thefourthvine: Two people fucking, rearview: sex is the universal fandom. (Default)
Keep Hoping Machine Running ([personal profile] thefourthvine) wrote2009-09-14 08:13 pm

The Things You Find While You're Unpacking Your Life

So, you know, I don't have time for recs right now. (Soon. Please, soon.) Unpacking has proved to be its own kind of entertaining, though.

We've uncovered a lot of things we just forgot we had - like, I remembered I have a reading cookbook collection. This is in addition to the books I actually cook things from; a reading cookbook is one that I have solely to marvel at, like the stunning A Thousand Ways to Please a Husband, which has characters and a plot, and what amazing characters and plot they are. It's mainly about Bettina and Bob. Bettina is the sort of person who can - does! - invite a group of friends over, insist that they hem all her tea towels and iron her linens, and then reward them with a quarter of a piece of white bread thinly spread with mayonnaise and topped with a single pimiento. You think I am kidding, but actually I'm understating it. She makes an entire chocolate cake with a part of a square of baking chocolate as the only source of chocolate flavor. She's constantly stretching meat by adding twice the volume of it in white sauce, thus making a sort of, say, thick tuna soup, which she then jellies. And serves with a pimiento (she has a weird pimiento fixation). She's lauded as frugal, but she may actually cross the line into crazy. Her husband, Bob, is singularly insipid. Also, BB and I think he's fucking his best friend - we think, in fact, that he married Bettina because of a conversation where his boss said, "Bob, people are - starting to talk. Maybe you should find a wife. Someone who doesn't really understand about sex." My point is: I would never, ever, ever make anything Bettina would. But I love this book. (I haven't even touched on the subplots, like Bettina's friend who can't ever remember to use a potholder. These people are special indeed, is my point.)

During the move, we found, and then the earthling explored, a series of cooking booklets I forgot I had. These were put together in the 1950s by some outfit that apparently didn't like food much. And these people were obsessed with Hungarians - it's not just that the only "ethnic" booklet is about Hungarian cooking (featuring recipes that mostly involve taking some cabbage and boiling it, which are apparently the "151 most flavorful Hungarian recipes," in which case I pity the Hungarians), it's that there are Hungarian recipes in the other booklets, too. Some of them seem to be sly digs at Hungarians. (The "gala" cake that Hungarians have only on festive occasions. But, the text seems to suggest, Americans can have it any time, because we are just that awesome! The 1950s were an interesting decade.) It's fabulous.

As the earthling flipped through the books, we did, too, and Best Beloved found a photo (all the photos in these are singularly unappetizing - like, you would never, ever eat anything that looked like that if there were other people's toenails still available - that kind of thing) that had her absolutely RIVETED. "Wow," she said after a long moment. "It's like Cthulhu could arise from this at any minute."

"Don't be silly," I said, taking the book from her, and then I saw it. A sort of black, gleaming, uneven mass with scattered suckers on it. (The text claims they are sliced olives, but I know better.) "You're right," I said. And I couldn't look away. After a minute, I added, "I've looked into this thing too long. Now it's looking into me." I could feel it drawing my soul out of my body, I tell you. I truly wish I had a scanner, so I could unleash this photo on the internet. We'd be knee-deep in Elder Gods by lunchtime.

But even the non-evil photos are worthy of marvel - like, I have never seen a simple chocolate swirl cake with white frosting rendered so revolting; it's like someone frosted it with peppered mayonnaise - and there are also line drawings, which are their own kind of impressive. Like the one for the "Wellesley Fudge Cake," which is adorned with a picture of a devil. I am not surprised, frankly. Those Massachusetts college girls, with their demonic fudge cakes. I know how it is with them. (No, it isn't a devil's food cake. There's another recipe for that; it has a drawing of a girl being chased by a boy holding a snake. I SEE WHAT YOU DID THERE, cookbook people!)

And the recipes themselves - well, it's very safe to say that I am never going to make any of them, unless of course someone hosts a Horrible Foods of the Twentieth Century potluck, in which case my Hungarian Green Bean Salad and I will be there with bells on. I also have a booklet entitled Creative Ways with Cottage Cheese (and its higher-fat companion, Cooking with Sour Cream and Buttermilk, featuring the most revolting photo of a fish dish I believe I have ever seen). Fear me.

