91-year-old chops up potatoes and hot dogs to share recipe from 1930 (2024)

The video was filmed in 2007 and Clara, sadly, passed away in 2013, but her YouTube Channel on Great Depression cooking remains a fascinating and popular source for recipes (and stories!) from hard times.

A sprightly 91-years-old when it was filmed, her video on making the “Poorman’s Meal” has now been enhanced and reposted – and it has regained millions of viewers in just a year!

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Depression-era cooking

As you can imagine, people needed to get pretty creative during the Great Depression when it came to making meals in a time of scarcity.

Not only was unemployment high (and therefore income low – or nothing at all), food shortages around the country left many without meat, milk, and even some pantry staples.

Anyone who has been suffering as a result of the pandemic and the economic downturn it exacerbated understands all too well.

In fact:

“During the height of the pandemic, The New York Times reported empty shelves across the country and the inability of grocers to keep staple pantry items and fresh produce in stock. Essentials such as beans, rice, pasta, and peanut butter became hot commodities. Hot dog sales also spiked. Thanks to modern food shortages — and farmers being forced to destroy food — pared-down cooking habits are once again being embraced. Home cooks are turning to Depression-era foods made with affordable and shelf-stable ingredients to feed the whole family.”

The Poorman’s Meal

Depression-era cooks had no qualms about calling some of their dishes exactly what they were (or what they felt like while making them), hence the very real name “The Poorman’s Meal.”

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Clara even shares that her family was so poor during this time that she had to quit high school because she couldn’t afford socks! (Just tell your teens to remember that every time they slip on flip-flops and head off to class.)

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The meal consists of hearty foods that were easy to come by at the time – at least for Clara’s family: hot dogs, potatoes, and onions.

You’re going to get some memories throughout her video recipe which make it all the more interesting to watch – and let’s just say some of them involve potatoes, but you’ll want to wait to hear the one about the neighbor trying to “shop in her garden.”

The recipe:

Her ingredients include:

  • 4 medium-large golden potatoes
  • 1 onion
  • 3 hot dogs
  • 2-3 tablespoons of tomato sauce (or other sauce, to taste)
  • 1/4-1/2 cup of water

You’ll just need a knife and cutting board as well as a spatula and frying pan for this.

1. First, start by peeling your potatoes.

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2. Next, cube them into pretty small pieces (this will help you spot any brown sections that you might want to throw away). You can also hold the potato and shred it into smaller pieces as Clara does, but that’s up to you.

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3. At some point, the stealthy Clara has chopped up an onion as well (by halving it and slicing, it appears). She adds it to the potatoes in a frying pan.

4. Once Clara has the potatoes in the unheated pan, she pours in some vegetable oil. (An amount we would consider “a lot,” and that looks like at least 1/4 cup.) If you’re using a healthier oil and have cooked in a frying pan in the past (especially if you have a non-stick skillet), you may want to add what you consider a more reasonable amount of your chosen oil (and more along the way if your food starts to stick).

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Of course, olive oil wasn’t being imported yet in Clara’s day and butter was expensive, so an authentic dish would have included a cheaper oil.

5. Now it’s time to fry your oil, onions, and potatoes.

6. Set the stovetop burner to medium or medium-high and begins to stir as everything cooks.

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At this point, expect human instincts to kick in even if you don’t enjoy onions or hot dogs because they just happen to smell really good while they cook! Clara says this is when all the boys come to her yard – her grandson’s friends love to come over for this meal.

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7. While the meal fries, get out your cutting board and start slicing the hot dogs. Clara slices them pretty thin (and hers appear to have come from the freezer), but this is all up to you.

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As you likely know, hot dogs a pre-cooked, so they really just need to be warmed up by the pan to be ready, meaning you can add them later in your cooking.

8. If your potatoes and onions aren’t getting a golden brown color after about 5 minutes, you may want to turn up the heat. You should hear them sizzling.

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9. Now, stir in a few tablespoons of your chosen sauce. Clara appears to have a bottle of pasta sauce, but a plain tomato sauce would do (as would ketchup, if that’s your thing). She doesn’t measure, but simply uses a spoon.

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10. Finally, she adds her hot dogs and stirs everything in the pan around so that the food is evenly distributed.

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11. The last step is to add about 1/4 – 1/2 cup of water to soften up the potatoes if need be. In that case, you’ll need to keep frying until the water is absorbed. Otherwise, your dish is ready when the hot dogs are warmed through.

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12. Now simply plate your meal and enjoy!

Be sure to scroll down below for Clara’s charming video recipe. She’ll walk you through the steps along with some stories.

Please SHARE this with your friends and family.

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91-year-old chops up potatoes and hot dogs to share recipe from 1930 (2024)

FAQs

What was a poor man's meal during the Great Depression? ›

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.

