Good Housekeeping’s Quick ‘N’ Easy Cook Book: Short-Cut Recipes

We all find ourselves short on times now-and-again. Sometimes we just spread ourselves too thin with outside (of the home) commitments, such as. working, volunteering, or chauffeuring the kids to practices and other extra curricular activities. At times like these, we might just grab fast food drive-thru or pick up something curbside to take home with us. It does not have to be that way. We can still offer our families home cooked meals with a little less effort. Not every meal has to be a gourmet, made from scratch endeavor. Shoot! Most of the time, the meals I prepare are far from gourmet or from scratch. We enjoy a simple grilled, lightly seasoned chicken breast with rice and roasted veggies. Nothing more simple than that.

short cut recipes, quick recipes, on the go cooking,
Illustration from Good Housekeeping’s Quick ‘N’ Easy Cook Book

We all find ourselves short on times now-and-again. Sometimes we just spread ourselves too thin with outside (of the home) commitments, such as. working, volunteering, or chauffeuring the kids to practices and other extra curricular activities. At times like these, we might just grab fast food drive-thru or pick up something curbside to take home with us. It does not have to be that way. We can still offer our families home cooked meals with a little less effort. Not every meal has to be a gourmet, made from scratch endeavor. Shoot! Most of the time, the meals I prepare are far from gourmet or from scratch. We enjoy a simple grilled, lightly seasoned chicken breast with rice and roasted veggies. Nothing more simple than that.

If you prefer something with a bit more flair, find some short-cut meals that work for your family. The Good Housekeeping Quick ‘N’ Easy Cook Book’s “Short Cut Recipes” section has some tasty vintage offerings to help you out on your busy days!

One of my favorites from the cook book is a simple Chicken Biscuit Pie. I might add some frozen veggies to bake inside or just serve them on the side.

Here is a quick, simple way of making French Toast. The clean-up is a bit easier, too! Add some fresh fruit and you have a lovely breakfast on a hurried morning.

There are so many good, easy recipes in this book. If you can find a copy in your local, used bookstore or at an Antique / vintage shop, I recommend it highly. I found mine on Amazon!

Here is one more recipe to help entice you:

There was a show on the Food Network, a few years ago, that I enjoyed called “Semi-Homemade with Sandra Lee.” She would make wonderfully delicious meals with the help of things already “made” such as boxed or frozen items. She would add to these products to make them a bit more …”special”. A more “modern” take on what the Good Housekeeping Cook Book is offering. An example of one of Sandra Lee’s meals is the Coney Island Chili Dogs that she served with Spicy Fries. She used canned chili sauce but jazzed it up with seasoning and fresh ingredients. She also used frozen fries but added spicy seasoning to give them a kick. Such an easy, yet deliciously kid friendly meal. Sandra Lee also is the author of cook books with the same theme.

photo from the Food Network

As I mentioned, above, a simple meal of chicken and veggies works for my family. One way to get this to the table in little time is the “sheet pan method”. All you do is spread your veggies on the pan with your chicken, or any choice of meat, season, and toss it the oven. So simple and so tasty. We do this with squash (sliced thick), baby carrots (right out of the bag), broccoli, onions, etc. We may serve with rice, pasta, or potatoes. If we use potatoes, they can be roasted right in the same pan. Season how you like, we sometimes use a packet of onion soup mix to add flavor. All kinds of meats do well with this way of preparing meals. Sausage or a turkey tenderloin in a great pairing.

photo from the Foods Network

Of course, if you are REALLY short on time , you could do as a good vintage mama might have done…. serve a TV Dinner!

TV Dinners were invented in 1953, so the Housewife’s of yesteryear had that as an option. “According to the most widely accepted account, a Swanson salesman named Gerry Thomas conceived the company’s frozen dinners in late 1953 when he saw that the company had 260 tons of frozen turkey left over after Thanksgiving, sitting in ten refrigerated railroad cars” Smithsonian Magazine.

