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Po folks food.
#1452444
09/17/15 10:10 AM
09/17/15 10:10 AM
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Joined: Aug 2012
Posts: 4,317 Boaz,Al,Mexican Paradise
OcToBeRDrEaMiN67
OP
10 point
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OP
10 point
Joined: Aug 2012
Posts: 4,317
Boaz,Al,Mexican Paradise
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The topic of foods you have never eaten got me to thinking after reading some responses.We were so poor when I was a kid that we never went out to eat anywhere.I mean never.Every now and then mister Kelly would let me pick up trash at Kelly's hamburgers in eastlake and he would give me a burger,fries and ice cream cone for it but other that that I didnt know what it was like to go out to eat.The one story of my childhood that relates to this topic is when my aunt carried my mother and me to taco bell when I was a kid.In our house we had eaten tacos several times but they were made with white loaf bread instead of taco shells.The reason being is because taco shells cost alot of money and we only lived down the street from the Dolly Madison day old store in Gate city and loaf bread was like a nickel a loaf.Well anyway there we are at Taco Bell in eastlake and I ordered tacos because that was the only mexican food I knew of.My mom sat me at a table and when the food was ready she and my aunt brought it to the table and then returned to the front to get stuff like condiments and such.While they were up there I started digging in to my food and lo and behold there was these hard things with taco stuff in them where my tacos were suppose to be.I at that point embarrassed my mother by yelling across the restaurant "mom there is something wrong with these tacos!They are in something hard and not on loaf bread!Also the first time I ever heard the word sloppy joe was in the 4th grade.Up to that point all I had ever heard was the redneck name for it"spoon burger.If you guys have some stories lets hear them.
Psalm 27:1 The Lord is my light and my salvation,whom shall I fear? The Lord is the strength of my life;of whom shall I be afraid?
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Re: Po folks food.
[Re: OcToBeRDrEaMiN67]
#1452477
09/17/15 10:38 AM
09/17/15 10:38 AM
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Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 10,573 Scottsboro, Al
jbatey1
Lucky Bastage
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Lucky Bastage
Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 10,573
Scottsboro, Al
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We rarely to never ate out at restaurants, drive thrus and etc when I was younger.
At one point we were living in some lower income apartments and really just couldn't afford the whole family going out to eat. My mom was a single parent at that time. ( She didn't meet the man I call Dad until a few years later on)I was probably 8. One summer night, very late at night(10pm-ish), my mom and a friend of hers went to Taco bell, picked up tacos and brought them home. I think me and my brother may have had a couple of friends spending the night, I remember all of us boys outside riding bikes and throwing the football under the street lights.
I think that was the first time I had ever ate taco bell, when they asked what I wanted, all that I knew existed- mexican wise -was tacos. So I asked for tacos. Eating tacos , from taco bell, at near midnight was for some reason something that really sticks out to me from my childhood. We weren't very wealthy as a family when I was young, but at that time I felt like we had it "made".
I was probably in high school before Mom started buying actual hotdog and hamburger buns, We had always used loafa bread for those things. It took me a while to get used to all the bread that was used for hot dog buns.
The fool tells me his reasons; the wise man persuades me with my own.
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Re: Po folks food.
[Re: OcToBeRDrEaMiN67]
#1452486
09/17/15 10:55 AM
09/17/15 10:55 AM
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Joined: Dec 2013
Posts: 23,064 Lickskillet, AL
Irishguy
a.k.a. Dingle Johnson
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a.k.a. Dingle Johnson
Joined: Dec 2013
Posts: 23,064
Lickskillet, AL
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I was fortunate as a young man and lived a pretty blessed life, however that was not the case after I got out on my own. At one time my first wife, our little daughter and I lived in East Lake and we had to really stretch our money. One of her favorite things to cook was macaroni with some salt, pepper and a can of tomatoes dumped in it. I still like that.
We would go for a week sometimes and have little more than butter beans, pinto beans, corn bread, macaroni and cheese, peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and stuff like that.
We learned a lot about using coupons, making a list of everything we would eat that week and really budgeting our money when we went to the grocery store.
We eat like kings now compared to those days... I still like a good ol' pot of butter beans, crispy buttermilk cornbread and a slice of sweet onion...
