America’s cooking culture really gained momentum in the 1950s as homemakers were preparing economic meals for their families at home. Entire families took advantage of the dinner meal to gather around the table and discuss the events of the day. Cookbooks and the recipes they contained played an important role in this social interaction. The 1950s was also a decade that saw servicemen returning from WWII and with them, came knowledge of different kinds of foods from different countries. These were gradually introduced into the mainstream of American culture, filtered through cookbooks. The early history
The first American cookbooks started playing a role in family life back in the 1700s. The Compleat Housewife (William Parks, 1742) was based on a British book. American Cookery by Amelia Simmons (1796) is still in print today and one of its most special features is that its recipes contain only American produce.
Cookbooks en masse in the 1950s
Cookbooks from the 1950s era were plentiful and this fact makes them very collectible as they are relatively inexpensive. Recipes in these culinary treasuries are often reminiscent of foods prepared by your grandmother. If you want to bring the same gastronomic pleasures to your children and grandchildren, cookbooks from the 1950s can help you recreate those meals.
During the 1950s, there were many popular television cooking shows. Julia Child is one example who became very famous and well-known, not only for her recipes but for her personality as well. When Julia Child published a cookbook, it sold like the proverbial “hotcakes.” Hollywood movie stars and other celebrities recognized the popularity of cookbooks in the 1950s and many published their own cookbooks, such as Vincent Price and his wife, Mary, with their cookbook entitled, A Treasury of Great Recipes.
Pillsbury and other food manufacturers published cookbooks, mainly to advertise recipes with their ingredients. The decade of the 1950s saw the manufacture and production of modern, time-saving, easy to use, and convenient appliances to make the homemaker’s life easier. Appliance manufacturers sold cookbooks as well to show the usefulness of their products Betty Crocker
Of course, the Betty Crocker cookbook is one of the most renowned cookbooks of all time. Many a young bride received that cookbook as a wedding gift in hopes of helping grow a happy marriage. Betty Crocker’s Picture Cookbook helped showcase what the finished food should look like. This cookbook was first published in 1950 and many daughters and granddaughters have a sentimental attachment to it because they saw their mothers and grandmothers cooking in the kitchen from them when they were young. Ah, the memories and the glorious smells that came from the oven thanks to those recipes!
Another cookbook from the 1950s was Mom ‘N’ Pop’s Apple Pie Cookbook. This cookbook is filled not only with nostalgic recipes from that decade but also with stories of sock hops, drive-ins, outdoor movies, and chronicles of life in suburbia that are sure to bring back memories. Monetarily valuable
Some of these cookbooks are not only sentimentally valuable, but monetarily valuable as well. For instance, Irma Rombauer’s The Joy of Cooking can bring $4,000 for a 1931 first edition. For collectors, things of note to look for when purchasing a valuable cookbook are: Did the author sign it? Obviously, a signature greatly enhances the appeal. What is the condition of the cookbook – does it appear unused or are there gravy stains and chocolate smudges on the pages? Monetary value is increased the more pristine condition the cookbook is in. Is it still in print? When a book is out of print, if you find a copy, it becomes much more valuable. Is it a first edition? Does the cookbook have a dust jacket and what condition is it in? The answers to these questions are what you can look at to determine a cookbook’s monetary worth. Helen Corbitt, Neiman-Marcus
The director of Neiman-Marcus, an expensive store by today’s standards and much more so in the 1950s, Helen Corbitt had a cookbook published, Helen Corbitt’s Cookbook. This cookbook included not only recipes but several personal anecdotes from the author. Many cookbooks published during the 1950s included amusing short notes and stories that personalized the cookbooks all the more.
Searching for valuable and interesting cookbooks online can turn up many unique prizes. The decade of the 1950s saw a huge number of cookbooks published and you can still find some of them today.
