Friday, May 2, 2025

Chilling moments in fridge history

After reading an old post on this blog, I popped down the vintage refrigerator ad rabbit hole and am going to pull you in too so I won't be alone. 

Here's where the goosebumps started:


The caption freaked me out a little. It reads like the title of a Twilight Zone episode, or a commentary of today's political climate. Either way, I'm scared. 
It makes me long for the days when we only had to worry about cameras in microwaves.

This ad is less menacing:


It still hints of some looming doom, but the trepidation is leavened by the idea that you can do something about it. You can defend your household. Or at least your leftover tuna casserole.

If the fridge in your house isn't up to the task of actual defense, it could always hide in plain sight, disguised as a bedspread.


Contact paper anyone? Decoupage? 

This ice box provides a different kind of camouflage, though there's no guarantee of safety for that tuna mac:


I've never seen anything like it, outside a hospital sandwich vending machine, or a diner pie-go-round.

My favorite part is the name, though. I'm adopting it as my new cussword stand in:

Rotafrig.

I'll proclaim it while evaluating just how much tuna I should stock up on, and where the heck I'll store it.

ROTAFRIG!

If you need a distraction from your own prepping, scroll through more fridging fun by clicking here

Enjoy! And prepare!

Friday, March 14, 2025

The year chocolate eggs are cheaper than chicken eggs

 

I stumbled across this image and couldn't help but marvel at its timeliness. Here we are in a state of national eggmergency, and somehow, the M&M/Mars company new, even back then, that we'd be here. 

But 'tis the season for purchasing basket candy, and the ad led me down confectionary lane, so I'm sharing some of what I found with you. First up, this guy. the chocolate bunny of my childhood. Hollow. Waxy. Delicious.


Next is a candy much loved by my hubs, though I'm not sure if it ever appeared in his basket.


This next ad reminded me of the Woolworth's in my home town, which featured a lunch counter and a checkout person who had a loooong curling hair jutting from their chin mole.


Perhaps that person looked like the one below, in younger days. Just as crazed, but less hairy.


This child looks spoiled. Despite appearances to the contrary, that's no Cindy Brady.


Perhaps that Cindy wannabe would have been happier if the bunnster delivered full-sized bars?



Or even a sacrificial PEZ dispenser. 


Abraham bunny might have some 'splainin to do once he let's the boy out of that box, but as for me, I prefer a softer, gentler, even slightly trippier candybration, like the one this friendly creature conveys.


 
Speaking of trippy, we return to the issue of eggs. 


Candy eggs of every variety. Let me know if you try them scrambled. It just might come to that.

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Thursday, February 22, 2024

Kitchen Snark Coloring Book

Do you love cookbooks? Need a distraction from the cares of the world? The Kitchen Snark Coloring Book is here to help! You'll find 50 pages filled with humor, wisdom, memories, and a touch of snark, all waiting for your creative flair. Color the stress away with this timeless book of vintage fun.

Details at KitchenSnarkFun


 

Love Day Goes Red

 Happy Valentine's from our corner of the world to your.






Monday, August 30, 2021

Cookbook of the Week: Mastering the Art of Outdoor Cooking on Your Gas Grill, circa 197?

 


The cookbook of the week is Mastering the Art of Outdoor Cooking on Your Gas Grill, just in time for a few more summer barbecues before the leaves start to change color.

While there's no copyright date in the book, we think it hales from sometime in the 1970s. Maxi skirts appeared in Paris in the 1960s, but didn't go mainstream until the next decade, and the cover model is sporting a particularly spectacular one:


Tune in to the Cookbook Love page on Facebook for pictures, commentary, and recipes from this book all week long!

Monday, August 23, 2021

Cookbook of the Week: Baker's Cut-Up Cake Party Book, circa 1973


The cookbook of the week is Baker's Cut-Up Cake Party Book, a little paperback cram-packed with ideas for celebrations and fancy, funny cakes around which to build parties.

Here's the front cover:


Tune in to the Cookbook Love page on Facebook for pictures, commentary, and recipes from this book all week long!


Wednesday, June 16, 2021

Cookbook of the Week: Magical Amazing JELL-O Desserts (1977)

The Cookbook of the Week is Magical Amazing JELLO-O Desserts, circa 1977!


Here's the title page:

Here's a video preview:


Want to see more? Check in with the Cookbook Love page on Facebook to see photos and recipes all week. Enjoy!


Friday, April 2, 2021

Cookbook of the week for April 2, 2021: Quick and Easy Meals for Two (1952)


The cookbook of the week for April 2, 2021 was this little cutie, Quick and Easy Meals for Two, published in 1952! Here's our kickoff video for it:


The title page offers a preview of the adorable illustrations. Animals are always happy to be consumed in old cookbooks.


Each section opens with an illustration like this one, in which the woman apparently has an actual menu board in her home and yet tries to convince us menu planning is easy.


The whole book is structured around the idea of menus, which is actually kind of handy. And several sections are organized by season, featuring what's fresh during that time of year. Here we are, thinking about summer, for example:


The idea of crunchy devilled eggs confused me slightly. Here's the recipe, which was significantly less bad than it could have been.


So, what are we having for dinner?


Let's start with salad. This one seems like a LOT of work.


Maybe just an easy tossed salad instead. With a special home-enhanced dressing.


Or if you prefer, we can go straight to dessert. For once you can eat with your fingers. Sort of.


I'm always leery of recipes including baby food, but what do I know?


This actually sounds straight-up delicious.


The book offers helpful tips for those who are just starting out in the kitchen.


Like this tip for feeding men wieners.


Can't speak for good old boys, but I'd eat this!


Is this one man-friendly? Cabbagey chili with plops of mashed potatoes?


There's a section for what I call "desperation dinners."


Luckily, I rarely get THIS desperate:


Happy hubby seems to like what he sees in this opener to the appetizer section:


Here's one reason why:


Wondering if these dishes end up being a mood killer though:



If all else fails, put on a pretty apron, and let your pressure cooker sing you a happy tune.


Quick and Easy Meals for Two is a lovely, fun little book, and a great addition to any cookbook collection. 
 

Tuesday, February 9, 2021

National Cheese Pizza Day! (Plus Hotdogs)

Today is National Cheese Pizza Day! Yippee!

In honor of this day of all days, I offer you the following recipe for Polka Dot Pizzas.


OK, so it's technically NOT cheese pizza. But it is pizza, sort of. And it does have cheese on it, as you can see by the picture.

It comes from Betty Crocker's 1975 Cookbook for Boys & Girls. You can see these very chillins below, enjoying the fruits of their labors.

I like this early example of multiculturalism. And that the guy on the left wears an apron adorned with strange farm animals. And that the blond girl in the middle sports a half eaten banana.


Here is the recipe, so that you can make it at home!


Be sure to notice the use of "baking mix", aka, Bisquick.

In case this part is confusing, they've included a close up of Frankfurter positioning:


Now bake it, let it cool a tiny bit, and voila! Biscuit dough, cheddar, hot dog pizza, ready to eat!

Please to enjoy.