I found some interesting items while scanning my grandmother’s recipe clippings Thursday afternoon. I’m saving the actual recipes for later posts, but I wanted to share some images and labels today. The giblet gravy recipe above comes from the back of a frozen turkey label, a piece of paper that could be the origin of a Mangan family tradition.
This book of oven triumphs (!) is coming back to Brooklyn with me. I want every time I bake to be considered a victory.

My policy is to try any food item I encounter at least once (as long as it’s not alive at the time of consumption), however this meal has me rethinking things:
More scanning finds (including melon cutting tips and men in hot tubs) with my unnecessary commentary after the jump.
I would like a degree in the science of Better Cookery.
My grandmother kept a quick reference guide for proper baking temperatures.

If only cutting melons brought me this much joy.
I like to imagine Don Draper pitching this tagline for the Yum Yum Machine.

The backs of the newspaper clippings had a lot of interesting images. I have three favorites and the first comes from a home tour in Binghamton’s Press and Sun Bulletin in 1983. Hyrdrotherapy. Right.

The paper put a punching clown on the street and documented the results in the sixties:

So good, children lick the spoon! (This baby’s face will haunt me all weekend.)







Hey, Mo. Baby laxatives have no place on a food blog. Let’s not let this happen again, ok?
Someone needs to share the burden of viewing that ad with me!
OMG! The Fletcher’s Castoria ad is so hysterical! I remember they used to have TV ads about this ! Nice baby!
The Yum-Yum Machine was our electric ice cream maker that we had back in the ’70′s. We experimented with many different recipies, but the best one I remember was peach ice cream. Everyone got involved with the ice cream making…Dad and Mom would work together on adding the rock salt to the machine…that would make it super cold and get the ice cream freezing. I think we all must have gotten fat the summer we got the machine! Nice, happy memories!
Thanks for posting the pictures!