Canned foods all baby boomers should remember
Let's take stock

Tomatoes and beans aside, it’s easy to turn our noses up at canned and tinned food. Because, these days, it’s all about fresh, local and seasonal. But our grandparents understood the value of a well-stocked pantry. Tinned foods – from rice pudding to pie fillings – were especially important during the Second World War, when a long shelf-life was crucial. Here’s a selection of some of the best, and possibly worst, from the 1940s into the 1960s.
Spam

Spork and Speef

Emergency bread

Yes, that’s bread in a tin. During the Second World War, factories began to produce ‘emergency bread’ that could be stockpiled as part of the war effort. The loaves were baked in hermetically sealed tins, apparently remaining edible for up to 10 years. They took pride of place in the center of many a household's table.
Peaches in syrup

Salmon

Corned beef hash

Rice pudding

Campbell’s soup

Alphabetti Spaghetti

Spaghetti

Marrowfat peas

These chunky yellowish-green peas are basically peas that have not yet been ‘mushed’ to make mushy peas, that classic fish and chips accompaniment. They are actually mature peas that have been left to dry out naturally and are used to make wasabi peas. But we’ll always remember them as a soft, salty veg served for Sunday lunch, usually mixed in with some tinned carrot.
Sardines

Hot dogs

Did you eat your hot dogs after heating them in a pan, simmering in their own brine, or cold and straight from the can (shudder)? Chopped up in a potato salad or just slapped in a skinny bun and smothered with ketchup and mustard? Or maybe served with a ‘Sack O’ Sauce’, as niftily demonstrated in this 1940s ad. Hot dog king Oscar Mayer’s wieners came with a sachet of barbecue sauce in the center.
Check out the fast food favorites from the year you were born
Pineapple

Ravioli

Liver loaf

Sweetcorn

There was something a little terrifying about the Green Giant – maybe his size, the fact he could lift enormous ears of corn with ease – or perhaps his deep, guttural ‘ho, ho, ho’. But his tins of corn were (and still are) perfectly tender and delicious.
These are the favorite foods of your grandparents' generation
Mixed veg

Pies

Condensed milk

Condensed or evaporated milk – milk that has been evaporated to thicken it, then sweetened – was practically a wartime hero. Its high fat, protein and sugar content made it perfect for field rations during the US Civil War and the two World Wars, and it’s also a key ingredient in banoffee and Key lime pies. It’s having a bit of a comeback, mainly for desserts that call for a creamy caramel – heating it creates a sweet, nutty sauce like dulce de leche.
Golden syrup

Remember how delicious this was drizzled on pancakes, on crumpets, on toast – on everything? Remember, also, how the lid would never fit properly back on the tin because so much sticky syrup was oozing around the edges? Basically, golden syrup was sheer joy for kids, but sheer irritation for adults.
Now discover the food fads from the year you were born
Comments
Do you want to comment on this article? You need to be signed in for this feature