Our Most Popular Vintage Recipes from A to Z (2024)

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Our Most Popular Vintage Recipes from A to Z (1)Emily Racette ParulskiUpdated: Jan. 05, 2022

    The best old-fashioned recipes, from angel food cake to zucchini pie.

    A: Angel Food Cake

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    For our daughter's wedding, a friend made this lovely, angel food cake from a recipe she's used for decades. It really is one of the best angel food cake recipes I've found. Serve slices plain or dress them up with fresh fruit. —Marilyn Niemeyer, Doon, Iowa

    B: Baked Alaska

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    Taste of Home

    Make these baked Alaskas ahead of time—you can torch the completed desserts and freeze them up to 24 hours before serving. —Kerry Dingwall, Ponte Vedra, Florida

    C: Chicken and Dumplings

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    Perfect for fall nights, my simple version of comforting chicken and dumplings is speedy, low in fat and a delicious one-dish meal. —Nancy Tuck, Elk Falls, Kansas

    D: Deviled Eggs

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    Herbs lend amazing flavor to these deviled eggs, which truly are the best you can make! The recipe includes tasty variations that feature bacon, chipotle peppers and crab.—Jesse & Anne Foust, Bluefield, West Virginia

    E: Egg Salad

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    Taste of Home

    I love the versatility of this creamy egg salad. You can serve it on a nest of mixed greens, tucked into a sandwich or with your favorite crisp crackers. —Cynthia Kohlberg, Syracuse, Indiana

    F: French Onion Soup

    Taste of Home

    Enjoy my signature French onion soup the way my granddaughter Becky does: I make onion soup for her in a crock bowl, complete with garlic croutons and gobs of melted Swiss cheese on top. —Lou Sansevero, Ferron, Utah

    G: Grape Salad

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    Everyone raves when I bring this refreshing, creamy grape salad to potlucks. For a special finishing touch, sprinkle it with brown sugar and pecans. —Marge Elling, Jenison, Michigan

    H: Hot Cross Buns

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    Taste of Home

    On Easter morning, our family always looked forward to a breakfast of dyed hard-boiled eggs and Mom's hot cross buns. I still serve these for special brunches or buffets. —Barbara Jean Lull, Fullerton, California

    I: Iceberg Lettuce Wedge Salad

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    Taste of Home

    A wedge salad gets the creamy treatment when topped with blue cheese dressing. Keep the dressing as a topper, or make it a dip for Buffalo wings. —Jenn Smith, East Providence, Rhode Island

    J: Jell-O Salad

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    Plump blueberries and a fluffy topping star in this pretty, refreshing salad that was my mother's recipe. It was served at every holiday and celebration, and now my grandchildren look forward to sampling it at holidays. —Sharon Hoefert, Greendale, Wisconsin

    K: Kuchen

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    Taste of Home

    Back where I grew up in Wisconsin, people have been baking this German treat for generations. We love it for breakfast or as a special dessert. It's no fuss to fix and impressive to serve. —Virginia Arndt, Sequim, Washington

    L: Lima Beans

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    A yearly Lima Bean Festival in nearby West Cape May honors the many growers there and showcases different recipes using their crops. This comforting chowder was a contest winner at the festival several years ago. —Kathleen Olsack, North Cape May, New Jersey

    M: Meatloaf

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    Mom made the best meat loaf, and now I do too. When I first met my husband, he wasn't a meat loaf guy, but this recipe won him over. —Michelle Beran, Claflin, Kansas

    N: New England Clam Chowder

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    This is the best New England clam chowder recipe, ever! In the Pacific Northwest, we dig our own razor clams and I grind them for the chowder. Since these aren't readily available, the canned clams are perfectly acceptable. —Sandy Larson, Port Angeles, Washington

    O: Oatmeal Dinner Rolls

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    Taste of Home

    These fluffy rolls go perfectly with any meal. They have a delicious homemade flavor that's irresistible. I like them because they're not hard to make and they bake up nice and high. —Patricia Staudt, Marble Rock, Iowa