The earthling is particularly fond of the soups booklet, and I'm not sure why. This is a booklet that contains a section called "Jiffy Soups," by which they mean: soup in cans. Seriously. A whole section on mixing cans of soup with other cans of soup. For example, you take a can of tomato soup and mix it with a can of pepper pot soup (Note for people who don't know what this is: you don't want to. Cow stomachs are involved.) and voila! You have tomato pepper pot soup. They suggest, for extra special specialness, that you make your canned soups with milk instead of water. Crazy!

I don't recall my family ever needing a recipe for mixing cans of soups - those nights were "Daddy doesn't feel like cooking, so we're having grilled cheese and soup, and you can mix the kinds if you want to" nights, and everyone rolled her own. (I, myself, do not believe in mixing soups. I was the abstainer in the mixed soups nights. I focused entirely on the grilled cheese, because my father made the best grilled cheese sandwiches in the world.) But apparently the fifties were a time when people didn't feel like they could get wild with canned soup unless they had guidelines.

Of course, this is also the booklet that features a recipe for Citrus Soup that involves taking grapefruit juice, mixing it with orange juice, and (optionally) adding whipped cream on top. In other words, it's a "soup" that is, you know, a beverage. I think they should have called this booklet Remedial Soups.

And I don't want you to think the booklets are my entire reading cookbook collection. No. I have a raw food cookbook that suggests that if we ever need some cruel and unusual punishment in a hurry, switching our prison system to a raw food diet would be the way to go. It features such concepts as "tacos" made entirely of provolone and cucumber. (If you're thinking that you didn't know cheese was allowed in a raw food diet, well, I didn't either. This book also has an entire section of gelatin-based recipes, which is not called Horrible Things in Jelly, for Extra Horror, but should be, so apparently skin and bones cooked in boiling water count as raw.) And a cookbook edited by Anne McCaffrey. And a tofu cookbook that was published back when no one in the US knew exactly what tofu was. (There is a helpful explanation in the introduction. If you read it, it will be some time before you can look directly at a block of tofu.)

If you need frightening recipes, in short, I am here for you. If you need fan fiction recommendations - that's going to be a few weeks.
vass: Small turtle with green leaf in its mouth (Default)

[personal profile] vass 2009-09-15 12:02 pm (UTC)(link)
If you like domestic books for the reading, not just the instructions, then let me recommend Cheryl Mendelson's Home Comforts: The Art and Science of Keeping House. It's a complete, modern (well, only ten years ago) guide to housekeeping. It explains how to do just about anything domestic, and why. Her whole thesis is that living comfortably and cleanly is a worthwhile pursuit.

She does the most wonderfully geeky research into matters of technique, such as "sweep first or vacuum first?" and lays out a carefully argued conclusion with historical context. I'm a terrible housekeeper myself, but I love reading about it, and this is a wonderful book for that.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2009-09-16 02:23 am (UTC)(link)
I have that book! It is awesome. I mean, I will never aspire to one hundredth of her domestic order and tidiness, but still: awesome.
vass: Small turtle with green leaf in its mouth (Default)

[personal profile] vass 2009-09-15 12:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, and I just noticed:
"Daddy doesn't feel like cooking, so we're having grilled cheese and soup, and you can mix the kinds if you want to"

Your father was the cook in your family? Mine was too. He still is, but it's just him and my mother now I've moved out. My mother, my siblings, and I can all cook, but my father's the most inventive with recipes and experimentation, and the one who does all the cleaning and washing up. The only thing he doesn't do is desserts, so they have fresh fruit most nights, and my mother makes or buys dessert if there's company.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2009-09-16 02:26 am (UTC)(link)
It was complicated, but mostly you could say that my father was the day-to-day cook, and my mother cooked for special occasions. If you wanted a turkey and all the trimmings, that was my mother. If you wanted a weekday meal on the table in an hour or less, that was Daddy. (He didn't do desserts either. Hmmm.)

He also did the cleaning and washing up - I still remember him carefully wiping down the kitchen counters every evening, the last thing he did after cleaning up from dinner - and the shopping. This is why I roll my eyes at, say, Barbara Kingsolver's husband being all, "If you're a guy, and you use a bread machine, you will be awesome and your wife will love you and you will have done more than any man ever for your family!" Yeah, right.

[identity profile] janet-carter.livejournal.com 2009-09-15 12:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Laughing so hard. Someone once gave me the Better Homes and Gardens Meat Cook Book of 1965. There's a chapter on game opening "When he brings home game, cook it right", in which the first recipe involves dipping rabbit or squirrel in crushed corn flakes. But my favorite is the frankfurter chapter ("now they are socially acceptable at the best tables") The picture of "Creole Franks" cooking in a sauce of ketchup with pineapple juice is...very red.

