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Banner: Bon Appétit! - A Celebration of Canadian Cookbooks
Banner: Bon Appétit!
IntroductionSearch CookbooksEducational Resources
Canada's First CooksThe Pioneer KitchenRevolutions In The KitchenThe Culture Of Cooking

The Culture of Cooking


Poster from the First World War era with an illustration of an older woman standing at a table covered with vegetables and jars, encouraging a young woman to preserve foods. The caption reads WASTE NOT - WANT NOT. PREPARE FOR WINTER. SAVE PERISHABLE FOODS BY PRESERVING NOW. Source

 

Wartime poster, 1914-1918


Cover of a ration book issued To Carol J, Wood, of Woodroffe, Ontario Source

 

Unumbered page of ration book, with numbered ration stamps Source

 

Unumbered page of ration book listing the responsibilities of ration-book holders Source

A ration book

Food rationing was introduced in Canada on January 24, 1942, as part of the war effort. Its purpose was to limit the use of imported food and to free up supplies for the military and for the allies. First sugar was rationed, then coffee, tea and butter. Everyone was issued a ration book, as well as tokens. Rationing continued, to some degree, until 1947.

Cover of cookbook, KATE AITKEN'S CANADIAN COOK BOOK Source

 

Title page of cookbook, KATE AITKEN'S CANADIAN COOK BOOK Source

 

Page 144 of cookbook, KATE AITKEN'S CANADIAN COOK BOOK, with recipes for Hamburger Squares and Beef Hamburger Pie Source

 

Page 145 of cookbook, KATE AITKEN'S CANADIAN COOK BOOK, with recipes for Hamburger Loaf, Broiled Hamburgers and Baked Beef Heart Source

Kate Aitken. Kate Aitken's Canadian Cook Book. Montréal: Standard, 1945

During the war years of the 1940s, inexpensive foods became the mainstay of many households. Ground beef was cheap and adaptable, and heart and tongue were common ingredients. Throughout the next two decades, one of Canada's most influential cooks was Kate Aitken. She seemed to be everywhere -- on the radio, in newspapers, directing cooking schools in both Canada and the United States, and advising the government on good nutrition.

Cover of cookbook, MARIE NIGHTINGALE'S FAVOURITE RECIPES, with a photograph of Marie Nightingale mixing a cake Source

 

Marie Nightingale. Marie Nightingale's Favourite Recipes. Halifax: Nimbus, 1993

"The wonderful sameness of my grandmother's meals -- roast chicken on Sundays, shepherds' pie on Mondays, fish on Fridays, baked beans on Saturdays -- was a reflection of her era" (p. vi). This collection recalls the comfort foods of the 1950s and 1960s, including recipes for favourites such as tuna casserole, banana bread, Scottish shortbread, banana cream pie and Molded Emerald Salad (jellied salads were very popular at the time).


IntroductionCanada's First CooksThe Pioneer KitchenRevolutions In The KitchenThe Culture Of Cooking
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