The "unusual" snacks of the Great Depression (2024)

Desperation pie, apple porcupines, and other dishes of the 1930s

Hello, Snackers. We’re heading back in time today to the USA of the 1930s for some snacks that reflect the era in different ways.

Also, yes, this is the Monday post and it’s publishing on Tuesday because … well, yesterday was a holiday in the USA (Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day) and also my kids are still home and it’s still cold and everything seems to take 20 times longer than anticipated.

Let’s snack.

The "unusual" snacks of the Great Depression (1)

The time

The 1930s! Here’s where I started; you can play along and find other stories if you have a Newspapers.com account. You can also browse The Food Timeline for free.

The story

Here are some snacks that were developed or popularized in the 1930s, according the The Food Timeline: cheese puffs, Fritos, Marshmallow Sandwich cookies, chocolate-covered pretzels (chocolate-covered potato chips date to the 1920s), Ritz crackers, SPAM, and Cho Cho ice cream treats. (Two other essentials that began in the 1930s: milk sold by the gallon and sliced bread.) That’s all fascinating and perhaps I’ll dig into some of those snacks another time, but I was curious what less-familiar snacks were out there during the Great Depression.

The first things that came up—a jarring number of times, honestly—were reports of people eating bits of metal (bike parts, screws, anything) and, in one case, soap and shoe polish. That’s all, uh, noteworthy, but presumably stems from issues far beyond the hunger and malnourishment of the era, so we’ll move on.

In 1935, the USA’s poverty rate was 64.9 percent, which is just astonishingly, heartbreakingly high (the rate is currently around 13.4 percent) and forced much improvisation. For many Americans, foods that might have been considered a snack in other times became the entire meal for the day, as food historians Andrew Coe and Jane Ziegelman document in their 2016 book A Square Meal: A Culinary History of the Great Depression:

For some [unemployed young women], hunger was a supremely private affliction. Rather than joining the [bread] lines, they banished themselves to shared apartments and boardinghouses and stayed put, “living on a cracker a day” as long as their rent held out.

The book documents “the ways the nation coped with suddenly not being the land of plenty,” including the dishes Americans created with the ingredients available, which was often not very many things at all and also not many things that typically go together. For example:

Looking back at the food coverage in newspapers of the era, it’s immediately apparent that many ingredients once readily available are in much shorter supply, and household budgets aren’t stretching as far as the once did—but you don’t get the impression that so many Americans are hurting so much. Instead, at least in these pages of the paper, you get rosier picture. Here, the meal-planning was aspirational (as it continues to be in food media today, although the goals now tend to be less about budget and more about the swagger that comes from sharing something that looks effortlessly amazing on Instagram).

In 1935, right in the heart of the Depression, an upbeat story ran in newspapers around the USA

The "unusual" snacks of the Great Depression (3)

Those unusual snacks included:

  • Apple and salami porcupines, which involved taking small cubes of salami and onion, impaling them on toothpicks, and sticking them into an apple. An attractive passed appetizer, or so we’re told.

  • Sardine pastries, a variation on pigs in a blanket but with, you know, sardines instead of hot dogs.

  • Ham and asparagus rolls, which start with the asparagus being soaked in French dressing for ten minutes. Then you roll them up inside pieces of ham and served with mayonnaise (obviously).

  • Celery and crabmeat sticks, a sort of fancy ants-on-a-long, with crab standing in for peanut butter (and no raisins, thankfully).

  • Baconized Camembert spread, which is literally just crispy bacon chopped finely and mixed into Camembert and spread on crackers. (I might try this one.)

What’s especially interesting, I think, is that some of the foods of hardship have made a comeback, including desperation pie, which was (at least back in 2015) the signature dessert for one James Beard Award-winning chef, while the party foods of the more well-off citizens have faded. Often, there’s an unfortunate imbalance to what foods (or buildings or music or any other aspect of culture) gets preserved in the long-term collective memory. Too often, it’s the tales of the rich and privileged that take precedence and get repeated and remembered. Here, though, is an example of something else. Ham (in various formats) plus asparagus is hardly an unfamiliar combo, but I’ve never seen it presented as something that speaks to a particular era; it’s a dish not remembered in the context of mythology. Meanwhile, I’ve never heard of apple and salami porcupines at all, and I sincerely doubt they’re on any restaurant menus today. And that’s just fine.

Will you like these snacks?

Probably! Maybe? Honestly, hard to say.

Random find

It’s always jarring to look through an old newspaper from your hometown and see a mention of a pretty darn big event that you’ve never heard of. That “Unusual Snacks for Appreciative Guests” story also ran in the Minneapolis Tribune, on the same page as this story (below) about city workers protesting at the Municipal Building (City Hall) and being forced away with tear gas bombs. The city also quickly allocated funding to add 200 new police officers to the force. It’s possible some of this may seem familiar to observant readers!

The "unusual" snacks of the Great Depression (4)
The "unusual" snacks of the Great Depression (2024)

FAQs

What unusual dessert became popular during the Great Depression? ›

Depression cake is a type of cake that was commonly made during the Great Depression. The ingredients include little or no milk, sugar, butter, or eggs, because the ingredients were then either expensive or hard to obtain.

What food did they eat in the Great Depression? ›

Celery soup mixed with tuna fish and mashed potatoes. A salad of corned beef, gelatin and canned peas. Baked onion stuffed with peanut butter. Those are just some of the recipes Americans turned to during the Great Depression, when many families struggled to eat enough nutritious food.

