when I was younger. Haven’t had it for years.
We never ate it raw... Cocktail rye, ground beef, sprinkled with garlic salt it was put under the broiler a few minutes to cook! Yummy!
I loved steak tartar!!!
Nasty! Sorry.
In England Pigs in blankets are small butchers sausages wrapped in streaky bacon. We have them with our Christmas dinner.
We mostly had bologna or peanut butter sandwiches for many meals. On weekends sometimes pop tarts for desert
I got you beat, we had government surplus food treats, dried beans,cheese, powered milk, peanut butter with expired bread,..although we had cows and we lived on a windy hill top and i would throw the powered milk into the wind for fun and used the dried beans in a home made sling shot .. cuz my dad behaved like he was half retarded ,never bathed he chewed tobacco and had 8 kids he didnt plan or want.. no joking ,this is a true story
Oh, the fried bologna and cheese sandwich on a kaiser roll. I still make it even today.