Favourite foods of your grandparents’ generation
Grand dishes

Crêpes Suzette

Crêpes Suzette is the sort of dessert you would order in a fancy restaurant, served table-side by a white-jacketed waiter with nimble wrists and perfect pancake-tossing skills. Or the flaming French import might have been served by dinner party hosts really looking to impress their guests (and ideally a fire extinguisher nearby). Find out more about it and try our recipe.
Beef Wellington

Some dishes just seem to endure, or at least dip in and out of fashion, and this pastry-encased hunk of beef is one of those – perhaps because it packs in so much deliciously rich flavour, or perhaps because it’s guaranteed to impress, if you get it right. The secret, as regular MasterChef viewers may know, is to wrap the beef in a thin pancake to prevent soggy pastry.
Tuna noodle casserole

Chiffon cake

Prawn cocktail

Was it even a dinner party if you didn’t start off with some shellfish swimming in pink sauce? This fishy dishy of defrosted prawns in Marie Rose sauce became a starter staple in the mid-1950s and continued its reign through the 1970s, playing a starring role at many an awkward dinner party. Read more about this enduring retro classic here.
Spaghetti casserole

The spaghetti casserole became popular in the 1950s as a budget dish and a tasty way to use up any veg, meat and sauces. Savvy home cooks added tomato sauce or soup and leftovers to a dish with spaghetti, buried it under grated cheese, and baked. Sounds like the perfect comfort food to us.
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Meat and potato patties

Key lime pie

Cheez Whiz canapés

Arctic roll

Bananas Foster

Chicken in a basket

Pineapple upside-down cake

Boeuf bourguignon

Iconic, pioneering celebrity chef Julia Child popularised this Burgundian peasant dish among US and UK chefs in the early 1960s, via her cookbooks and TV show The French Chef. The stew remains a wintry classic, packed with rich, heartwarming flavours of beef, root veg and wine-rich sauce.
Spam ‘n’ pancakes

Coronation chicken

Slapped in a sandwich or dolloped on a jacket spud, this creamy, curried chicken concoction was created for Queen Elizabeth II’s 1953 coronation banquet. It isn’t as ubiquitous as it once was, but you’ll still see it in some old-school cafés and sandwich shops, and we think there’s something comfortingly nostalgic about it. Frankly, if it’s good enough for the Queen...
Jell-O salads

Crown jewel dessert

Tunnel of fudge cake

Lord Woolton pie

Another tasty, carb-loaded treat to emerge from the Second World War, this 1940s favourite – sometimes simply called Woolton pie – was named after the British Minister for Food, and is basically just lots of veg and oatmeal encased in pastry. It was popular when rationing meant meat was scarce, and usually contained turnips, carrots, potatoes, swede and cauliflower. It was such an icon of wartime sustenance, in fact, that it was referred to as “weapon of mass nutrition” against the Nazis.
Taco salad

This crunchy centrepiece dish became popular in the late 1960s, after California-based Sunset magazine published a much-copied recipe. Ingredients like minced beef, shredded chicken, lettuce, tomatoes, grated cheese and sour cream went into this not-so-healthy salad, best served in an edible bowl made from a crisped tortilla. There’s nothing authentically Mexican about this, of course, but it did shake up dinnertime.
Pretty pickle tower

We’re not sure exactly what inspired this pickle tree, whose recipe was published in the December 1967 issue of Chatelaine magazine. But it must be some form of crazy genius. Consisting of a wedge of cheese studded with pickled onions and pickle slices on cocktail sticks, this is effectively a table decoration you can actually eat.
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Potato and hot dog salad

Liver loaf

It could easily be mistaken for a loaf of bread, but this pâté-like slicer won’t hold up so well in the toaster. It usually consisted of a mix of corned beef, pork, bacon and onions, or whatever was available, and was usually eaten sliced with vegetables and potatoes or sandwiched in a bun. Like so many dishes born in the 1940s and 1950s, it was a convenient and relatively cheap way for home cooks to whip up a nutritious dinner.
Plum Charlotte

Egg salad

Ambrosia salad

It looks like a bowl of Turkish delight and it’s just as sweet. But this 1950s dessert staple is actually fruit salad tossed with coconut, marshmallows and whipped cream. It could be made with tinned fruit and typically contained chunks of pineapple, orange segments and maraschino cherries (themselves a retro classic).
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Jellied chicken

Meatloaf

American-style meatloaf evolved from scrapple, a mix of pork and cornmeal dating back to the 1800s. But it became particularly popular during the 1940s as a way to use minced meats like beef that were cheaper – and stretched further – than steaks and whole joints. It still makes regular appearances at family dinners, best served sliced, smothered with gravy and accompanied by creamy mashed potato.
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