    P: Pound Cake

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    Taste of Home

    Because I'm our town's postmaster, I can bake only in my spare time. I especially enjoy making desserts such as this one. It tastes amazing as is, or tuck it under ice cream and chocolate syrup like a hot fudge sundae! —Karen Conrad, East Troy, Wisconsin

    Q: Quiche

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    I served this crustless quiche at a church lunch, and I had to laugh when one guy told me how much he disliked vegetables. Many people were surprised by how much they loved this veggie-filled quiche recipe—and he was one of them! —Melinda Calverley, Janesville, Wisconsin

    R: Rice Pudding

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    Taste of Home

    This comforting dessert is a wonderful way to end any meal. As a girl, I always waited eagerly for the first heavenly bite. Today, my husband likes to top his with a scoop of ice cream. —Sandra Melnychenko, Grandview, Manitoba

    S: Salisbury Steak

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    This hearty main dish is a favorite at our house. It really warms you up. —Kim Kidd, New Freedom, Pennsylvania

    T: Tapioca

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    My family loves traditional tapioca, but I don’t always have time to make it. So I came up with this simple recipe that lets us enjoy one of our favorites without all the hands-on time. —Ruth Peters, Bel Air, Maryland

    U: Upside-Down Cake

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    Taste of Home

    I often bake this beautiful cake in my large cast-iron skillet and turn it out onto a pizza pan. —Jennifer Sergesketter, Newburgh, Indiana

    V: Vegetable Stew

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    Come home to warm comfort food! This vegetable beef stew is based on my mom’s wonderful recipe, but I adjusted it for the slow cooker. Add a sprinkle of Parmesan to each bowl for a nice finishing touch. —Marcella West, Washburn, Illinois

    W: Waldorf Salad

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    Taste of Home

    Cranberries grow in the coastal area about 50 miles from our home. When they become available, I always make this creamy salad. —Faye Huff, Longview, Washington

    X: IceboX Pie

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    You will detect a definite lemonade flavor in this refreshing lemon icebox pie. High and fluffy, this dessert has a creamy smooth consistency that we really appreciate. It's the dessert that came to mind immediately when I put together my favorite summer meal. —Cheryl Wilt, Eglon, West Virginia

    Y: Yorkshire Pudding

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    This easy recipe is a cross between traditional Yorkshire pudding and popovers. It makes a perfect complement to prime rib. We also like it with beef stew and steak. Make more than you need, because everyone loves it. —Emily Chaney, Blue Hill, Maine

    Z: Zucchini Pie

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    Taste of Home

    We have a lot of zucchini on hand when it’s in season. This is a good and different way to use large amounts. —Lucia Johnson, Massena, New York

    Originally Published: September 13, 2018

    Our Most Popular Vintage Recipes from A to Z (28)

    Emily Racette Parulski

    Emily has spent the last decade writing and editing food and lifestyle content. As a senior editor at Taste of Home, she leads the newsletter team sharing delicious recipes and helpful cooking tips to more than 2 million loyal email subscribers. Since joining TMB seven years ago as an associate editor, she has worked on special interest publications, launched TMB’s first cross-branded newsletter, supported the launch of the brand's affiliate strategy, orchestrated holiday countdowns, participated in taste tests and was selected for a task force to enhance the Taste of Home community. Emily was first mentioned by name in Taste of Home magazine in 1994, when her mother won a contest.When she’s not editing, Emily can be found in her kitchen baking something sweet, taking a wine class with her husband, or making lasagnas for neighbors through Lasagna Love.

    Our Most Popular Vintage Recipes from A to Z (2024)

    FAQs

    What food was popular in the 1970s? ›

    18 retro dishes from your childhood
    • Bombe Alaska. Nothing screams the 70s quite like sponge, ice cream and meringue drenched in rum and set on fire, right? ...
    • Vol-au-vents. ...
    • Mini ham and pineapple pizzas. ...
    • Battenberg cake. ...
    • Scotch eggs. ...
    • Cheese fondue. ...
    • Crepes Suzette. ...
    • Apricot chicken.

    What food was popular in 1963? ›

    Chicken and dumplings, pot roast, casseroles, fried chicken and biscuits were just a few of readers' favorite dishes that are as popular now as they were in 1963, but few of us are killing the chickens we eat.

