• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    128 hours ago

    Yes, that is what home made food looks like sometimes.

    You’re not in a restaurant, the “cook” isn’t payed, and presentation is not high on the priorities list if you also have to do dishes, wash clothes, and organize life for the family, possibly in addition to a job.

  • @BoxOfFeet
    link
    26 hours ago

    Oh man… my mom called it “rice stuff.” It tasted like it looked.

  • Prehensile_cloaca
    link
    fedilink
    English
    38 hours ago

    Boomers across the country still have china hutches FULL of these plates. With probably more plates in storage.

  • @WhatYouNeed
    link
    39 hours ago

    I know its meant to represent 1987 but why canned?

    • @Dozzi92
      link
      58 hours ago

      I was born in '87 and I distinctly recall eating a lot of canned veggies growing up. I’m sure it’s what my mom grew up (in Newark, NJ) eating, and so it probably just passed on down when she was a young mother. I’m curious if canned veggies were just the rage at the time or if it was so because access to the fresh stuff wasn’t as available.

      • @BoxOfFeet
        link
        12 hours ago

        Similar experience in rural Michigan, same time period. I’m sure that’s how my mom grew up as well. Fresh veggies were quite available out there, but we still got canned. My grandma wasn’t a great cook, and even though my mother has a ton of fantastic skills, cooking isn’t one of them.

      • Gloomy
        link
        fedilink
        15 hours ago

        In Europe it would have been a thing because of Tschernobyl blowing radioactivity across the land for a while.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        27 hours ago

        I grew up with frozen vegetables, my wife grew up with canned… Just one of our many incompatibilities…

  • @gmtom
    link
    321 day ago

    This is why Americans aren’t allowed to make fun of British food.

    • @CaptnNMorgan
      link
      18 hours ago

      Not even comparable😂 Americans look back at this and laugh or cringe, Brits still eat their old-timey slop

      • @Nalivai
        link
        611 hours ago

        And started eating way, way worse

        • @CaptnNMorgan
          link
          58 hours ago

          Maybe “worse” in the sense of health, but certainly not taste.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    8
    edit-2
    19 hours ago

    Actually that wild rice dish looks fine. Mirepoix, manoomin, cream of mushroom… bit of seasoning and it’s a nice hearty dish in the winter.

    • @BoxOfFeet
      link
      22 hours ago

      Meals like this are exactly why I don’t ever use condensed soup in anything I make. I’ve had a lot of meals like that growing up. My family, my grandparents, my friends families… My wife still will make stuff like this sometimes. It’s all just lazy mush to me. I can’t stand it. Even my mother-in-law, who makes her own soup stock and makes bread and has her own chickens will make condensed soup and canned green bean mush. I just do not understand.

    • @smayonak
      link
      16 hours ago

      Food conglomerates had tried to sell a more efficient vision of the kitchen to working mothers:

      Less food prep time meant more time for family and career. But it also meant more sales of processed food and the extinction of the skills required to prepare food.

      The children of the seventies and eighties were among the first to experience this change toward preprepared foods.

    • @ChickenLadyLovesLife
      link
      English
      5
      edit-2
      19 hours ago

      They have a uniquely terrible taste, but I don’t understand how just the way they’re cut could produce that taste. I think maybe they’re also soaked in lye or something. Or maybe the exposed inner part of the beans absorbs metal from the can.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        113 hours ago

        It’s not the taste so much as the texture. The difference in a green bean casserole made with French cut green beans and whole, cut, green beans is night and day. And by that I mean only one is worth eating. The other is just mush.

      • Decoy321M
        link
        217 hours ago

        I’m guessing it’s more dependent on the brands you’re buying, but there shouldn’t be that significant of a flavor change. Also most cans have a liner inside them to protect the contents from chemically affecting the contents. I just checked a few sources for various products, and all of them were simply the beans in a water solution.

        Some did include salt, which may be having a minor effect. The French cut, julienne, provides a higher surface area / volume ratio. This means the beans will “marinate” in the solution more effectively than larger cut beans. As in, the salt and water have better access to the inner parts of the beam, leaving them more tender and “marinated.”

        I’m using that weird very loosely because I honestly can’t remember the right word.

  • @shortrounddev
    link
    English
    671 day ago

    I used to think I hated vegetables as a kid. Turns out I hated my parents “cooking”

    • @ChickenLadyLovesLife
      link
      English
      819 hours ago

      My mom used to make liver every Thursday. She now denies that ever happened, which is hilarious.