A TV Dinner offered a well rounded meal. Most included a protein, such as fried chicken or Salisbury steak, a starch, such as potatoes or pasta, a vegetable, and dessert. We have many more varieties these days with anything from a low calorie Lean Cuisine, gluten or dairy free or even vegan options.

The man in the above advertisment looks happy with his TV Dinner. I would prefer to offer my family something with even a little effort (like a sheet pan or even somthing from the crock pot) but I guess in a pinch, fed is best LOL. Well, at least a TV Dinner is a bit more appetising than a meal in a can like the advertisment below. LOL!!!

We are very fortunate with the options we have in these modern times. Our frozen meals are much more appealing than a meal in an aluminum tray. We have modern appliances that help with the ease of meal preparation, such as an air fryer and instant pot. And let’s not forget, although I mentioned fast food drive thru above, that and curbside pick up was not widely available in the 1950s!!! Drive thru got its start in the 1920s but there were not the variety or location in every town like we see today.  “The drive-in concept was first popularized by a Texas chain of eateries called the Pig Stand, whose first drive-in opened on a highway connecting Dallas and Fort Worth in 1921” from History.com.

I hope this blog gave you some ideas for when you are spead thin but still need to get dinner on the table. It is so fun to compare how we live today to how our home making sisters in the past did things. Thank you so much for reading my posts! I look forward to bringing you more very soon!

XOXO

Tiffany

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Crisp Refreshing Vintage Salads Ideas: Inspired by The 1958 Quick ‘N’ Easy Cookbook by Good Housekeeping: Vintage Ephemera

I loved flipping thru this cookbook and reading about all the different kinds of salads. They even included a few relish tray ideas. Included are tuna, ham, and chicken salads, wilted spinach and bacon, Spring lettuce wedges, aspics, your tried and true romaine salads, and macaroni salads for example. The list goes on and on and I am sure anyone can find a salad they would enjoy in the contents of this cute little cookbook.

Vintage salad recipes, vintage salad ephemera, vintage ad, vintage graphics, vintage food, vintage cookbook, good housekeeping recipes, good housekeeping cookbook, 1950s cookbook
Photo from Good Housekeeping’s Quick ‘N’ Easy Cookbook

Ok, most people are not thinking about cook, refreshing salads. Most have their minds on warm and comforting soup when fall hits the calendar. Well, it is still 75 degrees here in Texas and I have been enjoying the quickness and ease of a refreshing salad. Mine are quiet savory at times, opting for Taco Salads and those loaded with meats and cheeses. These are not your healthy salads and create a very satisfying meal on their own. Most salads, however, are healthy, loaded with fresh veggies, seeds, and fruits.

Vintage salad recipes, vintage salad ephemera, vintage ad, vintage graphics, vintage food, vintage cookbook, good housekeeping recipes, good housekeeping cookbook, 1950s cookbook
Photo from Good Housekeeping’s Quick ‘N’ Easy Cookbook

I loved flipping thru this cookbook and reading about all the different kinds of salads. They even included a few relish tray ideas. Included are tuna, ham, and chicken salads, wilted spinach and bacon, Spring lettuce wedges, aspics, your tried and true romaine salads, and macaroni salads for example. The list goes on and on and I am sure anyone can find a salad they would enjoy in the contents of this cute little cookbook.

Vintage salad recipes, vintage salad ephemera, vintage ad, vintage graphics, vintage food, vintage cookbook, good housekeeping recipes, good housekeeping cookbook, 1950s cookbook
Cut out from Good Housekeeping’s Quick ‘N’ Easy Cookbook
Vintage salad recipes, vintage salad ephemera, vintage ad, vintage graphics, vintage food, vintage cookbook, good housekeeping recipes, good housekeeping cookbook, 1950s cookbook
Photo from Good Housekeeping’s Quick ‘N’ Easy Cookbook
Vintage salad recipes, vintage salad ephemera, vintage ad, vintage graphics, vintage food, vintage cookbook, good housekeeping recipes, good housekeeping cookbook, 1950s cookbook
Recipe from Good Housekeeping’s Quick ‘N’ Easy Cookbook

Here are a few vintage salad ads I found amusing.

