So now you switch positions and say that people actually did eat veggies. Interesting.Quite so, Tenpenny. Everyone ate meat, potatoes and vegetables in that order.
Also,Indeed, in the old days, it was considered manly to eat red meat, real men did not eat fruits and vegetables. It is not for nothing that the words ‘fruit’ and ‘vegetable’ have a negative connotation when applied to a person.
Meat and potatoes (steak and potatoes when one could afford it). What was the traditional Sunday lunch? Pot roast. Roast beef was considered a treat. Was it really that fashionable to eat fish, different kinds of vegetables etc. in old days? I doubt it.
I'm a rebel. I usually start with a couple bites of veggies first, then meat, then rice/pasta/spuds. Hubby usually starts with meat, veggies, then carbfood unless the veggie is green beans or asparagus in which case he downs the veggies completely before touching the other stuff.The current recommendation is to eat potatoes, vegetables and meat, in that order.
That stuff's just for the unmanly men. lmaoWhy did people grow corn, cabbage and apples then? I think the mother ship is calling....
Most of the people around here had a steady diet including carrots and turnip as the main vegetables, as they could be easily kept over the winter. Peas and beans and beets were also a staple through the winter, as they could be preserved.
In the old days" people ate whatever stored through winter easily. Mostly root veggies, grains, honey and booze.
I have no tolerance for intolerant people.
aaaaand, I have no tolerance for people who are not tolerant of intolerant people.
Yup. That's why people had such things as root cellars and stuff.Most of the people around here had a steady diet including carrots and turnip as the main vegetables, as they could be easily kept over the winter. Peas and beans and beets were also a staple through the winter, as they could be preserved.
You forget dried meat (salt pork, beef jerky etc.). And while that may have been true say 100 years ago, I doubt that it was true 50 years ago. By then limited number of vegetables were available in winter (but as i said before, people didn't eat a whole lot of them).
According to you. I'd suggest that people didn't eat as many veggies from stores as they do now. Gardens were more plentiful and preserving was more frequently done.You forget dried meat (salt pork, beef jerky etc.). And while that may have been true say 100 years ago, I doubt that it was true 50 years ago. By then limited number of vegetables were available in winter (but as i said before, people didn't eat a whole lot of them).
And my point being - vegetables picked at the hight of their freshness and canned retain much of their nutrients. And no, I didn't go back to the beginning of the thread - sorry - it's very late...Excuse me? My family lived in the Maritimes - they ate seasonally - they ate a lot of root vegetables in the winter and ate what was growing in the summer - much like the rest of rural Canada did. People at what was available - and what they could put by - by canning and preserving. To say that people didn't eat a lot of vegetables ? Maybe in the city? But in rural areas - they did.
For the record? I spent a lot of times with my relatives in Nova Scotia when I was a child. We ate a LOT of vegetables - just like all the other families - and in the winter? There were root vegetables and canned vegetables. It's what people did.
Yup!According to you. I'd suggest that people didn't eat as many veggies from stores as they do now. Gardens were more plentiful and preserving was more frequently done.
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Amber Waves, March 2010, Feature - Guess Who's Turning 100? Tracking a Century of American Eating
Excuse me? My family lived in the Maritimes - they ate seasonally - they ate a lot of root vegetables in the winter and ate what was growing in the summer - much like the rest of rural Canada did. People at what was available - and what they could put by - by canning and preserving. To say that people didn't eat a lot of vegetables ? Maybe in the city? But in rural areas - they did.
For the record? I spent a lot of times with my relatives in Nova Scotia when I was a child. We ate a LOT of vegetables - just like all the other families - and in the winter? There were root vegetables and canned vegetables. It's what people did.
Definitely. People didn't eat steak and spuds, roast beef with yorkie pudding every day, and usually what was left over from roast or whatever was turned into a meat and veggie soups, stews, and pies. And the amounts of meat in those soups, stews, and pies was dwarfed by the amounts of veggies simply because, unless you were a hunter, meats were more expensive than veggies by a long shot (pun intended lol). What's more is there were a lot of countries where the majority of peoples couldn't afford to eat meat more than once a week or more.Excuse me? My family lived in the Maritimes - they ate seasonally - they ate a lot of root vegetables in the winter and ate what was growing in the summer - much like the rest of rural Canada did. People at what was available - and what they could put by - by canning and preserving. To say that people didn't eat a lot of vegetables ? Maybe in the city? But in rural areas - they did.
For the record? I spent a lot of times with my relatives in Nova Scotia when I was a child. We ate a LOT of vegetables - just like all the other families - and in the winter? There were root vegetables and canned vegetables. It's what people did.
yup, when I was a little girl, my mother did not have much money at all to spend on food, and she had to
carefully decide what meats she could buy, and then make them stretch. Lots of cheaper cuts that cooked
slowely with moisture and such, BUT the trick was the VEGETABLES she added to the meals and of course
potatoes, almost with every meal, to complete the nutrition, because meat was expensive, and certainly
not the main food in our house.
She canned peaches and pears every year, and we had those all winter, and she also bought some canned
fruits as well.
Carrots, turnips, parsnips, peas, cabbage, beans, ALWAYS veggies with our meals, and she always had lettuce
in the house too, which was part of most sandwitches, she did not make salads, unless it was potatoe salad.
We loved fresh lettuce and tomatoe sandwitches, and there was not any meat in those sandwitches, just a
little salad dressing.
Yep, I doubt if people during the Hungry thirties were buying very much meat if any. In fact they probably shot most of the meat they ate.