    • @Acters
      link
      -241 day ago

      What’s even more silly about this is that you never bothered to cook it yourself to experience better cooked food and the reason is? Idk for me it was because I am lame and too shy to ask to change the established way of life. On the other hand I have adjusted to eat food of all sorts even though it is displeasing. Except foods that have capsaicin or or peppers, I’m allergic to them.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        12 hours ago

        Things were much different before the internet. “Food porn” wasn’t really a thing (unless maybe you sought it out in cookbooks, and even then…). Hell, Food Network didn’t exist until the mid-90s, and back then it was a third-rate cable channel that nobody watched.

        If you’re a child in that world, how would you even know that vegetables could be good?

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        520 hours ago

        You would first have to believe that better tasting vegetables was a possibility before you start looking for it.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          35 hours ago

          This. I didn’t know steak was good until I spent a few months living with my uncle, because growing up, if my mom made steak, it was like burnt shoe leather. Why would I ever think to order it at a restaurant?

        • @Acters
          link
          118 hours ago

          idk, am I privileged to have a family who cared enough to go to eat out once in while like once a month ?

          I fail to see how you can think I am trying to relate to someone who never had decent vegetables. It’s not like it is impossible for many of us to eat decent vegetables at one point. I clearly am not trying to be relating to everyone’s background. You are simply nitpicking and didn’t bother reading or understanding my comment.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            29 hours ago

            Who said anything about relating to others? You criticized a kid for doing what any reasonable kid would do. That’s the part I’m responding to.

      • Match!!
        link
        fedilink
        English
        121 day ago

        because fresh vegetables are expensive and have short shelf lives

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          823 hours ago

          Which is funny because these days I just buy frozen vegetables and make food with those, and I still enjoy it far more than my parent’s cooking

          It really isn’t even about fresh vegetables

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            422 hours ago

            Refrigerated fresh vegetables are much better than canned. Somewhere in between the '50s and today refrigerated got common and cheap and there was no excuse anymore for buying that soggy canned shit. I would’ve said the '90s were well after that point though. Anybody using canned green beans as a side in the '90s was just coasting on momentum and bad choices I think.

            (There’s reasons to use canned – they make a good soup ingredient if you’re going to boil it to death anyhow, and they store better in your disaster prep bunker. But as a simple side for dinner, not a good choice.)

            • @Droggelbecher
              link
              116 hours ago

              Am I crazy because I liked canned green beans as a salad (like, standard oil, vinegar, salt, pepper) when I was a kid? Mum still makes that and I still like it.

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                2
                edit-2
                8 hours ago

                Nah, no one’s crazy for liking any kind of food, and don’t let anyone tell you different. A simple bean salad sounds delightful to me

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                17 hours ago

                The other guy was more affirming but I’m gonna say yes you’re crazy. Anybody who likes what I hate so much has to be crazy, right?

            • @Acters
              link
              220 hours ago

              This is so true. I find there are plenty of ways to enjoy vegetables on the cheap or lower the effects of rot on foods. I feel like people don’t realize that 2000s is the year that current adults as kids grew up in. It is so much better back than after 2008 and 2020(current generation) are having to deal with but still it was a solved problem.

              Yet people don’t really see what was talking about. I wasn’t alluding to the vegetables, but rather how kids are not willing enough to learn to cook or take initiative when they don’t enjoy something.

              It isn’t easy to cook but I still helped my little brother. I wish when I was a kid, I learned to cook. My mom made the best foods though, and I lived pretty much happy with vegetables. I love salads. It is sad how many are not liking salads or vegetables as much.

              • @Rooty
                link
                218 hours ago

                I was essentially banned from the kitchen when I was a kid, so I learned to cook and bake as an adult. It’s cooking, not jedi training, you cannot age out of learning it.

                • @Acters
                  link
                  118 hours ago

                  I guess, but really I had some bad habits and didn’t know how to make anything more than simple dishes like spaghetti and meatballs. Salads seemed like way too much effort until you get the proper technique to chop them up. I understand what you mean but I still wish I had learned it as a kid. The muscle memory/technique to hone in on would have been nice before I became an adult and had to rely on eating out or eating random stuff at home because I also never learned to plan out meals properly. I guess there is more to it than cooking is what I am saying.

