The
Great Depression was biting hard in Chicago in 1932, and “Society” took up the
cause of the hungry. The Border Cities
Star of February 4, 1932 reported on a new campaign:
“Pioneer Meal” Move Is Started in Chicago To Aid Poor
--
Society Takes Lead
--
Money Saved by Cheaper Food to Go to Relief Fund.
Housewives of Chicago are helping to defeat the depression by
organizing to share food from their kitchens with their 400,000 hungry neighbors.
As in World War days, the movement is
the result of a campaign and has its slogan. The slogan is “One pioneer meal a week for 10 weeks in
250,000 homes.
“PIONEER” MEALS.
A “Pioneer Meal” is one ample and nourishing, but low in cost. The saving
effected by serving a meal that costs about 35 cents instead of one costing $2.50
or so is to be turned in by each housewife to the joint emergency relief fund
for distribution to the 125,000 destitute families in Chicago.
Society matrons, club women, wives of millionaires are joining
with the host of women who do their own cooking in a revival of pioneer thrift
for the benefit of the unfortunate. Husbands are helping, they are eating food
they haven’t tasted since boyhood on the farm – and liking it.
The campaign is endorsed by the joint emergency relief committee
and is directed by Mrs Joseph M. Cudahy. Emblems are worn by those who have
pledged themselves to the plan. The associated milk dealers of the city agreed
to distribute a specially tabbed bottle to each of the 250,000 homes as savings
banks to receive the money saved by housewives who serve cheaper meals.
RECIPES EXCHANGED
“I grew up eating pioneer meals. I remember what we used to eat
in Chicago’s younger days, and I am going back to those menus” said Mrs. J.F.
Ales, one of the housewives sponsoring the plan. She has been married 54 years.
Thousands of women exchanged recipes today. Brokers, salesmen,
street car conductors, laborers in the streets were intermediaries in hundreds
of cases.
“Here is a recipe my wife said to give you for your wife,” was
the password between men in street cars, office and lunchroom.
Sample recipes, showing what can be accomplished, have been
prepared by leaders in the campaign. Two typical ones follow:
Usual Meal – cost $2.50
Shrimp cocktail, lamb chops, rissole potatoes, broccoli,
Hollandaise sauce, light rolls, butter, mint, celery and carrot salad,
chocolate cream pie, whipped cream, coffee.
Pioneer Meal – cost 35 cents.
Spanish rice, apple and carrot salad, butterscotch pudding,
coffee.
Another pioneer meal – cost 36 cents.
Salt meat, boiled kale, escalloped potatoes, bread, one-egg cup
cakes, coffee.
One
of the several things I found fascinating about this story was the quite clear
description of the gender roles. And do we still have “society matrons”, and if
so, how do I get to be one? The role sounds terribly important and interesting,
does it not?
The Border Cities Star did
not include any of the submitted recipes in its article, but I am sure the following
versions from other contemporary newspapers will be more than adequate for your
own “pioneer meal.”
Spanish
Rice. Serving 6.
4
slices bacon, 4 tablespoons onions, 2 tablespoons parsley, ½ teaspoon salt, ¼ teaspoon
paprika, 2 cups tomatoes, 3 cups cooked rice.
Cut
bacon into small pieces. Heat in frying pan until brown. Add and brown onions,
parsley and rice. Add rest of ingredients and cook 10 minutes. Stir frequently.
The
Deseret News, January 30, 1932
Butterscotch Pudding.
Two tablespoons
cornstarch, one cup water, one cup evaporated milk, one tablespoon butter, one
cup brown sugar, one-eighth teaspoon salt, one teaspoon vanilla. Mix cornstarch
with one-fourth cup water, scald remaining milk and water. Melt butter, add sugar
and cook until sugar melts, stirring constantly. Add slowly to hot milk,
stirring until well blended. Add cornstarch, stir until thickened.
Cook 20 minutes. Cool
and add the flavoring.
Pulaski
Southwest Times, October 28, 1932
1 comment:
My mother used to make Spanish Rice to use up left over bits of meat. You can afford to feed 7 kids if you use a lot of rice.
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