[identity profile] supremegoddess1.livejournal.com 2009-09-15 11:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Squirrel in....corn flakes???

I boggle.

[identity profile] janet-carter.livejournal.com 2009-09-16 01:45 am (UTC)(link)
P.S. No lie, I just got off the phone with my mother, and she told me about how she found this hilarious old book and gave it to my soon-to-be sister-in-law. A cookbook about how to please a man, with vignettes about a character named Bettina.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2009-09-16 02:38 am (UTC)(link)
The Better Homes and Gardens Meat Cook Book of 1965. It's like a dream come true!

Although, seriously, if the best tables are serving frankfurters, I will take the second-best tables, or the tables in the back near the bathrooms, or whatever tables DON'T think frankfurters are A-OK.

[identity profile] cobweb-diamond.livejournal.com 2009-09-15 01:35 pm (UTC)(link)
1950s america may have been a culinary black hole when it came to recipe books, but by god they were good at cocktails.

p.s. i think i know who would read and attempt to utilise the Bettina & Bob cookbook: Benton Fraser from due south.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2009-09-16 02:41 am (UTC)(link)
The cocktails thing makes perfect sense to me: if you knew dinner was going to consist of a crown of frankfurters and Hungarian Green Bean Salad with Crazy Apricot Pie-Cake topped with Dream Clouds for dessert, you'd want to knock back a number of pre-dinner drinks, too. Plus, this is how they could have all that horrible food and not starve to death: no one ate it. For an entire decade, adults got all their nutrients from mixers, and the food was there solely to torture the kids.

Benton Fraser would NEVER use Bettina's recipes. He's better than that. Also, Bettina has very little idea of how to catch the meat herself.

[identity profile] sienamystic.livejournal.com 2009-09-15 01:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Ahahahah! For the past few weeks, I've been engrossed in Kitchen Essays, by Agnes Jekyll - it's a compilation of columns she wrote for the Times in the 1930s on food topics. It's a great combination of witty writing and mindboggling food, including aspic in places where I would not have expected it. Sneaky aspic! It gets into everything!

I also collect ladies magazines from the 1930s and 40s, and really should start scanning some of the food stuff, and not just the fashion stuff as I have been. I did scan this one - an ad claiming that Franco-American canned spaghetti is "the very soul of Italian cooking." The very soul.

Image (http://www.flickr.com/photos/21233184@N02/3887047545/)

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2009-09-16 02:43 am (UTC)(link)
I am part Italian. My very soul is trying to CRAWL AWAY AND DIE right now.

(Yes yes yes please scan the food stuff. OMG PLEASE.)

[identity profile] breeamal.livejournal.com 2009-09-15 03:55 pm (UTC)(link)
The other day I found a Wise Potato chip Recipe booklet at the recycling center. I dived into that pile of cardboard faster than you can say, "crispy chip cookies."

Have you seen the The Weight Watchers Recipe Cards circa 1974, http://www.candyboots.com/

They are great and terrible, I bought the book.

Lastly, A thousand ways to please a husband with Bettina's best recipes is available for download at http://www.archive.org/details/thousandwaystopl00weav

I am downloading it now.

[identity profile] gaudior.livejournal.com 2009-09-15 05:17 pm (UTC)(link)
A kind soul has also scanned portions of it into lj for easy viewing here:
http://www.bigredcouch.com/journal/archives/2006/09/a_thousand_ways.html

Dear gods in the heavens.
ext_14845: betta fish (kitten sandwich)

[identity profile] fish-echo.livejournal.com 2009-09-16 01:56 am (UTC)(link)
♥! Thank you so much for posting the link to the Bettina book. I'm half-tempted to request that fandom for Yuletide this year.

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[identity profile] margueritem.livejournal.com 2009-09-15 04:17 pm (UTC)(link)
Your adventures in packing and moving (and other people's) make me feel less bad about failing to pack in an efficient way. I know I should get rid of stuff before I move, but I've reached the point where it looks less exhausting if I do that after the move.

[identity profile] thefourthvine.livejournal.com 2009-09-16 02:52 am (UTC)(link)
I know of people who can pack and move all efficiently - I grew up (partly) in a military town, and there were lots of folks there who had packing down to a science. But for most people, even if you start out all scientific and careful, you end up throwing stuff into boxes and writing MORE RANDOM CRAP on it.

