Straight Talk from a Comfort Foodie - Fast Food

My parents lived for convenience when it came to feeding their children. I was a Beech-Nut kid, and breast-feeding wasn't my mother's idea of liberation. I was weaned on A&W root beer served by a car-hop at a local joint called "Suds n' Dogs." Dad was a cosmetic salesman, and, though he was raised in an orthodox Jewish household by a mother that adhered to the kosher principles, he lived on a steady diet of quick stop specialties regardless of their orientation.

On Sunday mornings we would scarf down some bacon and eggs and then pile into Dad's 67' Impala and head to Brooklyn for a visit with his parents. They were immigrants who spoke Yiddish and little English and had raised four children in their two-bedroom apartment. Somewhere along the way we'd stop for burgers and fries. Visiting McDonald's, in those days, was different than it is today. Outside you could run along the red and white tiled wrap-around bench and look through the impressive glass walls surrounding the kitchen to watch the burgers being cooked and the assembly line churn out perfectly packaged sandwiches. (When Burger King eventually came to our hometown, we actually got dressed up to try their flame-broiled brand.) There was no drive through then, and very few people called it "fast food". My sister and I would eat the stuff in the back seat, using the fries as swords in a dual, while Dad drove and Mom bit her nails. Before arriving at my Grandparents third floor walk-up in Flatbush, a small crowded apartment that was always filled with the aroma of garlic and onions, Dad would stop at a dumpster and throw away any remnants of our lunch - including all the paper packaging. The four of us would get out of the car so he could spray it down with air freshener, pile back in, turn the block, and arrive. He figured what Grandma didn't know wouldn't hurt her.

Sometimes we would bring shopping bags full of peaches or apples from the local farmers market on Long Island for Grandma to use in the fruitcake recipe that she'd brought with her from Poland. If there came a Sunday when the previous weeks' produce hadn't been processed, there was an ingenious, if not totally devious, procedure for letting us know. Rather than call us directly, and incur a toll call, she'd place a collect-call to our home and ask for "Mrs. Noapel". This being the code name for "NO Apple" ? Dad would decline the incoming call by saying there was no one there by that name. Then he knew not to bring any fruit. My Dad and his mother wrote the book on "the art of the food trick".

One of my fondest memories was the day Dad ordered home delivery of Cott soda. Two cases would arrive every week; an assortment of grape, cola, black cherry, and the coveted Cream - that was always the first one tapped. Folks in our suburban neighborhood got their Charles Chips home delivered in huge brown cans. Others got milk and eggs delivered, but our house got the goods. No wonder our milk-fed friends were begging to have dinner at our house.

My folks never had a problem finding a teenaged baby-sitter, because the word was out about our junk-food stockpile. Whipped cream from a can was a trendy delicacy in those days. It was also good for a half an hour of entertainment. My sister and I would compete by standing with our mouths open as the baby-sitter injected as much whippedcream as the space would hold. Who ever gagged or exploded lost.

Mom liked to sleep in. Getting up with the sun to serve a warm breakfast to her school-aged children was a far and few between event. The day I started first grade was the day I received a crash-course in the morning meal.

"Isn't Mom going to make us breakfast?" I had asked my older sister. I was hoping for a hot bowl of Farina.

"Mom doesn't get up early, just get used to it", she had replied, and had walked off to forage through the pile of Drake's cakes stored in the oven. We ate Yankee Doodles for breakfast, and had Green Giant creamed vegetables with dinner.

Even after I had been to college and had my dietary world revolutionized ?returned home with an armful of bottles from the vitamin/health food store to concoct a soy lecithin, wheat germ and organic honey gruel?dad was still doing the morning cup of coffee with a cupcake chaser.

Grandma's Apple Cake

3 cups flour
2 cups sugar
4 large eggs
1/4 cup orange juice
1 cup vegetable oil
3 teaspoons vanilla extract
3 teaspoons baking powder
6 apples
3 teaspoons cinnamon
6 tablespoons sugar

Directions:

1. Preheat oven to 350-degrees F. Grease and flour a large rectangular pan (lasagna-type).

2. Combine the first seven ingredients and beat at medium speed for 10 minutes.

3. Peel and thickly slice the apples and add cinnamon and sugar.

4. Layer half of the batter in pan; add apples, then the rest of the batter. Sprinkle top with additional cinnamon and sugar.