Vintage salad dressing advertisement, vintage salad ephemera, vintage ad, vintage graphics, vintage food
Darling, I love your … “hat”? Photo found on Pinterest, the original link is pzrservices.typepad.com but that site no longer exists.
Vintage Jello salad advertisement, vintage  Jello salad ephemera, vintage Jello ad, vintage Jello graphics, vintage food, Jello
These Jello or Aspic salads are an entire blog post of their own and I WILL be diving into this subject in the near future…. but enjoy these lovely pics, in the meantime. These are just “weird” to me. I can not say I would not like them as I have never tried one…other than the lime Jello and cottage cheese, which I rather like. Who knows? Maybe I will like my Spaghetti-Os trapped within a wiggly Jello mold. Photo from Design Bump.
Vintage salad dressing advertisement, vintage salad ephemera, vintage ad, vintage graphics, vintage food
Look at Kraft trying to tempt me with this glorious cottage cheese Temptation Salad. Photo found on Pinterest.
Vintage Tuna salad advertisement, vintage salad ephemera, vintage ad, vintage graphics, vintage food
I love Tuna Salad sandwiches, Tuna Salad on tomatoes, Tuna Salad just out of a bowl. My MawMa used to make the best Tuna Salad. She would put chunks of cheddar cheese in it. So Yummy. Photo from Pinterest. Original link no longer working.
Vintage salad advertisement, vintage salad ephemera, vintage ad, vintage graphics, vintage food
I have no words. Well, maybe it is a ham salad in a head of iceberg? Photo from Finding Betty Croker.
Vintage wishbone salad dressing advertisement, vintage salad ephemera, vintage ad, vintage graphics, vintage food
I never got a Salad Genie when I opened my Wishbone Dressing! He sure is a cutie. Photo from Vintage Ads and Stuff.
Vintage salad dressing advertisement, vintage salad ephemera, vintage ad, vintage graphics, vintage food
Photo from Gold Country Girls.
Vintage salad dressing advertisement, vintage salad ephemera, vintage ad, vintage graphics, vintage food, vintage hellmanns ad
I have never been one to usemayonaise as a salad dressing. I am more of a ceasar or ranch type of gal. I do love an oily Greek dressing with feta, tomatoes, and cucumbers, as well. But plopping a dallop of mayo on my salad was never a craving. I’m sure glad Peg was able to use it to impress her judging mother in law! She got in SOLID thanks to Hellmann’s. Photo from Daily Mail.
Vintage salad dressing advertisement, vintage salad ephemera, vintage ad, vintage graphics, vintage food

XOXO

Tiffany

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Quick Vintage Inspired Soup: From The 1958 Quick ‘N’ Easy Cookbook by Good Housekeeping: Vintage Ephemera

It is FINALLY getting cooler here in Texas. That means it is time for Chili…but it is also time for SOUP!!! Nothing warms me up quicker than a lunch of yummy, warm tomato soup and a grilled cheese sandwich. Chili can wait for supper time!

The soup section of Good Housekeeping’s Quick ‘N’ Easy Cook Book is included under the “Soup and Salad Suppers” title. I want to separate the two because each can be a meal on it’s own.

I have a few “hearty” soups that are my go-to lunch staples. I enjoy a good potato based soup. These are versatile and can be quiet tasty with different add-ins like brocoli and cheese, or bacon, sour cream, and cheese for a baked potato soup. All varieties of soups can be found, now-a-days, in a can and that is perfectly fine, however they are super easy to make for a quick meal.

So many soups to choose from. You will find more than 21 on varieties in todays soup aisle, I dare say!