Last edited by Irishguy; 09/17/15 10:56 AM.
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Re: Po folks food.
[Re: jbatey1]
#1452593
09/17/15 12:56 PM
09/17/15 12:56 PM
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Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 25,312 Buc-ee’s Beach Express
leroycnbucks
Freak of Nature
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Freak of Nature
Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 25,312
Buc-ee’s Beach Express
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My momma made poor mans spaghetti when I was a kid when we couldn't afford hamburger meat. It's was spaghetti with just tomatoe sauce. Way before ragu came along. Bologna was the staple meat in our house.
Proud Army and ALNG veteran God Bless America!
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Re: Po folks food.
[Re: OcToBeRDrEaMiN67]
#1452596
09/17/15 12:57 PM
09/17/15 12:57 PM
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Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 8,288 Montgomery, AL
Hunting-231
14 point
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14 point
Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 8,288
Montgomery, AL
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When I was young - my dad would say, "We were so poor, that we were "PO" - we couldn't even afford the "OR" to make us poor." My sister is 3-years younger than me, and while my mom was at the hospital with my newborn baby sister - my dad and grandfather put a toilet in the storage room (enclosed back porch of a shotgun mill town house) of our house, so my mom would have a place to rinse the dirty baby diapers.
My mom and dad worked their asses off to provide much better for my sister and I than they had growing up, but for several years when I was young - it was tough times around our house. However, everyone else was so poor, to be honest I really don't feel like I missed out on anything. When I was about 12 or so, things got much, much better - and we were at least middle-class.
I remember eating fried deer steak, mashed potatoes, milk gravy, and pinto beans almost every single night. Lunch at home was typically, bologna sandwiches or if it was during school whatever they had at the cafeteria. Breakfast was normally two cans of whop biscuits and/or fried potato cakes (from the left over mashed potatoes from the night before).
The funny thing is - my favorite meal is fried deer cube steak, mashed potatoes, milk gravy, and pinto beans. My favorite sandwich is a fried bologna sandwich and I love Pillsbury buttermilk whop biscuits (the cheap 4-pack that you get at Wal-Mart). And my whole family loves fried potato cakes from leftover mashed potatoes.
"The struggle you're in today, is developing the strength you need for tomorrow."
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Re: Po folks food.
[Re: OcToBeRDrEaMiN67]
#1452600
09/17/15 12:59 PM
09/17/15 12:59 PM
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Joined: Nov 2014
Posts: 16,609 Guntersville
AC870
Old Mossy Horns
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Old Mossy Horns
Joined: Nov 2014
Posts: 16,609
Guntersville
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We had a dish my mama called "hobo dinner." Hamburger patties, potatoes, carrots, onions all put in one pan and baked in the oven. Damn good. I'd start talking about hobo dinners at school and other kids just look at me like I was out of my mind. I thought everybody ate hobo dinners and knew what it was.
Of course I thought everybody called their little buddy a "noonie" too cause that's what my dad told me to call it. Kids at school gave me hell about that too.
I was weirdo who played with his noonie and ate hobo dinners.
“Killing tomorrow’s trophies today.”
On the distance I like to walk to my stands: “The first 100 yards is also the last 100 yards.”
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Re: Po folks food.
[Re: Irishguy]
#1452605
09/17/15 01:04 PM
09/17/15 01:04 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 5,027 Bay County
Sharpshooter69
12 point
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12 point
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 5,027
Bay County
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One of her favorite things to cook was macaroni with some salt, pepper and a can of tomatoes dumped in it. I still like that My mother used to make this every Sunday afternoon. She added onions and canned tomatoes from the garden. I'd love to have some right now. Man I sure wish she was still with us. Most of the food, meats included, that we ate were raised by us and my grandpa. We had a pretty big garden and also raised pigs, chickens, and a few head of cattle. I don't remember having fast food until I was about 14. We didn't have money or fancy clothes , but we always had food on the table. I don't know what we would have done without my grandpa.
The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.
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Re: Po folks food.