5. Preheat oven to 350 degree. Bake for 1 hour and 15 minutes.

Marti Ladd is the cookbook author and food product designer for "The Recipe Company". See her media kit at http://www.martiladd.com or visit her virtual cookbook store at http://www.ecookbookstore.com


AddThis Social Bookmark Button

From You Flowers. LLC

In The News:


Dallas Morning News

Cobbler recipes make the most of summer peaches, cherries and ...
Dallas Morning News, TX - 13 hours ago
Her recipe calls for peeled and sliced peaches. Be sure to use what the recipe calls for – fresh, frozen or canned fruit – to keep the cobbler from being ...

In search of mud pie, best meatloaf recipes
SunHerald.com, MS - 3 hours ago
From Mississippi Mud Pie to the vegetable pasta at Neco's Market Place in Pass Christian, readers are looking for recipes. This week's mailbox, both snail ...

Chattanooga: It's not too early for holiday recipes
Chattanooga Times Free Press, TN - 5 hours ago
I’VE GOTTEN ONLY one recipe for favorite summertime vegetables. Sallie Beckes sent in a great one for zucchini chips that will be featured in an upcoming ...

Top Chef Harold Dieterle's tasty recipes
MSNBC - 12 hours ago
The winner of “Top Chef” season one shares his signature dish, spicy duck meatballs and his flavorful edamame falafel recipe. Heat 1 teaspoon olive oil in a ...

Hit the trail for fresh blackberries to toss into your recipes
Kansas City Star, MO - 5 hours ago
By LAUREN CHAPIN Good Mrs. Rabbit, widowed mother of four bunnies, knew she could trust her daughters Flopsy, Mopsy and Cottontail to stay on the lane to ...

Recipes: salt and pepper squid with cucumber salad and asian ...
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - 16 hours ago
Fill a deep pan no more than a third full of oil and put it to heat over a high heat. Smash the peppercorns roughly in a pestle and mortar and mix with the ...

UK cookbooks bring Gordon Ramsay, Jamie Oliver and others to a ...
Los Angeles Times, CA - 2 hours ago
It's divided into three sections: history (the restaurant's rise to three Michelin stars), recipes (for example, sardine-on-toast sorbet and chocolate wine) ...

Earthtimes (press release)

National Media Tour Promotes US Farm-Raised Catfish
MarketWatch - 10 hours ago
The recipe, one of four US Farm-Raised Catfish recipes found in her new cookbook, displays the overall quality and versatility of the fish, according to ...
Eli Manning, Emeril Lagasse Cook US Farm-Raised Catfish for a Cause MarketWatch
all 14 news articles

Recipes, Please - Mock Apple Pie
The Birmingham News - al.com, AL - 1 hour ago
Recipes, Please isbased on requests and responses sent in by News readers. All requests and responses are handled through the mail; none is taken by ...

Los Angeles Times

Book review: 'Piri Piri Starfish: Portugal Found' by Tessa Kiros
Los Angeles Times, CA - 10 hours ago
That just-us-friends tone, though, makes Kiros' recipes difficult to follow. Although the techniques are not complex, she assumes her readers have a certain ...
recipes - Google News

Games at Buy.com

Holiday Home Store at Buy.com

Weight Loss Recipe: Spicy Chicken Cacciatore

Just because you are watching your weight, doesn't mean the whole family can't enjoy your health enhancing meals! The kids will love "Spicy Chicken Cacciatore" and you... Read More

Simply Salads

"It is just sensible."exclaimed my friend. She was referring to the large plates sitting in front of us loaded with everything imaginable. As though, it was sensible... Read More

Rockfish Bessie

Ingredients 5-6 lbs. Whole Rockfish 1 Onion 1 Lemon 1 Lime Cilantro Corn Husks Olive Oil Salt and Pepper Preheat over to 375F. Make... Read More