How are Blackie's hot dogs cooked? ›

They are cooked Connecticut style (also sometimes New Jersey style), with a quick visit to hot oil (secret but not peanut oil in case you're worried) where the frying blisters and sometime rips them (in Jersey these dogs are called “rippers”). The hot dogs are always served plain for diners to dress as desired.

When was the first hot dog made? ›

The hot dog popular today was invented somewhere in Europe, but the exact time and place is still debated. The people of Frankfurt, Germany, claim it was invented there in 1487, which is where the name frankfurter comes from. Another story claims they were invented by a butcher who lived in Coburg, Germany.

What is the history of Hoover stew? ›

Hoover Stew, like the now-infamous water pie, dates back to the Great Depression, when supplies were limited and flavor came at a premium. The solution? A “stew” made of macaroni noodles, tomatoes and sliced hot dogs.

What is the poor man's meal? ›

The poor man's meal, in various forms and varieties, has been around since the great depression. It's a simple combination of ground beef, potatoes, onions, garlic, sweet corn, green peas, and some tomato sauce.

What did poor people eat in 1930s? ›

Many cheap foods still common among the poor today made their debut during the Depression: Wonder Bread (1930), Bisquick (1931), Miracle Whip (1933), and Campbell's Cream of Mushroom soup (1934). Ragu spaghetti sauce, Kraft mac-n-cheese, and Hormel Spam all appeared during the Roosevelt Recession in 1937.

What kind of hot dogs do blackies use? ›

- So the hot dogs are made just for us by Martin Rosol's. So it's a Blackie's frankfurter. Nobody else has their own hotdogs this way.

Does boiling hot dogs cook them? ›

Bring to a full boil and heat for 4-5 minutes. If you are using frozen hot dogs, boil for about 8 minutes. Note. Hot dogs are typically already fully cooked.

What is the oldest hot dog brand? ›

It all started in 1867 on Coney Island, New York, when Charles Feltman, a German immigrant and baker by trade, invented the first hot dog as a convenient way for beachgoers to enjoy frankfurter sausages on a long sliced bun without the hassle of plates or silverware.

Was the original hot dog pork or beef? ›

"Wiener" refers to Vienna, Austria (German: Wien), home to a sausage made of a mixture of pork and beef. Johann Georg Lahner, an 18th/19th century butcher from the Franconian city of Coburg, is said to have brought the Frankfurter Würstchen to Vienna, where he added beef to the mixture and simply called it Frankfurter.

What is a nickname for a hot dog? ›

hot dog
  • dog.
  • footlong.
  • frank.
  • Georgia hot.
  • pigs in a blanket.
  • redhot.
  • weenie.
  • wiener.

What is hobo stew made of? ›

Hobo Stew, made with ground beef, a mixture of vegetables, canned tomatoes and V-8.

What was the first soup kitchen in America? ›

The concept of soup kitchens hit the mainstream of United States consciousness during the Great Depression. One soup kitchen in Chicago was sponsored by American mobster Al Capone in an apparent effort to clean up his image.

What famous gangster opened a soup kitchen during the Great Depression? ›

Al Capone's soup kitchen provided breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Capone also provided clothes for those who were in need. Well-known throughout Chicago as a murderer and bootlegger, Capone opened the soup kitchen in an effort to improve his image.

What did the poor peasants mainly eat? ›

Barley, oats, and rye were eaten by the poor while wheat was generally more expensive. These were consumed as bread, porridge, gruel, and pasta by people of all classes. Cheese, fruits, and vegetables were important supplements for the lower orders while meat was more expensive and generally more prestigious.

What did poor people do during the Great Depression? ›

With no job and no savings, thousands of Americans lost their homes. The poor congregated in cardboard shacks in so-called Hoovervilles on the edges of cities across the nation; hundreds of thousands of the unemployed roamed the country on foot and in boxcars in futile search of jobs.

Where did many of the homeless eat during the Great Depression? ›

Soup kitchens and bread lines were methods of feeding the neediest people in the country during the Great Depression. Run by charities, private companies, and the government, many soup kitchens and bread lines served thousands of people a day.

What did people mostly eat during the Great Depression? ›

11 Foods That Made Their Mark During The Great Depression
  • Buttermilk. NataliaPopova/Shutterstock. ...
  • Cornbread/Johnny Cakes. Liudmyla Chuhunova/Shutterstock. ...
  • Dandelion salad. DUSAN ZIDAR/Shutterstock. ...
  • Spam. Steve Cukrov/Shutterstock. ...
  • Kraft Macaroni & Cheese. The Image Party/Shutterstock. ...
  • Hearty soups. ...
  • Peanut butter. ...
  • Meatloaf.
Feb 25, 2023

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