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Posted: 5/27/2016 11:14:10 AM EDT
What was considered "fast food" before the invention of microwaves? (in homes, not at restaurants)
Canned food and put on stovetop to be heated? |
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Used to just put the same type crap you microwave now into the oven.
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The quality of "fast" in-home food has improved TREMENDOUSLY.
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Sandwiches, cereal, etc.
I still heat most canned stuff on the stove just out of habit. |
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Hot dogs in boiling water, ramen noodles. Used to make both at the same time.
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Quoted:
What was considered "fast food" before the invention of microwaves? (in homes, not at restaurants) Canned food and put on stovetop to be heated? View Quote Women would actually be in the kitchen and have dinner on the table when the man walked in. |
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Creamed eggs on toast. Cheap and easy for a poor single mom with three kids in the 70s.
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Quoted:
TV Dinners in foil. http://www.todayifoundout.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/tv-dinner.jpg Put that shit on a folding tray, turn on some Hee Haw, strew some Six Million Dollar Man toys on the floor and you have my childhood View Quote Memories triggered! |
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When I was a kid there was fast "lunch food" (cold cuts, canned soup, Spagetti-Os, even sardines) and fast "dinner food" (hot dogs, bakes beans from a can, fish sticks, fries, burgers).
ETA: We had McDonald's and Burger King within walking distance and as a kid those were once or twice a year treats. We went to "real" restaurants more frequently. |
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FPNI.
I loved the chicken fried steak with mashed potatoes and peas. FWIW, the corn on these dinners sucked, always get the ones with peas... |
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TV Dinners in foil. http://www.todayifoundout.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/tv-dinner.jpg Put that shit on a folding tray, turn on some Hee Haw, strew some Six Million Dollar Man toys on the floor and you have my childhood View Quote Oh yes, this. All of this. Remember the skin on his arm that you could roll up to see his bionics? And there was a tiny window in the back of his head that you could look through to see the world through his eye. I felt stronger after looking through. |
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Anyone remember the TV dinners where there would be a picture on the foil under the entree? If you ate it all you got to see it
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Oh yes, this. All of this. Remember the skin on his arm that you could roll up to see his bionics? And there was a tiny window in the back of his head that you could look through to see the world through his eye. I felt stronger after looking through. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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TV Dinners in foil. http://www.todayifoundout.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/tv-dinner.jpg Put that shit on a folding tray, turn on some Hee Haw, strew some Six Million Dollar Man toys on the floor and you have my childhood Oh yes, this. All of this. Remember the skin on his arm that you could roll up to see his bionics? And there was a tiny window in the back of his head that you could look through to see the world through his eye. I felt stronger after looking through. Yep. And you could pull the "modules" from his arms. Had the capsules and a ton of big GI Joe stuff, too. Joe had a cool orange helicopter. I'd line all that shit up and crank ol' Evel up and let him jump it. Of course, Evel always had a wire broken in one of his arms, so his dumb ass would be waving at the crowd in mid air. |
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I'd say any pre-packaged meals that only required the addition of one or two ingredients for completion, like Hamburger/Tuna Helper, Kraft Mac & Cheese, etc. It wasn't ready to eat like a TV dinner, so you could at least pretend that you had cooked a meal, even if it wasn't anything more than opening a can of tuna and mixing it up in a pan over medium heat. Maybe "convenience meal" would be a better description than fast food in this case though.
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Quoted:
Oh yes, this. All of this. Remember the skin on his arm that you could roll up to see his bionics? And there was a tiny window in the back of his head that you could look through to see the world through his eye. I felt stronger after looking through. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
TV Dinners in foil. http://www.todayifoundout.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/tv-dinner.jpg Put that shit on a folding tray, turn on some Hee Haw, strew some Six Million Dollar Man toys on the floor and you have my childhood Oh yes, this. All of this. Remember the skin on his arm that you could roll up to see his bionics? And there was a tiny window in the back of his head that you could look through to see the world through his eye. I felt stronger after looking through. I'm a little older I guess. For me it would have been Jackie Gleason, Combat and G.I.Joe shit all over the floor. |
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This. I remember them without any nostalgia or fondness whatsoever. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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TV Dinners in foil. This. I remember them without any nostalgia or fondness whatsoever. They still sell them. I bought one a few years ago out of a warped sense of curious nostalgia. I cooked it and ate it. It was worse than I remembered. |
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Wow, we have a lot of old farts here!!! (considering that microwaves became common in the 1960s)
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TV dinners weren't really fast food, they were easy no mess food that took a long time in the oven.
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I grew up an Cambells's soup, Oscar Meyer, PB&J, Bananas, Oranges, Apples, Grapes, Milk and Oreos
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My parents got a microwave as a wedding present in 1978 (they were very expensive back then). Microwave cooking was kind of a fad back then, right up there with fondue pots.