Here is a basic Potato Soup recipe to get you started. This recipe is from AllRecipes with a bit of tweaking of my own.

  • ¼ cup butter
  • 1 large onion, chopped
  • 6 medium potatoes, peeled and diced
  • 3 cups water
  • 2 tablespoons chicken bouillon powder
  • ground black pepper to taste
  • 3 tablespoons all-purpose flour
  • 3 cups milk
  • 1 tablespoon dried parsley
  • ¼ teaspoon dried thyme
  • Melt butter in a saucepan over medium heat. Stir in the onion; cook and stir until the onion has softened and turned translucent, about 5 minutes.
  • While the onions are cooking, place the diced potatoes, carrots, water and chicken soup base (or vegetable base; see Cook’s Note) in another pot and bring to a boil. Cook until vegetables are tender, about 10 minutes. Do not overcook. Season with ground black pepper to taste.
  • Add the flour to the cooked onions to make a paste. Cook, stirring constantly, for 2 minutes. Gradually add the milk and stir well. Cook over low heat stirring constantly until warmed through. Add the potato mixture. Stir in the parsley and thyme and heat through. Serve hot.
Photo from PBS.com

As I mentioned above, a hot bowl of tomato soup along with a grilled cheese sandwich is a favorite lunch, of mine. I just use ready made soups, usually the jarred soups from La Madeline Bakery and Café. If you would rather have a homemade variety, try your hand at the Quick’N’Easy Cook Book’s version.

Recipe from Good Housekeeping’s Quick ‘N’ Easy Cook Book, page 10.

Today we have many options from Annie’s, Progressive, and independent delis and cafes that jar their soups for the mass market to even your local grocery store having a soup bar. Many still think of Campbell’s when thinking of Tomato Soup, however. Campbell’s and Heinz were popular brands in the 1950s and 1960s. Campbell’s still has a prominent spot in the grocery store soup aisle. I do not see Heinz when I am in the market but that could be just my area or because I am not looking for that brand. A quick search shows the brand is available at Walmart and online.

Photo found on Pinterest

Franco American was another popular soup brand in days gone by…way way “gone by” before the turn of the century in 1887. We Generation Xers know the name in connection to Spaghetti-O’s which were introduced in 1965. Campbell’s acquired Franco American brand in 1915 and quietly retired the name (Franco-American, not Spaghetti-O’s) in 2004, according to the Boston Globe. Campbell’s seems to be a reining kind of soups.

Photo found on Pinterst

A soup I have never made or had from a jar or can is Lobster Bisque. The Quick ‘N’ Easy Cook Book has a simple way to make this…with a little help from canned soups and lobster. I have never even considered lobster from a can.

recipe from Good Housekeeping’s Quick ‘N’ Easy Cook Book, page 11.
What d’ya know? Pepperidge Farm got in on the canned soup game in the late 1960s.

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Here are a few more vintage soup ads for your viewing pleasure….

photo found on Pinterest
Oh! Those rosey cheeks!!! Photo found on Saturday Evening Post.
Photo found on Pinterest.
Well isn’t this blue eyed blonde a beauty!!! Photo found on Vintage Ad Browser
Photo found on Pinterest.
I just love old ads with babies eating. This cute vintage ad was found on Flickr
Soups are great in casseroles and dips. That is a great idea for a future blog! Photo found here.

XOXO

Tiffany

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Spread the Butter Thin: How to Stretch your Butter Supply – Inspired by World War 2 Rationing

Photo from the Your Share Pamphlet

Today, we have another installment from Your Share: How to Prepare Appetizing, Healthful Meals with Foods Available Today pamphlet from Betty Crocker. We will be discussing how to stretch your butter and fat supplies. I know…I know, some people try to limit the butter and fats…well, honey, I am not one of those people. I take a page from Paula Dean and agree that “everything is better with butter”. And I am referring to REAL butter. I do not mess around with margarine.

