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Depression-era Cooking (With Clara)

  • Written by christine 3 Comments
    Last Updated:: April 6, 2009

    Note: This is from my Money Saving Monday series at Blogging For Michigan

    Let’s talk about Clara, a 93 year old cook and great grandmother, from upstate New York. Clara has a popular online cooking show, Great Depression Cooking. In her show, Clara teaches you how to prepare depression-era meals, and she shares stories about her childhood. Here’s a video in which she shares 5 Depression Cooking Survival Tips:

    1. Family
    2. Have a garden
    3. Use & re-use
    4. Make your own meals
    5. Eat healthy

    Clara has been doing this for a couple of years. Here’s her first episode, in which she makes pasta and peas.

    “It’s not expensive and it’s nourishing … we ate a lot of pasta during the depression. … What are we doing to eat tonight? Pasta with garlic. What are we going to eat tonight? Pasta with peas. What are we going to eat tonight? Pasta with beans.”

    Dice some potatoes, dice an onion, put some olive oil in and fry ‘em up until the potatoes are rosy. When the potatoes are rosy, put in the peas. Add enough water to cook the pasta in. Boil and season the water, add pasta. Cover the pan and turn off the stove, and use the heat to cook the pasta. “In the depression we would turn off the gas and let it cook in its own heat, so we would save gas. Anything to save anything.”

    And she also tells the story of the whiskey bootleggers next door. Very entertaining.

    Clara’s youtube channel is here, and her blog is here. She also has a forthcoming DVD.

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  1. #1 Angie says:
    July 9, 2009 at 9:38 am

    This was so great, I watched every video, wrote down recipes, not only are they super inexpensive, but they look delicious!! Thanks for sharing this, I would have never found Clara without you!!

  2. #2 christine says:
    July 10, 2009 at 8:32 pm

    Thanks, glad you enjoyed it. Clara is a real treat! :-)

  3. When my mother-in-law, one of 7 kids born in the 1920’s and 30’s, married my father-in-law, she was shocked to discover that chili did not contain rice. Her mother added rice to many dishes when her father couldn’t get enough game for the meal.

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