#I've looked to Depressing and WWII cooking in the past for trying to feed myself in these lean times
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I love looking up the histories and backgrounds of poverty food, mostly past but sometimes present. Seaweed/channel wrack during the Irish Famine, acorn flour in North America both in Native communities and by European occupiers. Wartime "roof rabbits" (depressing, don't look up if you're sensitive about pet death). Depression-era and WWII rationing as a whole topic in and of itself. Various nuts around the world that are otherwise shunned in times of plenty because of the association with Bad Times. And of course the history of lobster going from being considered water insects in attitude to an expensive gourmet cuisine.
The one time I ever got pissed off by this was watching a Townsends video where he made colonial-era rice bread, because rice was cheaper than wheat at times. Anyone who's forced to be gluten free will tear our hair out at that statement, because most of us have to forgo bread entirely because rice bread and other gluten free bread at this point is 4 times more expensive than white wheat bread and you only get like a third of the portion in both size of the loaf and the amount of slices within (this has only gone up even more with the corporate price gouging of regular food).
#i used to say 3 times the cost for a third of the portion but now it's more than that#heck it's prolly shrunk with the rising cost too. i know gluten free pizza has definitely gotten smaller and thinner#and they use that as an obscene selling point! 'new thinner crust!'#arrgh#quote#shrinkflation#unquote#anyway#food#history of food#poverty food#it's me i'm cooking poverty food and i def need my vitamins and minerals#it's white rice and manwich#I've looked to Depressing and WWII cooking in the past for trying to feed myself in these lean times#but sometimes the recipes are irrevocably gluteny and gf flours won't work#but i am learning to adapt by researching and tentatively experimenting#like replacing one egg with one-fourth cup applesauce. that works even with gluten free baking#i need to learn food science so i can figure out what substitutions work with gluten free flours without risking ingredient waste
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