I tend to do without other items so that I can have the luxury of real butter. I stock up when it is on sale and use coupons if available. I do substitute other fats when cooking and save my butter for times when I think there is no substitute….like on bread, veggies, potatoes, etc. However, in the time of World War 2, families did not have that luxury. They had to make do with what they had available.

Photo from the Your Share Pamphlet

It is recommended, in the Your Share pamphlet, to extend your butter supply by “making 1 lb. do where you had 2 before; Soften 2 tsp gelatin in 1/4 cup milk; dissolve over hot water. Add 1 3/4 cups top milk and gradually heat into 1 lb. of butter. (soften to room temperature but not melted) with rotary beater. When completely blended, beat in 2 tsp salt; add 10 drops yellow coloring, if desired. Pack into straight sided rectangular container; chill until firm. This will keep about a week.” Now that is a lot of “doing” and just does not sound very appealing, to me.

Other ways to help make your butter go a bit further is by being picky when you use it. As mentioned above, I like to use bacon dripping and other fats in place of butter when cooking. When frying an egg, bacon fat adds a wonderful flavor. For general cooking, the Your Share pamphlet advises, “for browning meats, fish, vegetables, frying eggs, making waffles, pancakes, cornbread, cream gravy, etc., use bacon fat, sausage fat, other drippings, lard, margarine, shortening, salad oils etc. For deep fat frying use any fat of mild flavor.” Collect the drippings when frying bacon or sausage, for example, in a mason jar and keep in the refrigerator. My momma used to collect the grease in an old Crisco can. Cute, decorative, grease containers are available, as well.

Using bacon or other meat drippings in baking, does not appeal to me. I would prefer to substitute shortening for butter. Before replacing butter with shortening in your cookies, for example, you will have to do a bit of math (eeek!!!). A tablespoon of butter is not equivalent to a tablespoon of shortening. Shortening is 100% fat while butter is only about 80% fat. Butter is made up of 15% water and the rest is milk solids. When subbing in shortening for butter, multiply the weight of the butter by 0.8, which gives you 181 grams. This is how much shortening you’ll need. When using shortening, instead of butter, you may want to add in a table spoon or two of water, as well. This will make up for the liquid you will be losing by using shortening. You do not have to include this step but by omitting it, your cookies may be a bit more chewy. Of course, you should do your own research when subbing and a bit of trial and error for other recipes. This is just an example of how to save your butter when cooking and get your creative juices flowing.

Of course, one of the best ways to save your butter is to find recipes that simply do not call for butter or stretch what you do use by stretching the baked good or dish. For example, if making a a 2 crust pie, make enough for one crust but stretch it into two. Roll the part for the lower crust thinner than usual and use strips of crust for the top. You still get a pretty good pie and use 1/2 the ingredients for the crust.

Here is a recipe for a cake that uses no butter or shortening, at all, from the Your Share pamphlet.

War Time Cake

While butter is something that makes my life complete and I do not plan to ever be without…I seriously have a well stocked supply in both my refrigerator and freezer…there are legitimate substitutes. I just hope I never have to use them.

Photo found on Pinterest
Photo found on Pinterest

Photo found on Pinterest

XOXO

Tiffany

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How to Make Cheese go Further….and Reduce Your Meat Budget: Inspired by WW2 Rationing

This might sound cheesy, but I think you’re really grate.

Oh how I love cheese…it just makes everything better. Such dreamy richness. Such possibilities. You can even have it if following a Low Carb eating plan…not that I am, at the moment…I mean, I should be….but you know, Covid and all…(Yes, I am blaming everything on Covid, at the moment).

I would like to share this section of the Betty Crocker vintage booklet, Your Share: How to Prepare Appetizing, Healthful Meals with Foods Available Today, while discussing the joys of cheese.

Cheese was rationed, but “cost” fewer ration points than meat, according to this booklet. Finding creative and tasty cheese dishes would help stretch your meat supplies while still providing nutritious, filling, and yummy meals.

photo from Radio.com

Here are a few cheese centered meals to get you started….