        • @Acters
          link
          120 hours ago

          I don’t know where this came from. I am talking about how as kids we grow up too shy to pickup cooking as a skill, even though we find it not taste right for us. It is fine to accept the food cause hard work and all that about love, but if you feel like it’s not good enough, we don’t seem to try. But you know I don’t deny it’s like that, yet people can still talk to their parents as kids, spice exists and canned veggies or frozen ones can taste decent. All basic truths.

          I helped my little brother cook, he started pretty terribly and to be encouraging everything was, well, not gonna be effective for him to learn. I always made it clear I admired his work but clearly put how cooking skill takes patience and dedication to do. He learned how hard it was for me to cook. I wish I learned to cook when I was a kid.

          Oh well people here got whooshed on the real story I laid out.

        • @Acters
          link
          020 hours ago

          I kept it short cause I didn’t think there much else to talk about. I expressed my opinion, big no-no on the internet but whatever

  • @BigBenis
    link
    151 day ago

    My mom used to make me add a can of mixed vegetables to my instant ramen until we agreed that I could eat them separately. So I would quickly force down the bland, mushy veggies then enjoy my ramen in its pure form.

  • @hOrni
    link
    802 days ago

    Most of that looks like it already passed through a person once.

    • @encrust9870
      link
      English
      732 days ago

      XRF showing lead (Pb) from the pattern.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        302 days ago

        Damn is this your picture? Did my comment cause you to go and test for yourself? Cuz thats amazing if you did lol

        • @encrust9870
          link
          English
          1123 hours ago

          When I found out they had lead last year, I went to work with the cup to confirm. This is a handheld XRF, which depends on the specific spacing of electrons in atoms to determine the identity. Not much to it other than point and shoot! (with shielding)

      • @Machinist
        link
        English
        21 day ago

        That is not a cheap toy. I’ve heard of them, never seen one. What is it and how much was it?

        • @encrust9870
          link
          English
          823 hours ago

          This is a Thermo handheld XRF. I wasn’t working at this place when it was purchased, but it was somewhere between $40k-$60k.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      32
      edit-2
      2 days ago

      I’m pretty sure that’s Corelle. Do they still do this today? Because all of our dishware are fucking Corelle

      Edit: Ok so they stopped putting lead since 2005 so we should be safe. But how come they only stopped in 2005

      • @frunch
        link
        162 days ago

        But how come they only stopped in 2005

        Probably ran out of their stock of lead around that time

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          1
          edit-2
          1 hour ago

          Who needs government regulations, amirite?

          It’s not like widespread lead exposure has ever had any negative effect… Oh wait.

        • @AoxoMoxoA
          link
          222 hours ago

          My aunt always drops off the fucking best, most fattening, rich meals ( “church food” ) and it is always on a plate or bowl from that company that her family has had since at least the 80’s. I will not stop eating from those dishes, I don’t even care , it’s worth it.

        • @errer
          link
          English
          72 days ago

          Wouldn’t surprise me if money > children’s brains, this is America after all

          • C A B B A G E
            link
            fedilink
            English
            61 day ago

            Properly fired it’s pretty tough to get any meaningful amount of lead out of a glaze on ceramics.

            I’d bet they did it because of pressure from customers.

      • @jaybone
        link
        31 day ago

        I have corelle (or corealle?) but mine are all white and don’t have the decorative print. Does that mean mine are safe from lead?

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          11 hour ago

          I believe it was just the one (or maybe two?) specific design… I have one from circa 2004-2005 with a different pattern, and I remember looking into this a few years back and finding out that mine was probably ok.

          • @jaybone
            link
            31 day ago

            Yeah yeah, there could be layers that are not visible. I don’t fuckin know.

      • UnhingedFridge
        link
        English
        61 day ago

        It sure will be when the lead-induced delirium kicks in.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        91 day ago

        You’re fine. The lead is bound in inert glass and only in the design. You would have had to chip off the design and eat it to have any problems.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        123 hours ago

        I think we still have one of those plates in the cabinet. It’s not in normal rotation, tho.

    • vortic
      link
      122 days ago

      What part of the plate has lead? The plate itself or the paint?

      • @Darorad
        link
        222 days ago

        The paint in the pattern

    • @jaybone
      link
      41 day ago

      You can play poker with the symbols on the outside.

  • @Sam_Bass
    link
    251 day ago

    Dogfood on the right, catfood on the left, goat chow in the middle