Family Recipe Friday – Jello: Salad or Dessert?

Continuing with recipes my mom contributed to the Friendship Circle Cookbook, Westminster Presbyterian Church, Clovis, NM, 1973  

In October of 2009, my friend Pam and I wandered around the Texas Book Festival on Saturday afternoon. We were getting pretty hot and decided to duck into the cooking tent, relishing the shade and hoping there might be samples.

Two young men, authors of the cookbook Baked Explorations, were the presenters. Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito own Baked bakery in Brooklyn. The cookbook in question features regional desserts – the kind grandma took to the pot luck dinner at church or the family reunion – and then the authors put their spin on the recipes. I’m not sure exactly how they came by the recipes, but it sounded as though people submitted them while they traveled around the country searching for recipes.

The black and white cookies looked really good and I surely would have liked a sample. 🙁

In answering a question about the most unusual ingredient in a dessert recipe they had received, Matt and Renato looked at one another and started talking about jello recipes with celery and carrots in them and laughed.

It was obvious that these guys didn’t know the difference between a jello salad and a jello dessert.

So let me set the record straight:
If the jello has carrots or celery in it, what you have is salad.
If the jello sits on a crust (usually graham cracker), what you have is dessert.

Granted, some jello recipes walk a fine line between salad and dessert – what with the addition of Cool Whip or sweetened cream cheese.

When in doubt, use this rule of thumb: If your momma serves it with the meal, it’s salad. If you have to eat your vegetables first, it’s dessert.

And so these young men, uneducated in the particulars of J-E-L-L-O, included a recipe which they named Strawberry Jell-O Salad in their book of dessert recipes. And it is a dessert – the jello sits on a crust. Their unique spin on the recipe is a pretzel crust.

Seriously, I wanted to send these guys an email to set them straight, but three years later I have a blog, so I can just get it off my chest here. If you want to check out their jello salad dessert recipe, I found it on a couple of blogs. Here is one you might peruse. It sounds pretty tasty.

Now – about my momma’s jello recipes…

Jello salad was a regular item on our dinner menu. Tuna casserole was often accompanied by green peas and a lime jello and pear salad. Sometimes we had red jello with fruit cocktail. Or orange jello with mandarin oranges. The recipes Mom included in the cookbook had more ingredients or were prepared in layers, making them suitable for company.

I’ll share Mom’s version of a strawberry jello salad today and a couple of others in later posts.

Strawberry-Nut Salad

2 packages strawberry jello
1 cup boiling water
2 (10-ounce) packages frozen strawberries
1 (1-pound 4-ounce) can crushed pineapple
3 medium bananas, crushed
1 cup chopped walnuts
1 pint commercial sour cream

Combine jello and water. Fold in thawed strawberries with juice. Drain pineapple; add bananas and nuts. Put 1/2 strawberry mixture into dish as first layer. Refrigerate until firm. Spread top with sour cream. Spoon rest of jello mixture on top and refrigerate. Be sure to thaw berries before dissolving jello.

***  P.S.  If you put Mom’s Strawberry-Nut Salad on a crust, it would probably make a good dessert. Just be sure you call it dessert when you serve it.

Wisdom Wednesday – Cover Your Knees!

I’ve been posting some of Grandma Eveline’s newspaper clippings from the 1960s-1970s and I thought this one was the perfect follow-up to my recent post about my mom’s knees and my pigeon toes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ouch.

Mini-skirts were the bane of parents, grandparents and school administrators in the mid-to-late 1960s. First popularized in Europe – many credit British designer Mary Quant – the mini-skirt made it’s way across the ocean to middle America where girls like me subscribed to Seventeen Magazine and wanted to dress like Twiggy.

I never really had the knees for mini-skirts though.

And even in the 3rd grade, sitting by a friend on the playground, I was asked about those little blue and purple lines showing through the skin of my thighs.

So I suppose I should have avoided short skirts.

In my high school in Joplin, MO around 1968, girls were required to drop to their knees if a teacher or administrator thought their skirt was too short. A ruler was used to measure the distance from the floor to the hem of your skirt. If it exceeded 4 inches, your parent’s were called and you had to go home and change.

I think I had to do this once. But maybe I was just so humiliated for a friend that I think it happened to me. I do know I was never sent home – so if it was me, I tugged that skirt down just far enough to pass.

And this is reminding me of the girl I carpooled with in Joplin. Ninth grade was in middle school then and I carpooled with another girl who also had to get to school early for band practice. When my mom drove, Gayle would sit in the back seat and, during the drive to school, she would take off her shoes and white socks and procede to put on a pair of panty hose and sometimes a different pair of shoes that she had stashed in her very large purse. (No backpacks in those days.) On the days her mom drove, Gayle would run into the school bathroom as fast as she could to change there. If my mom knew what was going on in the back seat, she never said anything.

These days it is undoubtedly best to cover my knees.

 

Family Recipe Friday – Strawberry Dessert

Continuing with recipes my mom contributed to the Friendship Circle Cookbook, Westminster Presbyterian Church, Clovis, NM, 1973 

I must have asked Mom to make this dessert a lot, because I remember her making it for me when I was a little older – maybe home from college on break – and her making reference to it being my favorite.

When I made it as an adult, I realized my tastebuds had undergone a transition and I found it a little too sweet. (Must have been around the time I stopped adding any sweetening to my tea!) I still make it in the spring or summer and enjoy it.

There’s just something about angel food cake and strawberries.

Not making it today, though, as I am waaay behind on too many things.  And I happen to have a picture I took years ago when I thought about making a family cookbook.

The picture doesn’t really do it justice. If you are skilled, you can get servings out of the pan in a nice square.

Daughter in picture is now 21. That’s how long ago I started that project.

Strawberry Dessert

3 packages (3 ounce) strawberry jello
2 cups hot water
1 quart vanilla ice cream
2 large or 3 small boxes frozen strawberries, thawed
1 angel food cake

Break angel food cake into small pieces and fill bottom of 9 x 13 cake pan. Mix jello with hot water. Stir until dissolved. Let cool. Add vanilla ice cream and stir until the ice cream is melted. Add thawed strawberries. Mix and pour into cake pan. Let set several hours or overnight in refrigerator.