Charcuterie

This is one of my all time favorite meals. I have always been a snacky, cheese, salami, and crackers type of gal and this just adds a fancy touch to it with such little effort.

So what is charcuterie? “From the French chair (“flesh”) and cuit (“cooked”), and pronounced “shar-koo-tuh-ree,” charcuterie describes a wide range of cured meats, from hard, thin-sliced cuts to soft spreads” (from foodandwine.com). When making a charcuterie board, all you need is a wooden board (I like to use all kinds of cutting boards, TJ Maxx has so many options for a budget minded housewife), meats, cheese, and a bit of creativity. Some think there are rules to making these appetizing delights, however, I think you should just throw on what you are craving. I like to add veggies and fruits for color and taste, some people throw on a variety of nuts. A google search will give you so many ideas!

Photo from Delish.com

Mac and Cheese

We can certainly do better than the photo above! Mac and cheese does not have to be boring! Well, I guess they tried making it fun by forming into a mold and placing slices of, what appears to be, SPAM around it.

I found the easiest and tastiest mac and cheese recipe on my local moms group. Its not even a recipe, really, just a set of ingredients and instructions….well, I guess that IS a recipe LOL…. Here’s what ya do…

Put the following in the Instant Pot (or other pressure cooker)

  • 1 box of elbow macaroni
  • 4 cups water
  • 2 tsp salt
  • 2 tbsp butter

Set Instant Pot to high pressure for 4 minutes.

When the pot has done what it does…release pressure, uncover, and add the following

  • 1 cup heavy whipping cream
  • 2 cups cheese (I prefer sharp cheddar but add whatver you want…make it fancy)
  • Season to taste

Stir until melted

Make it extra special with additional add ins like bacon, ham, or veggies. You can also add variety by using different types of pasta.

photo from Houstonian

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photo found on Pinterest

Pimento Cheese

This is the epitome of a vintage inspired lunch, to me. My Mawma always had this and the ladies at the Assisted Living could not get enough of it at our Monday afternoon tea parties. We would make little triangle sandwhiches or stuff it in celery or tomatoes.

I have not made it, homemade, in awhile because I discovered a delicious brand available in stores called Pawleys Island Specialty Foods. It is available with or without jalapenos.

I bought this at Costco but a smaller container is available at Target, as well.

Of course, making it homemade is super easy and you can control the ingredients.

Ingredients
  • 8 ounces sharp cheddar cheese shredded
  • 8 ounces mild cheddar cheese shredded
  • 8 ounces cream cheese softened
  • ¼ cup diced pimentos
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon  ground black pepper
  • 2 tablespoons mayonnaise (optional)

Note: Shred the cheese yourself. Cheese that is sold as “shredded” has a coating to keep it from sticking together. You want the cheese to stick together to promote creaminess.

Cream together cheddar cheese with the softened cream cheese until well combined.

Stir in pimentos and salt and pepper.

If you prefer your pimento cheese to be a bit thinner for spreading, add in optional mayonnaise or liquid from the diced pimentos to preference.

Photo found on Pinterest

Cheese makes everything just a little bit better. Next to butter, it is my favorite thing to add to a meal. And as mentioned in the Your Share booklet, there is a “cheese for every taste” so the sky’s the limit on possibilities.

XOXO

Tiffany

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How to Stretch Meat for Delicious and Economical Meals as inspired by World War 2 Rationing

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Homemakers, during the War World II years, had to learn how to stretch their food supplies to meet the needs of their families.  The War put a heavy burden on basic supplies like food, shoes, metal, paper, and rubber. “The Army and Navy were growing, as was the nation’s effort to aid its allies overseas. Civilians still needed these materials for consumer goods as well. To meet this surging demand, the federal government took steps to conserve crucial supplies, including establishing a rationing system that impacted virtually every family in the United States.” (https://www.nationalww2museum.org/war/articles/rationing) Meat was one of the basic supplies that were heavily rationed.