These days, we just use them to re-heat leftovers or whatever sad sack "dinner" we purchased in the frozen foods section. But for a while there, people actually cooked entire meals in the things. From raw ingredients. My parents had a full color glossy microwave cookbook, full of recipes for this new futuristic way of cooking. Their microwave had a built in temperature probe and everything. It's one of the saddest things I've ever seen, in retrospect. |
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We didn't get ours until the mid-80s and even then they weren't everywhere.
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Wow, we have a lot of old farts here!!! (considering that microwaves became common in the 1960s) You are incorrect. I was thinking like you but anymore, the only thing on me shorter than my memory is my |
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Wow, we have a lot of old farts here!!! (considering that microwaves became common in the 1960s) View Quote They didn't become "common" until the late 1970s. My GF gave me one in '82. Pre-microwaveable pot pies were the best, and could be had 3/$1.00 on sale. Now, microwaveable pot pies are all crust and air - and I feel like watching American Hustle again. |
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When I was a young child there was a Chicken Delight that would deliver.
There was a Poor Boy sandwich shop. There was also an early Jack In The Box in my neighborhood, with a drive-through window. It was the second one ever built. |
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I'm trying to remember when my family got their first microwave, my Grandmother bought it and she died in 1970 when I was 13 and we'd had it for at least 3 or 4 years, so I'm guessing it was 66 or 67. I would have been around 10 or 11 then.
But I remember foil tray TV dinners all too well. When I was a kid "fast food" meant Grandma's cooking, usually sandwiches, or if I was lucky, her goulash. |
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Quoted:
Yep. And you could pull the "modules" from his arms. Had the capsules and a ton of big GI Joe stuff, too. Joe had a cool orange helicopter. I'd line all that shit up and crank ol' Evel up and let him jump it. Of course, Evel always had a wire broken in one of his arms, so his dumb ass would be waving at the crowd in mid air. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
TV Dinners in foil. http://www.todayifoundout.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/tv-dinner.jpg Put that shit on a folding tray, turn on some Hee Haw, strew some Six Million Dollar Man toys on the floor and you have my childhood Oh yes, this. All of this. Remember the skin on his arm that you could roll up to see his bionics? And there was a tiny window in the back of his head that you could look through to see the world through his eye. I felt stronger after looking through. Yep. And you could pull the "modules" from his arms. Had the capsules and a ton of big GI Joe stuff, too. Joe had a cool orange helicopter. I'd line all that shit up and crank ol' Evel up and let him jump it. Of course, Evel always had a wire broken in one of his arms, so his dumb ass would be waving at the crowd in mid air. We had all the same stuff, but I bet I lose you here......Stretch Monster. |
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We didn't get ours until the mid-80s and even then they weren't everywhere. View Quote The one my parents got as a wedding present in 1978 was YUUUUGE. You could put a chicken in there. It was built like a tank, too. They still had it and it was still in daily use when I moved out of the house in ~1998. I don't remember them becoming ubiquitous in my friend's kitchens until the late 80's and early 90's. They were super expensive for a while. IIRC, the one my parents had retailed for like $500. That's a fair bit of money now. It was downright opulent in the late 70's. I think I paid all of $45 brand new, for the one in my kitchen. |
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Quoted: I'm trying to remember when my family got their first microwave, my Grandmother bought it and she died in 1970 when I was 13 and we'd had it for at least 3 or 4 years, so I'm guessing it was 66 or 67. I would have been around 10 or 11 then. But I remember foil tray TV dinners all too well. When I was a kid "fast food" meant Grandma's cooking, usually sandwiches, or if I was lucky, her goulash. View Quote The first countertop microwaves were sold in 1967. Your grandma was an early adopter! They had them earlier, but they were yuuuge. |
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The first ones I ever saw were on TV commercials.
RADAR RANGE by Amana It was what NASA used for the astronauts I think. '69 maybe? |
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Quoted: We had all the same stuff, but I bet I lose you here......Stretch Monster. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: TV Dinners in foil. http://www.todayifoundout.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/tv-dinner.jpg Put that shit on a folding tray, turn on some Hee Haw, strew some Six Million Dollar Man toys on the floor and you have my childhood Oh yes, this. All of this. Remember the skin on his arm that you could roll up to see his bionics? And there was a tiny window in the back of his head that you could look through to see the world through his eye. I felt stronger after looking through. Yep. And you could pull the "modules" from his arms. Had the capsules and a ton of big GI Joe stuff, too. Joe had a cool orange helicopter. I'd line all that shit up and crank ol' Evel up and let him jump it. Of course, Evel always had a wire broken in one of his arms, so his dumb ass would be waving at the crowd in mid air. We had all the same stuff, but I bet I lose you here......Stretch Monster. |
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Quoted:
TV Dinners in foil. http://www.todayifoundout.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/tv-dinner.jpg Put that shit on a folding tray, turn on some Hee Haw, strew some Six Million Dollar Man toys on the floor and you have my childhood View Quote YES! The good ole days - thanks for bringing back the memories. |
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