Food, Tea Time, Meals in the 1950s (2024)

None of this toast and coffee type breakfasts! Breakfast was viewed as the meal to set you up for the day so was, at the very least, porridge, followed by bacon, eggs and fried bread, then toast and home-made marmalade, and lots of milky tea.

As children it was also when we had our vitamin tablets - Haliborange and Adexolin capsules.

School diners were interesting. Communal tables of 8 children who were expected to have good manners and be able to serve themselves from the bowls and tins brought to each table. Many days the main meal was a stew of gristly meat or a pastry pie with the grisly meat hidden underneath. A lot of mashed potato - I cannot remember chips ever being served - and watery cabbage and swede.

Puddings were the nightmare of childhood - yellow semolina, rice pudding with a swirl of jam and the awful slimeyness of tapioca; jam roly-poly and very thick custard. Mum used to make a macaroni pudding where the pasta element swam around in lots of boiled milk. She was not a great cook! We used to tease her that her pastry would serve to sole shoes as she energetically bashed it out with her wooden-handled rolling pin!

But tea-time was a small meal by comparison with lunch, which was served as the main meal of the day. We would come back from school to have, at about 5 o'clock, home-made bread, butter and jam and home-made sponge cake.

Sunday tea was more special. Then it would be ham or a salmon salad, with the ham or salmon coming out of a tin. There would be tinned fruit - usually peaches, mandarin oranges or fruit salad and evaporated milk. In summer time, if the ice-cream van came at an appropriate time. We might have an ice-cream block and wafers for 'afters'.

We rarely drank coffee. I can remember the Rington's Tea man bringing tea to the house.

Food was bought much more on a daily basis. The Co-op was close by, and in the 50s there was a separate grocery, Greengrocery and Butchery shop. Our store number was 94249 - remembered to this day.

Fish was still eaten on Fridays, so there was a fish shop in a lock-up behind the main shops. The wet fish was wrapped up in newspaper to carry home. Probably why most shopping bags were net bags. The bakery sold Hovis bread and this was also where you bought fizzy drinks - lemonade, ice-cream soda, Vimto and Iron brew.

I don't remember 'snacks' being readily available - the height of modernity was Jacob's Cream Crackers. Biscuits could be bought loose from tins, along with the broken biscuit selection. Fig Rolls, Ginger Snaps, Rich Tea, Marie, Digestives. Sugar came loose in blue sugar bags, butter was cut from a block as was cheese and bacon was sliced to order.

There wasn't a huge variety of fruit and vegetables available at any one time - much more seasonal. Exotic fruits just weren't there … and it was still a pleasant treat to find an orange on the toe of the Christmas stocking, along with a handful of Brazil nuts, hazelnuts and almonds - all virtually impossible to crack without everything shattering into hundreds of pieces.

Dorne Coggins

Food, Tea Time, Meals in the 1950s (2024)

FAQs

What food to serve at a 50s party? ›

From tea sandwiches and deviled eggs to meatballs and pigs in a blanket, the co*cktail hour foods of the 1950s were simple to make, but still quite delicious.

Did people eat healthier in the 1950s? ›

Women were naturally more active as 'helpful' modern technology hadn't kicked in quite yet and ongoing rationing meant people were eating plainer food and smaller portions. Fewer refined carbs and lower-sugar fruits meant women consumed on average 400 calories fewer a day than we do now.

What was a typical meal in the 1960s? ›

Dinner: American palates became more sophisticated thanks to Julia Child, but many 60's meals were still dominated by convenience foods like this terrifying olive,celery and cheese jello salad. Buffet dinners of beef stroganoff, green beans amandine and flaming cherries jubilee were popular.

What did kids eat for lunch in the 1950s? ›

School lunches in the 50s were pretty much like the meat and two veg in diners at the time. There was only one lunch, no choice. Typically it would be a ham slice with pineapple, mashed potatoes and gravy amd green beans. Or turkey and dressing or Salisbury steak.

What food was served at the 1950s picnic? ›

Often tinned hams, salads, breads and dessert would be served in a field. However, for an easier alternative make sandwiches and wrap them in greaseproof paper. Don't forget the hard boiled eggs as no picnic would be a picnic without one! Tea and lemonade.

What did people snack on in the 50s? ›

However, packaged snacks were not about to concede to the fast food trend. Peanut M&Ms, Atomic Fireballs, Certs Mints, Hot Tamales, PEZ candy, Pixy Stix, Smarties Candy Necklaces and Marshmallow Peeps were all candies developed during this decade.

What were popular breakfast foods in the 50s? ›

Breakfast was viewed as the meal to set you up for the day so was, at the very least, porridge, followed by bacon, eggs and fried bread, then toast and home-made marmalade, and lots of milky tea. As children it was also when we had our vitamin tablets - Haliborange and Adexolin capsules.

What candy was popular in the 1950s? ›

Peeps. This candy just screams the 1950s! Peeps candy is composed of luscious-tasting marshmallow candy depicting some very sweet-looking chicks. Peeps' sweet squishiness came to warm our hearts in 1953.

What was the most popular food in 1955? ›

Here's the most popular food the year you were born:
  • 1930s: Creamed Chipped Beef. The Great Depression meant dinner could be pretty lean. ...
  • 1940s: Meat Loaf. ...
  • 1950: Tuna Casserole. ...
  • 1951: Baked Alaska. ...
  • 1952: Salisbury Steak. ...
  • 1953: Chicken Tetrazzini. ...
  • 1954: Deviled Eggs. ...
  • 1955: Green Bean Casserole.
Aug 31, 2017

What are the 4 food groups in 1950? ›

In the 1950s, the USDA developed the Daily Food Guide, which focused on 4 main food groups (milk, meat, vegetables and fruit, and bread and cereal) and introduced serving sizes (Figure 2) (12).

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