Homemakers, on the home front, had to come up with clever and appetizing ways to stretch their share of meat. In late spring of 2020 we are in need of stretching our supplies due to meat prices climbing because of our own shortages. Shortages may not be due to a war but we are seeing other causes. Meat plants are being shut down, temporarily, due to employees testing positive for Covid 19, for example. The manufacturing plant must close to disinfect and follow safety procedure to lessen the risk of spreading the virus. “As of June 12, there have been at least 24,000 reported positive cases tied to meatpacking facilities in at least 233 plants in 33 states, and at least 86* reported worker deaths at 38 plants in 23 states.” (https://investigatemidwest.org/2020/04/16/tracking-covid-19s-impact-on-meatpacking-workers-and-industry/)

To keep our meals pleasant and delicious, we can take some hints from our homemaking sisters of World War II. “In spite of the heavy demands on America’s supply of meat because of the war, our share at home will be enough – if we use it wisely, learn to extend it with other foods – and make the most of every bit available.” (Your Share:  How to Prepare Appetizing, Healthful Meals with Foods Available Today).  I am sharing some tips and tricks from this booklet while adding my own notes along the way.

How to Extend Your Share of meat

1. Loaves, Mock Steaks, and Patties

What to use:  Back in the 1940s, it was suggested to use ground beef, veal, pork, or liver.  We have more options today with ground chicken, turkey, and even the meatless varieties such as Beyond Burgers (although, these do tend to be a bit pricier) .

For loaves and patties, extend with: bread and cracker crumbs,  cereals, cooked rice, oatmeal, or even Parmesan cheese and pork rinds if you need a lower carb extender.

For mock steaks, grill up a ham steak or pork chop.  Of course it isn’t a rib eye but cooked on the grill, you get a yummy “grilled” flavor.

Photo from Picture Cookbook: Life, 1958 cookbook in my personal collection

2. Pot Roasts and Stews

What to use:  Neck, shank, round shoulder flank of beef, veal or lamb. kidneys or oxtails for stews were recommended in the 1940s.  I, personally, enjoy a Mississippi Roast made with bone in chicken breasts.  And for stews, we have enjoyed using ground hamburger or turkey.

You can extend a pot roast and stews with just about anything.  Leftover veggies such as green beans, potatoes, carrots, turnips, peas, onions, and tomatoes.  I love adding great norther beans or pinto beans to stews to bulk them up and add textures.

This advertisement, from the Wine Advisory Board in an October 1943 copy of Life Magazine, advises to use 1/2 a beef heat roast to serve 6 and stay within your meat rations.  I do not think I am brave enough for beef heart.  Please leave a comment, down below, if you use beef hearts in your meal plan. 

3. Meat Pies

What to use:  Same meats for stews, anything leftover.  I love a good craw fish pie but we would, most likely, never have leftover seafood in our home.

Extend with Bisquick or home made biscuit topping, dumplings, pie shells (think pot pie).

4. Birds and Chops with Stuffing

Just like at Thanksgiving, stuff your birds!  Turkey or Chicken, beef or veal round, liver, chops – pork or veal.

Extend by stuffing with leftover breads, apples, celery or mushroom stuffing.  Leftover rice and veggies work, too.

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5. Pinwheel Rolls! 

We spent a pretty penny at Central Market (a local HEB owned specialty type of market) on a few of their famous pinwheels.  Little did we know how economical these are when DIYing at home!

It was recommended, in the “war years” to use ground beef, pork, and veal.  However, if you are trying to stretch a more expensive cut of meat, these are perfect. You get the taste of a steak or cut of salmon, for example, but it takes much less to fill you up when making a pinwheel.

You can roll just about anything in your pinwheels.  The old stand by veggies, potatoes, and rice make a great filling.  We like to add cheeses like feta, Parmesan, or goat cheese crumbles and mix that in with pine nuts and spinach.