    What was the most popular food in the 30s? ›

    From frozen foods to Jell-O molds, the 1930s and 40s saw a huge upsurge in convenience foods. Building on the popularity of brands like Wonder Bread, Kool-Aid, Velveeta Cheese, and Hostess Cakes, American supermarkets stocked up on mass-produced items.

    What food was popular in the 50s and 60s? ›

    Popular packaged foods included Kellogg's Frosted Flakes and Special K cereals, General Mills' Trix and Cocoa Puffs cereals, Star-Kist Tuna, Minute Rice, Eggo Waffles, Pepperidge Farm Cookies, Ruffles potato chips, Rice-A-Roni, Ramen Noodles, and Haagen-Dazs Ice Cream.

    What did people eat for dinner in 1969? ›

    Pigs in a blanket, Swedish meatballs, shrimp co*cktail, vegetables with green goddess dip — and pineapple upside down cake or the popular bundt “Tunnel of Fudge Cake,” which won the Pillsbury Bake-Off in 1966. Drinks: According to mixologists, this was a strange time for co*cktails.

    What was the most popular food in 1973? ›

    1973: Fondue

    As Lovegren wrote in Fashionable Food, "Foreign, sophisticated, easy, and fun, fondue was served in a gleaming pot, which in its streamlined beauty bristling with long-handled dipping forks resembled nothing so much as the space-age satellites circling Earth's atmosphere."

    What did hippies eat in the 70s? ›

    The cuisine that the counterculture took to in the late 1960s, and then helped introduce to the mainstream in the 1970s, embraced whole grains and legumes; organic, fresh vegetables; soy foods like tofu and tempeh; nutrition-boosters like wheat germ and sprouted grains; and flavors from Eastern European, Asian, and ...

    What was the most popular food in the 1980s? ›

    Inspired by a thread in our Talk community, here's a list of ten iconic '80s foods and some corresponding commercials.
    • Tab Cola.
    • Artificially Flavored Fruit Snacks. ...
    • Equal. ...
    • Orange Julius. ...
    • Tri-Color Pasta Salad. ...
    • Cool Ranch Doritos. ...
    • The California Raisins. ...
    • Jawbreakers. ...

    What food was invented in 1975? ›

    was invented in 1975 in Santa Fe.

    What was the most popular food in 1965? ›

    1965: Onion Dip

    The advent of packaged soup mixes made easy, entertaining-friendly dips a popular '60s go-to.

    What food came out in 1974? ›

    Throwback Thursday: 5 Fun Food Ads From 1974
    • Kraft Singles. Is there anything more classically American than a grilled cheese sandwich? ...
    • Ragu Spaghetti Sauce. There are some timeless staples, and spaghetti sauce is no exception. ...
    • Kraft Squeez-A-Snak Cheese. ...
    • Kraft Real Mayonnaise. ...
    • Kraft Grated Parmesan Cheese.
    Feb 20, 2014

    What was peoples favorite food in 1920? ›

    Recipes for Chicken and Rice with Sauce; Baked Rice Milanaise; Prosperity Sandwich; Ice Box Cake; and a Sidecar.

    What was the most common food in the 1800? ›

    Pork and turkey were widely eaten and considered staples among Americans, and alcohol consumption dominated the beverages throughout the country.

    What was junk food in the 1960s? ›

    Pringles, Pop-Tarts, Doritos, Starburst, Chips Ahoy!, Gatorade, Sprite, and Ruffles all debuted during the decade, and fast food came into its own with McDonald's. New kid-friendly (read: super-sugary) breakfast cereals abounded, like Froot Loops, Honeycomb, Cap'n Crunch, and Lucky Charms.

    What was swinging sixties party food? ›

    Popular party snacks were: chunks of pineapple and cheddar cheese on co*cktail sticks stuck all over a grapefruit. And milk shakes with balls of different pastel-coloured ice creams. Or you could make Jelly in pretty shaped moulds with different layers of tinned fruit in them.

    What was iconic in the 60s? ›

    Arguably the most iconic product of the troubled 1960s was the counterculture movement and the birth of hippie culture. Rejecting prevailing social norms related to family and relationships, the hippies were particularly vocal about social injustice and political strife.

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