Anonymous wrote:Grew up in CT in 80s-90s. Single parent mom (widowed; German/English ancestry, but not entirely sure of all of it) as 100% Italian dad died when I was little.
Breakfast: Cereal (Cheerios, Rice Krispys, but my mom generally refused to buy sugary ones like Lucky Charms, Cocoa Puffs, much to my dismay). A lot of zucchini bread (made with zucchini from our backyard haul every summer, then frozen), eggs, yogurt.
Lunch: cold cut sandwiches - bologna, olive loaf (which I loved as a kid), ham, salami. Sometimes sub hot dogs and ketchup on white bread if we were out. Probably w/ a piece of fruit like an apple or banana that didn't require cutting or keeping in a container. I lived for the sweet treats that I always got in my lunch like hostess cupcakes or Little Debbie - My favorites were Star Crunch, Nutty Buddy, etc.
Dinner - all sorts of things, but a lot of:
Breaded and pan fried chicken cutlet or pork chops
Beef stew
Pasta with red sauce/meat sauce (or ravioli or shells)
French bread pizzas
Soup. Favorite was tortellini in chicken broth with some veggies like carrots/celery and/or peas. Sometimes split pea soup w/ ham.
Boiled cabbage and ham/brisket
Hot dogs, hamburgers
Steak (cheap cuts)
Sides were frozen or canned veggies, sliced and fried potatoes, rice (sometimes
rice and black eyed peas).
In the summer, we had a garden in the backyard so there was a lot of sliced tomatoes and cucumbers tossed in olive oil and vinegar. Zucchini and eggplant would be thin sliced and fried (sometimes, but not always breaded), sometimes turned into like a zucchini/eggplant parm casserole.
Always had ice cream in the house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you were white it doesn’t matter where you grew up, you were probably eating the same variety of bland church cookbook food mentioned in the last 2 pages. American cuisine was shockingly uniform. Food Network really opened up people’s eyes to better ways of eating and trying different cuisines.
Have you even read the replies? Plenty of us generic white folks grew up in areas with ethnic European food traditions. Italian, Irish, Greek, Polish, Hungarian. You had exposure to your family’s traditions, but also what was offered in the community. Not everywhere eats/ate bland church cookbook food.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Grew up in a very small nothing town in upstate NY with amazing Italian American food, and Greek and Polish.
So very good pizza/calzones/pastas like stuffed shells were always available. My dad was a huge buffalo wings fan so every once in a while that would show up in our house. Tangy.
Birthday dinner for everyone in the family was always at "Symeons" Greek restaurant, where we always ran into other people we knew also having birthday dinners. Very very yummy.
People in that town are also obsessed with a food called "Chicken Riggies" so that was a common party food. (A kind of pasta with chicken and a spicy creamy sauce. It's good.)
I swear, there is nowhere in DC that comes close to the level of pizza and Greek food. Maybe Greek Deli in Dupont.
My parents are Indian (Bengali) immigrants, so my mom cooked extremely delicious Bengali food throughout the week -- Dahl, chicken curry, puris, fried fish, etc. They also had lived in Scotland for a decade so they made a lot of British/Scottish food, like sausages rolls, "mince and tatties (ground meat and mashed potatoes)", a big breakfast with eggs and baked tomatoes and beans. She also grew to like chicken with barbecue sauce and potato salad? And filled in lots of meals with frozen chicken tenders or chicken patties. Also lots of homemade french fries.
Syracuse? Massena? If, yes, give me some pizza places in Massena and Watertown area, I'd love to try it.