I figure, you do what you can stand to before you pack. And you do what you can stand to while you unpack (when you have a much better idea of what's going to fit and work out anyway).

Bettina

[identity profile] ivadel.livejournal.com 2009-09-15 08:42 pm (UTC)(link)
At a fundraising event for the museum, we have Bettina's Bakery. Items are supposed to be home made, but I've never seen a bit of pimento. The Director is a great fan of Bettina's. There is a great book called "Perfection Salad" about the development of 20th century cooking and home economics as a course of study. Bettina was surely a graduate of such a course.
ext_2084: (Default)

[identity profile] elbomac.livejournal.com 2009-09-15 11:59 pm (UTC)(link)
You are wonderful! I needed a laugh, and this provided several. Thanks, and good luck with the unpacking.

(Anonymous) 2009-09-16 01:18 am (UTC)(link)
If you need frightening recipes, in short, I am here for you.

Thank you! I mean, I don't, but I feel better knowing that if I did, you'd be able to provide from your wide selection.

*still smiling*

Seriously though, you do realize that this whole stack of books should be consigned to the 'recycle' bin, thus saving some young and innocent trees?

(Anonymous) 2009-09-16 01:21 am (UTC)(link)
because my father made the best grilled cheese sandwiches in the world.

You wouldn't care to share his recipe with the unwashed masses, would you? I've always wondered because outside of the US and UK I am not sure this dish exists, certainly not as a staple.

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[identity profile] thepouncer.livejournal.com 2009-09-16 03:58 am (UTC)(link)
My favorites are vintage etiquette books. At one point, I found some circa 1920 that were hilarious. If Queen Elizabeth decided to visit, however, I could handle the place settings for dinner with ease.

And there would be no aspic.

[identity profile] furies.livejournal.com 2009-09-16 08:41 am (UTC)(link)
hah, i was at the library today and checked out the "for sale" section - and i saw a beauty. a cookbook, translated from danish, published in the 1950s, all about OPEN FACED SANDWICHES. THERE ARE PICTURES.

also, i would like to say on behalf of those of hungarian decent everywhere: it's actually good food! especially if you like sour cream, paprika, and potatoes. it's not all weird cold soups! (though they do like cold soups.) even my italian dad likes some of the hungarian stuff!

(he'll never get on the liver or sourkraut though. and i remember being a kid trying to trade my liverwurst sandwich at lunch and failing every day.)

[identity profile] nessreader.livejournal.com 2009-09-16 08:42 am (UTC)(link)

We grew up on Marguerite Patton recipes (50s, British, still thinking within rationing rules) and those books were pretty much what you're describing my gelatine horror story (http://nessreader.livejournal.com/31180.html)

[identity profile] liddle-oldman.livejournal.com 2009-09-16 04:36 pm (UTC)(link)
"Don't be silly," I said, taking the book from her, and then I saw it. A sort of black, gleaming, uneven mass with scattered suckers on it. (The text claims they are sliced olives, but I know better.) "You're right," I said. And I couldn't look away. After a minute, I added, "I've looked into this thing too long. Now it's looking into me."

Actual, real life lolling.

I can't find it just now, but there's a website about 50's cookbooks; the ones about meat are especially slenderizing. But not if you follow the recipes. I once had a cookbook that suggested one buy a well-marbled piece of beef, then cut pockets all over it and insert extra butter. It does sound tasty, for the few days you'd have left.

[identity profile] grey-bard.livejournal.com 2009-09-17 04:51 am (UTC)(link)
I don't know what they were smoking, because Hungarian food is *awesome*. Okay, I'm prejudiced, I'm 1/4 Hungarian.

But seriously, Hungarian food is not all about the cabbage. It is all about the paprika! Lots of paprika. And apricots. And plums. And water fowl. And potatoes. And... okay, fine. Cabbage. But it is *good* cabbage.

Just ask Steven Brust! Most of his Dragaeran feasts described in loving detail are Hungarian recipes with the names of imaginary creatures substituted for the meat.

[identity profile] fred-god-of.livejournal.com 2011-05-11 12:59 am (UTC)(link)
So I looked up The Bettina book because of the post and had great fun reading it, but did you know there's a sequal where she apprently figures out sex long enough to make two kids and it includes many more wonders of pimentos and white sauce but now made to cook for at least four.

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