Items from Grandma's kitchen does anyone else remember these
#1
Posted 03 November 2009 - 10:02 AM
tracey
Maxine
Avoid cutting yourself while slicing vegetables by getting someone else to hold them while you chop away.
"It is the government's fault, they've eaten everything."
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#2
Posted 03 November 2009 - 10:21 AM
Grandma's kitchen? That's a relative term. My grandmother's kitchen never imagined such modern day, newfangled conveniences as disposable coffee cups.
#5
Posted 03 November 2009 - 12:09 PM
Don't think Granny would ever have deigned to drink from such a cup - but they were all the rage in the church kitchen as I recall.
#6
Posted 03 November 2009 - 04:38 PM
Things I have from my grandmothers' kitchens are a Griswold cast iron skillet, a hammered Club Aluminum dutch oven, an aluminum hand-cranked grinder that every Jewish woman of their generation had for making chopped liver, a set of dishes, some crystal stemware, a silver-plated tray, a set of silverware, a silver fish knife and fork so ornate that they would not be out of place as implements for keeping one's place when reading the torah, a recipe box from one grandmother and a few assorted recipes from the other.
#8
Posted 04 November 2009 - 01:55 PM
rooftop1000, on 03 November 2009 - 11:02 AM, said:
tracey
I don't remember those from my grandmother's kitchen. My granny served coffee and hot chocolate from "Franciscan" cups.
I am, however quite familiar with those cups. I saw them not that long ago in the waiting room while getting my new tires installed.
#9
Posted 04 November 2009 - 02:42 PM
Neither of *my* grandmothers wouldn't have had any such thing as the OP mentioned in her kitchen. They all drank their South Indian Filter Coffee from tumbler-dabara, like so: http://blogpourri.bl...ra-coffee.html. You never touched the tumbler or dabara to your lips, drank "from up", pouring the coffee into a stream straight down your gullet, from about 3 inches above your mouth, glug, glug glug goes your throat.
Still common up to my parents' generation, but a lost art in my Fourbucks swilling, early-morning hurrying, generation.
#10
Posted 04 November 2009 - 06:08 PM
#11
Posted 04 November 2009 - 07:03 PM
#12
Posted 04 November 2009 - 07:51 PM
We had a 4-pot commercial Bunn coffee maker and went through several pots a day.
I don't know how many of the plastic cup holders we had but there were always three or four "sleeves" of the cone-shaped liners in the cabinet.
I remember them mostly from various parties where the cups were used as caps, ear caps, shoulder "pads" (we had a Trekkie who could do some amazing things with office supplies) and one of the doctors with them taped to his chest doing one of the numbers from South Pacific.
Brings back great memories.
In my kitchen and pantry there is so much stuff inherited from my grandma that I can't begin to enumerate it all, from tiny gadgets to the big electric roaster! And I have several of the large percolators that were used for coffee and other hot beverages. I grew up in a very large, extended family and my grandma needed volume.
Certainly there were never any paper cups in my grandma's kitchen. In fact there were only a few mugs, used by some of the men at breakfast, otherwise there were cups with saucers, even in the kitchen. The mugs certainly never appeared in the dining room or even outside for picnics.
#13
Posted 04 November 2009 - 07:59 PM

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