What did hobos eat during the Great Depression? ›

Perhaps one hobo acquired a few carrots from a charitable person, while another stole an onion off a box car, while another had a few potatoes from a farm he worked on briefly… From this concoction, a “hobo stew,” also known as “Mulligan/Mulligatawney stew” was born and became the traditional food of the hobo.

What popular snack was invented in the 1930s? ›

The story. Here are some snacks that were developed or popularized in the 1930s, according the The Food Timeline: cheese puffs, Fritos, Marshmallow Sandwich cookies, chocolate-covered pretzels (chocolate-covered potato chips date to the 1920s), Ritz crackers, SPAM, and Cho Cho ice cream treats.

What was depression cake made of? ›

This depression era cake is made with the usual chocolate cake suspects like flour, sugar, and cocoa minus the typical rich ingredients like eggs and butter which were harder to come by in those days.

What were the appetizers in the 1930s? ›

  • SHRIMP FILLED DEVILED EGGS. Cut peeled eggs lengthwise into halves. ...
  • CRAB MEAT DIP. ...
  • SPINACH ARTICHOKE 3-CHEESE DIP. ...
  • BACON WRAPPED SCALLOPS. ...
  • SPINACH DIP. ...
  • EASY HOT CRAB DIP. ...
  • MARINATED GARLIC SHRIMP. ...
  • SALMON APPETIZERS.

What did the homeless eat in the Great Depression? ›

Hoover Stew

The ingredient list consists of macaroni noodles, hot dogs, corn, and canned tomatoes. The dish received its name after being common within homeless shelters or shantytowns, nicknamed Hoovervilles. Hoovervilles got their name from the president at the time of the Great Depression, Herbert Hoover.

What is the poor man's meal? ›

Potatoes were also inexpensive and used extensively. Some meals even used both. One of these meals was called the Poor Man's Meal. It combined potatoes, onions, and hot dogs into one hearty, inexpensive dish, which was perfect for the hard times people had fallen on.

What did African Americans eat during the Great Depression? ›

But back in the 1930s, inexpensive parcels of meat such as beef necks or pork liver would have been part of the frugal fare for African-Americans, especially in Chicago with its many stockyards. And, oh yes, there was chicken - as in chicken feet, he said. Both beans and greens of various descriptions were popular.

What did dogs eat in the Great Depression? ›

Kibble + canned dog foods were introduced made out of dehydrated meat and grain mill scraps. Great Depression (30's - 40's): Canned pet food became 90% of the pet food market. WWII (1939-45): “Non-essential” pet food was not a priority during wartime and rationing.

How did poor people get food during the Great Depression? ›

Not only was access to food limited by rationing, many people had to turn to soup kitchens, which are places where people can go and get a free meal, or food stamps, which are booklets of stamps that could be used to buy food, cleaning supplies, and other necessities, to get enough food to feed their families.

What did people drink during the Great Depression? ›

Roosevelt (1882–1945) changed the Volstead Act (the law enforcing the Eighteenth Amendment) to allow the sale of beer. By December 5, 1933, Prohibition ended. The manufacture, sale, and consumption of all alcohol was again legal. The martini, a co*cktail made with gin, became a popular and legal beverage.

What candy was used in the Great Depression? ›

With the connection to a sweet treat, maybe Bonnie and Clyde stole other popular candies of the time such as candy buttons, Bonomo Turkish Taffy, Nik-L-Nips, Yum Yum Marshmallow Candy Cones, Tootsie Pops, or the high end Choward's Violet Mints.

What is the oldest snack? ›

Interestingly, the oldest snack food discovered was Popcorn. It is over 7000 years old and originated in Peru and Mexico. Archaeological research found the oldest maize husk that was said to be the evidence of popcorn preparation by ancient indigenous peoples.

What candy was made in 1930? ›

CANDY BUTTONS

These sweet and sugary candies from the 1930s will surely stir up childhood memories. Take a stroll down memory lane with this retro Candy Button Candies. This unique retro candy is small buttons of candy stuck to a long sheet of paper.

What things were popular during the Great Depression? ›

Radio programs, music, dancing and dance marathons, and cinema were popular forms of entertainment during the Great Depression. Many people affected by the economic downturn sought inexpensive ways to pass the time and distract themselves from the challenging circ*mstances.

What classic toy was created as a result of the Great Depression? ›

The company was named "Lego" in 1934, a contraction from the Danish phrase "leg godt", meaning "play well". Coincidentally, 'lego' means 'I put together' in Latin. During the Great Depression, Christiansen began producing miniature versions of his products as design aids, which eventually inspired him to produce toys.

What is the most popular dessert of all time? ›

1. Pie. Pie earns a spot on the top of everyone's list of popular desserts merely for its delicious versatility. From fruit pies to cream pies, from seasonal favorites like pumpkin to year-round standards like apple, what's not to love?

What desserts did they eat in the 1800s? ›

Ready, Set, Bake: Recipes from the 18th and 19th Century
  • Queen Cakes – (Rundell, 1822)
  • To make Ratafia-Cakes – (Kettilby, 1719)
  • Excellent Rolls – (Rundell, 1822)
  • The best Orange-Pudding that ever was tasted – (Kettilby, 1719)
  • Rasberry Tart – (Henderson, c.1800)
  • Rich Puff Paste – (Rundell, 1822)
Aug 24, 2016

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