This was the (expensive!!!) pinwheel Roll we got from the butchers at Central Market.  There are a few DIY recipes online to cut costs and have the same delicious meal!
Doesn’t look like Princess Margaret II enjoyed her meal.

6. Scalloped Potatoes and meat.

 (Actually, you can add ground meats, ham, or any leftover meat or seafood into a potato, pasta, or rice dish and make it a meal.)

Home makers, of the past, would add in bologna, lunch / deli meats, frankfurters slices, dried beef or ham.  I like to add diced up smoked sausage links to fried rice or a Cajun type of rice.  Also, a can of tuna goes a long way when mixed into mac and cheese.  Ground meats are great as add ins, too. We plan to mix in leftover taco meat, that I threw in the freezer after last weeks taco night, into a southwestern pasta salad for a future Taco Tuesday.

Be creative with whatever sauces you have on hand or can whip up, add in some bread crumbs to bulk it up, and you have a delicious and very inexpensive meal.

7.  Creamed meats

Ground sausage, dried beef, ham, or any left over meat added into a sauce or gravy.

This is so yummy over biscuits (a staple for a southern breakfast but we actually enjoy it any time of the day).  You can also make it a meal by serving over toast or any leftover breads and pastries.

8.  Croquettes

Ground meats such as beef, veal, or lamb, ground or dices chicken, canned salmon, or to make it even more economical my mom would “sneak” in some tuna.  I actually still use a mix of tuna in a can and pouch even in the best of times.

Mix in filler such as rice, bread crumbs, corn flakes or chips and add an egg for binding.  Fry in a pan with a little oil.  Serve with a complimentary sauce (catsup or tarter sauce go nicely).

These sure are some fancy looking croquettes in this vintage Crisco ad.  Mine never come out so pretty.

9.  Baked, stuffed veggies

Use any leftover meats, a little goes a long way.

Add in the typical fillers of rice, potatoes, bread crumbs, etc, and stuff mixture into a bell pepper, squash, etc.  Very appetizing with a pretty presentation.

10.  Go meatless!

As simple as it sounds, stretch your meat by not using it.  I have a gal pal that routinely has Meatless Monday on her meal plan.  She may whip up a pancake dinner, a pot of beans served with corn bread, or Spaghetti without the meatballs.  This would not fly in my home, on a regular basis, we are big meat eaters.  However, in a pinch and if we are really trying to economize, we would learn to deal with it.  There are so many filling meals that do not include meat!  You can download my list of 10 Vintage Inspired Meatless Meals, here.

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Bonus #1:  Replace or stretch ground beef with ground sausage

Beef prices are climbing sky high right now.  I went to the market for the first time in over 3 months to find ground beef at 4.99 – 7.99 a pound!  Maybe I lived in a “managers special” and Kroger “woohoo” bubble but I do not remember it being that pricey pre-pandemic.  A pound of ground pork sausage is 3.39 at Kroger and goes on sale often for 2.50 or even 1.99.  I love the flavor this adds to ground beef for tacos or a meaty spaghetti sauce.  Its also very good in the popular egg roll in a bowl dishes.

This is a VERY amateur video….there are many, more polished, creators if you need more guidance.

Bonus #2:  Soups

Stew’s less meaty cousin.  Use leftover bones and trimmings, or any leftover meat that needs to be used up.  Forgo the meat all together for a bean, lentil, or veggie soup. I have a filling Pinto Bean soup recipe in my Top 10 Vintage Inspired Meatless Meals packet that is an included FREEBIE when you sign up for my email list.

Bulk up the soup with loads of veggies.  Add in a starch, such as rice, potatoes, or noodles.  Serve with a crusty bread and you have a very filling, warm comfy meal.

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Homemakers, it is possible to have a delicious meal plan that your entire family anticipates while keeping your costs down by stretching your meat supplies.

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