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Did Nelsonâs grandfather Earl and granduncle Leon get to eat SOS (Stuff On Shingles; meat scraps in gravy on toasted bread) growing up? I think I can easily make that with luncheon meat, gravy used for biscuits and gravy, and toast.
One of the occasion things I liked my grandmother made, think she called it depression loaf. Like a mini meat loaf, based on a loaf of Klik or similar, stuck with cloves and in a kind of mustard glaze.
Recall the âpoor daysâ. Rabbits were 50cents each at the ranch a mile down the road. Funny but I miss my Momâs collard greens and ham hocks. Hated it as a kid. The boiled salted cod fish I can do without altogetherâŠ..
My neighbor, born and raised in New Orleans, told his young children about the hardships he endured as a child, through snow to school, a heated potato in his pocket the only thing keeping his hands from freezing. At his school, when he misbehaved, the nuns required him to kneel on raw rice for hours. Still LOL
My father was born in 1918. He told us some kids brought lard sandwiches for lunch at school. How times have changed! Am grateful. Yet children are still going hungry. Hoping this administration will help fix the root causes of this shame.
When I was a small boy, we were so poor we had baloney sandwiches for lunch every day. My three brothers and I finally couldnât stand it anymore. We would wrap the sandwiches up in napkins and hide them behind the refrigerator. Eventually, Mom found out and was pretty mad about it.
allen@home over 3 years ago
Earl is full of it alright. But it ainât baloney.
Templo S.U.D. over 3 years ago
Did Nelsonâs grandfather Earl and granduncle Leon get to eat SOS (Stuff On Shingles; meat scraps in gravy on toasted bread) growing up? I think I can easily make that with luncheon meat, gravy used for biscuits and gravy, and toast.
syzygy47 over 3 years ago
One of the occasion things I liked my grandmother made, think she called it depression loaf. Like a mini meat loaf, based on a loaf of Klik or similar, stuck with cloves and in a kind of mustard glaze.
Cornelius Noodleman over 3 years ago
Tomato soup: hot water and ketchup.
Zykoic over 3 years ago
Recall the âpoor daysâ. Rabbits were 50cents each at the ranch a mile down the road. Funny but I miss my Momâs collard greens and ham hocks. Hated it as a kid. The boiled salted cod fish I can do without altogetherâŠ..
Pgalden1 Premium Member over 3 years ago
My neighbor, born and raised in New Orleans, told his young children about the hardships he endured as a child, through snow to school, a heated potato in his pocket the only thing keeping his hands from freezing. At his school, when he misbehaved, the nuns required him to kneel on raw rice for hours. Still LOL
iggyman over 3 years ago
Heâs full of beans and passing gas!
juicebruce over 3 years ago
So what did you learn Nelson ? Only to believe part of what Grandpa says ;-)
Milady Meg over 3 years ago
Is this like the Blues Brothersâ âwish sandwichâ?
Zebrastripes over 3 years ago
Lordy! Poor Nelson will remember all the Bologna Earl slung when he was a kidâŠ
Darryl Heine over 3 years ago
ButterâŠbutterâŠParkayâŠ
tremaine53 over 3 years ago
I fondly remember jam sandwichesâ two pieces of bread, jammed together.
jagedlo over 3 years ago
Time to learn the difference between the deli meat and the term for BS, Nelson!
joegeethree over 3 years ago
The folks would call it round steak. It didnât make it taste any better.
cmerb over 3 years ago
I guess that it was too much to ask for that Roscoe would be in two days in a row . Sad ) :
ksu71 over 3 years ago
If you missed picolllâs comment yesterday:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9CdVTCDdEwI
FassEddie over 3 years ago
We had lots of balcony. I donât miss it. I donât miss the Spam either.
I donât like Spam.
angier3824 Premium Member over 3 years ago
My father was born in 1918. He told us some kids brought lard sandwiches for lunch at school. How times have changed! Am grateful. Yet children are still going hungry. Hoping this administration will help fix the root causes of this shame.
Watchdog over 3 years ago
No one made SOS like the Draft Army.
mistercatworks over 3 years ago
When I was a small boy, we were so poor we had baloney sandwiches for lunch every day. My three brothers and I finally couldnât stand it anymore. We would wrap the sandwiches up in napkins and hide them behind the refrigerator. Eventually, Mom found out and was pretty mad about it.
walt1968pat Premium Member over 3 years ago
Yes, and I had to walk 5 miles to school. Uphill both ways.
Alberta Oil over 3 years ago
Nothing tastier as a kid than a mixture of butter and sugar
zeexenon over 3 years ago
One of the kids stole a loaf, and chose a career of Rower on a big boat, and was just promoted to head cook or galley chef.
David Huie Green LikeNobody'sEverSeen over 3 years ago
He has WELL made up for any possible lack of baloney (as opposed to bologna) in previous days.
âIf I had ham, I could make a ham sandwichâŠif I had bread.â
pbr50138 over 3 years ago
I never thought we were poor but my moms brother and one sister were rich and one loved on a farm. So I got to see both sides of life.
jcsvtraver 11 months ago
Anyone that would eat SOSâŠ.. would also eat a dogâs droppings, with a dirty spoon!