Anonymous wrote:My little Italian grandma lived until 96.
She ate eggplant parmigiana, crusty Italian bread, Italian bean soup, chicken parmigiana, all types of pasta with red sauce, big pots full of braised beefs and sausage all in red sauce. Difference being every single thing she made was from scratch. She had a hand grinding pasta maker attached to her kitchen counter. There was never not a pot of red sauce cooking on the stove. She was 5 foot nothing and weighed 90 lbs soaking wet.
We went to farms and picked our own of whatever was in season. Then we made jam of the fruits, canned the vegetables, made fresh pies/cakes for that week out of whatever was fresh. At Easter we made Italian Easter pie and spaghetti pie. At Christmas we had the feast of the 7 fishes.
She was an amazing cook. She grew up on a farm, her mother died when she was 10, and she took over all the cooking and everything else. Hard life, and an evil step mother to boot who came in later, leading to an unfortunate very young marriage to escape her situation. But a heart of gold despite it all and a wonderful grandmother. Even my mother would tell you she had the best MIL ever.
Anonymous wrote:My DH's grandparents lived to be 94 and 90. Both lived through German occupied WWII France, so had serious reservations about drinking water (because in the 40s the Germans made it dirty so you couldn't drink it). This meant they never drank water, and only drank beer and wine, at all times of the day (even for breakfast). They didn't trust bottled water either.
They also both smoked, him unfiltered hand rolled cigarettes and her mini cigars.
Anonymous wrote:Almost nothing processed, everything made from scratch. Minimal desserts.
Anonymous wrote:One set of grandparents were farmers in South America in the early 20th c. Lots and lots of rice. Fresh meat, (made their own) cheese and produce. Grandpa died in his 70’s from heart issues. Grandma was younger and died from complications from type 2 diabetes. She also had 11 children. Seems that some of it is genetic. My dad, her son, developed diabetes in his 50’s even tho he was never overweight and always exercised. Also has major heart and cholesterol issues. He’d happily eat rice with every meal if he could but it just doesn’t work with his body.