The manufacture of salt and pepper shakers began in earnest when an easy method of ceramic production was discovered in the 1940s. After that time, nearly every collectible category you can imagine had a set of salt and pepper shakers included with it. Given their small size and the need for only limited space to display, collecting salt and pepper shakers was quite a popular hobby and remains so today. Reasons to collect
Several incentives exist for collecting salt and pepper shakers. Two reasons are that they are easy to collect and display, given their size, and they are relatively inexpensive to purchase. True collectors will amass hundreds of sets of every kind of salt and pepper shakers imaginable, and they will have stories about each and every set. Bygone eras
Vintage salt and pepper shakers from days gone by can bring back fond memories for an earlier period. Salt and pepper shaker sets that are representative of former eras and allude to times past will capture your thoughts and help you reminisce about those earlier times. The history of salt and pepper
Before salt and pepper shakers were introduced for the purposes we know today, salt was often kept in a family’s cellar, in a block. If you wanted salt, you had to go to the cellar and chip a section off. The very first salt shakers contained an “arm” of sorts inside the container to chip the salt into smaller pieces before it shook out as the salt was still in “chunks,” albeit smaller chunks, when it was first introduced to the shaker. You would then shake the smaller particles out for use. Those early models were called salt “mills.” You can still find examples of salt mills around today.
The same can be said for pepper, although there are many pepper “mills” still is use today. In fine restaurants, you will be asked if you would like your server to add some “ground” pepper from peppercorns to a food involved with your meal. They then proceed to turn a grinder which breaks up the course peppercorn inside the container into a more usable version of the fresh, spicy accompaniment for your taste buds. Production materials
Salt and pepper shakers are manufactured from a variety of materials including ceramic, clay, glass, stone, plastic, and wood. A salt and pepper shaker set can be found to suit any taste, any mood, and any collection. The varieties are endless and allow collectors a multitude of choices. Souvenirs
Travelers and tourists have been purchasing salt and pepper shakers as souvenirs of places visited for family and friends, as well as for themselves, for many years. They are easy to pack in luggage for your return trip home, and they make memorable collectibles that are great for gift-giving. Collector clubs
Collectors of salt and pepper shakers enjoy sharing their treasures and stories with like-minded enthusiasts. When you join a salt and pepper shakers Collectors Club, you become a member in a group of people who have the same passion for collecting salt and pepper shakers as you. Club members get together to attend salt and pepper shakers collectible conventions where all kinds of exciting treasures and exotic finds may await you.
If you collect, well, anything, chances are quite good that you will be able to find several salt and pepper shakers that will fit right in to your particular category of collecting. If you collect frogs, roosters, pigs, cats, dogs, and the list goes on into infinity, you will enjoy looking for that next salt and pepper shaker set addition that will grace your collection so magnificently.
Any true music fan will eagerly rattle off the names of the four men that comprised The Beatles, perhaps the most popular and influential band the world of music has ever seen. John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr. Many fans will even take it the next step and give credit to original drummer Pete Best. But there’s more to their story than the band’s wild success in the 1960’s.
It all began in 1957. John Lennon was just a boy of 17 when he started his first band, The Black Jacks, with a childhood friend. After playing a few local gigs, they then changed their name to The Quarry Men. Later that year, another friend would introduce John to a promising young guitarist named Paul McCartney, who was only 15 at the time. Paul joined The Quarry Men, but gigs were few and far between as the boys returned to school in the fall.
John would enter Art College, and Paul would return to high school where he would become friends with a fellow music-obsessed student named George Harrison. George followed The Quarry Men from show to show for several months before John would invite him to join the band in 1958. By then, The Quarry Men had grown to include seven members.
In 1959, a lack of gigs combined with the changing interests of the seven teenage members led The Quarry Men to disband, but John, Paul, and George continued to play various venues under the name of Johnny and the Moondogs. By May of 1960 they were calling themselves The Beetles. Their name and additional band members would change over the next couple months, until August when they acquired Pete Best as a drummer and settled on the name they are known for today—The Beatles.
In 1961 they acquired their first serious manager, Brian Epstein, and by the beginning of 1962 had recorded with Tony Sheridan for Polydor Records. Getting a recording contract of their own would prove difficult though, and Epstein approached several representatives of both Decca and EMI, only to be turned down as many times. Finally, in mid-1962, the Beatles received a one-year contract with the Parlophone division of EMI. Later that year, they would record what would become their first hit, “Love Me Do,” and they would also replace drummer Pete Best with Richard Starkey (who would later be known as Ringo Starr).
And so The Beatles as we know them today had begun. By 1963, they had released their first album Please Please Me, with singles hitting #1 on both the UK and American charts. From there forward their popularity exploded, and in less than a decade they would release ten albums, creating one of the most valuable music catalogues in the world. The later disintegration of the band and the relationships between its members is infamous.
The irony of course is that these British kids started their band with the intention of playing “American Rock and Roll,” but the sound and style of their music would ultimately revolutionize the genre.
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