[Re: Hunting-231]
#1452607
09/17/15 01:07 PM
09/17/15 01:07 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 5,027 Bay County
Sharpshooter69
12 point
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12 point
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 5,027
Bay County
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When I was young - my dad would say, "We were so poor, that we were "PO" - we couldn't even afford the "OR" to make us poor." My sister is 3-years younger than me, and while my mom was at the hospital with my newborn baby sister - my dad and grandfather put a toilet in the storage room (enclosed back porch of a shotgun mill town house) of our house, so my mom would have a place to rinse the dirty baby diapers.
My mom and dad worked their asses off to provide much better for my sister and I than they had growing up, but for several years when I was young - it was tough times around our house. However, everyone else was so poor, to be honest I really don't feel like I missed out on anything. When I was about 12 or so, things got much, much better - and we were at least middle-class.
I remember eating fried deer steak, mashed potatoes, milk gravy, and pinto beans almost every single night. Lunch at home was typically, bologna sandwiches or if it was during school whatever they had at the cafeteria. Breakfast was normally two cans of whop biscuits and/or fried potato cakes (from the left over mashed potatoes from the night before).
The funny thing is - my favorite meal is fried deer cube steak, mashed potatoes, milk gravy, and pinto beans. My favorite sandwich is a fried bologna sandwich and I love Pillsbury buttermilk whop biscuits (the cheap 4-pack that you get at Wal-Mart). And my whole family loves fried potato cakes from leftover mashed potatoes. Love me some fried mashed tater cakes !
The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.
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Re: Po folks food.
[Re: OcToBeRDrEaMiN67]
#1452608
09/17/15 01:07 PM
09/17/15 01:07 PM
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Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 31,681 Slidell, La
perchjerker
Freak of Nature
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Freak of Nature
Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 31,681
Slidell, La
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Man My grandmother could make a feast of squirrel. We had fried squirrel, squirrel and dumplings, squirrel and rice. Being poor didn't mean you had to go hungry. We had a garden and lots of fresh vegetables that we ate and some we froze for meals later.
Thomas Jefferson. The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.
Life is too short to only hunt and fish on weekends!
If being a dumbass was fatal some of you would be on your death bed!
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Re: Po folks food.
[Re: AC870]
#1452628
09/17/15 01:30 PM
09/17/15 01:30 PM
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Joined: Nov 2014
Posts: 490 St. Clair County
RoadRN
4 point
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4 point
Joined: Nov 2014
Posts: 490
St. Clair County
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We had a dish my mama called "hobo dinner." Hamburger patties, potatoes, carrots, onions all put in one pan and baked in the oven. Damn good. I'd start talking about hobo dinners at school and other kids just look at me like I was out of my mind. I thought everybody ate hobo dinners and knew what it was. I've eaten many hobo dinners as a kid. My wife thought I was out of my mind the first time I cooked them for her. She'd never seen anything like it. She loved it once she tried it though. Come to think of it, I haven't had one in a while...might just have to have one this weekend.
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Re: Po folks food.
[Re: Sharpshooter69]
#1452645
09/17/15 01:50 PM
09/17/15 01:50 PM
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Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 8,288 Montgomery, AL
Hunting-231
14 point
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14 point
Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 8,288
Montgomery, AL
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Love me some fried mashed tater cakes !
Made em tonight with a left over grilled pork chop.
"The struggle you're in today, is developing the strength you need for tomorrow."
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Re: Po folks food.
[Re: OcToBeRDrEaMiN67]
#1452646
09/17/15 01:50 PM
09/17/15 01:50 PM
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Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 6,252 alex city
oakachoy
12 point
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12 point
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 6,252
alex city
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Pea patties at the end of the month when my Dad was in Nam. Even a hobo dinner's were after the 1st of the month!
WM Hunter "Trump literally sacrificed himself, his family and all of his businesses for this country. He literally is a true American hero. And True American Patriot - warts and all."
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Re: Po folks food.
[Re: OcToBeRDrEaMiN67]
#1452663
09/17/15 02:14 PM
09/17/15 02:14 PM
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Joined: Nov 2014
Posts: 16,609 Guntersville
AC870
Old Mossy Horns
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Old Mossy Horns
Joined: Nov 2014
Posts: 16,609
Guntersville
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Loved me some fried potato cakes. As a kid I liked em better than the mashed taters. On fried stuff, we had fried salmon patties as a kid too.
“Killing tomorrow’s trophies today.”
On the distance I like to walk to my stands: “The first 100 yards is also the last 100 yards.”
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