ARTS & EVENTS

Potatoes & Po-Ta-Toes: 'Great Depression Cooking With Clara'

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ACCORDING TO CLARA, the Depression was bad, potatoes used to cost a dollar a sack and a peppers-and-eggs sandwich was the coveted school lunch.

Maybe potatoes cost a bit more today, and maybe kids would rather eat a processed meal of Lunchables and GoGurt, but there is still much we can learn from 93-year-old Clara, all via her YouTube show, "Great Depression Cooking With Clara."

Between simple instructions for simple food, she weaves childhood stories, such as the time her brother mailed her a garden snake — but, she assures us, "he got a good whipping that time." Throughout the show, Clara uses her sense of humor, storytelling ability and old-school-style cookery (she never uses a cutting board) to turn six-minute clips into a family-bonding experience. Well, if you pretend that Clara is your grandmother, which of course you will.

Part history lesson and part cooking show, Clara lets you in on the harsh times of Depression-era living, all revealed through food. "I had to quit school 'cause we couldn't afford socks ... but we survived. We were all fat, eating potatoes. ... We ate potatoes every day: potatoes with pasta, potatoes fried, potatoes with eggs."

Clara laughs as she recalls her mother telling her to go outside and get the meat for dinner: She had to venture through a wintry backyard to dig up their buried food in the snow because her family couldn't afford a refrigerator. And while 2009 will probably not be a year of surpluses, let's hope Americans will not have to hide our produce in an apartment windowsill. But some of Clara's ideas can be put to good use today because we all want food that is, as Clara remembers of her childhood, "very inexpensive and very nutritious and very good."

» One Pot Meals. For egg drop soup, Clara sautees potatoes, creates broth and scrambles eggs all in one pot. One pot meals mean less cleaning, less fuss and less water wasted washing dishes.

» Potatoes, Potatoes, Potatoes. Potatoes have gotten a bad rap. But a computer-mouse-sized potato, with the skin on, is an important source of vitamins and it's not that fattening. Clara throws potatoes in with soup, hot dogs and pasta for a cheap way to add bulk to a dish.

» Saving Gas. Many foods, once heated to a high enough temperature, will continue cooking after they have been removed from the heat source. When Clara makes her pasta and peas (with potatoes!) she lets the noodles cook in the heated broth with the stove off, unlike the boiling method that's currently preferred. This was a trick her family used during the Depression, but it could help lower gas bills this winter, too. "Anything to save anything," Clara reminds us.

So while you might sub tofu for Clara's potatoes and choose not to bury your delicata squash under the porch, you can take comfort in your Internet grandmother's culinary wisdom: "Everything was terrible, but we had good food."

Spoken like a true foodie.

Written by Express contributor Stefanie Gans

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COMMENTS (4)
  • Dear Clara, I realy enjoyed your websight and I am too a depression kid that is 83 now. My mother could make a delicious meal out of practically any thing edible. She served my family liver and oinions and I told Mom that was the best steak that I had ever tasted and today I love liver. Funny it is on the senior citizens menu often. I remember the eggless depression cake and it is still tasty and no fluff. best regards and happy cooking Elaine

    By Elaine , Posted February 27, 2009 5:00 PM
  • It never occurred to me that the delicious meals my mother prepared were depression-era cooking. Now, we consider most of the ingredients bad for us and the meals are work to prepare. Therefore, we'll just have a Big Mac and fries...

    By Marty Masters , Posted February 27, 2009 9:17 PM
  • Dear Clara, It was a joy to read about you and your wholesome recipes which sustained us in the leanest times. I'm a WWII war baby of immigrant Italian grandparents and remember well the recipes you talk about. Pasta (we called it macaroni then) with everything. Your pasta with peas was a staple in our home. We were poor, but never hungry. Nothing was wasted ----- when she cracked an egg, my aunt would run her finger through the shell making sure to get every drop of eggwhite out. It is so upsetting to see how much food we waste today, when simple kitchen tricks would go far to stretch our budgets.
    Thank you for sharing your experiences and to your grandson who brought you into our lives.

    By Concetta Fiedler , Posted March 4, 2009 11:34 AM
  • Dear Clara,
    Like Concetta, I too am a WWII baby, of Italian immigrant grandparents. My grandmother made "macaroni" only with tomato paste and it was delicious.

    My mom was an excellent cook and made "macaroni" 2-3 times a week; pasta w/peas, lentil soup w/chopped up spaghetti, pasta fagioli (w/beans), good old macaroni and meatballs and the list goes on ... .also, onions and eggs (yummy), peppers and eggs, potato and eggs.......and liver that my daughters and love even today!
    Thank you Clara and a big thanks to your great grandson.
    Elaine/NY

    By Elaine , Posted March 4, 2009 4:06 PM
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