Why Is Everyone Suddenly Cooking Depression Era Recipes? (2024)

They say trends are cyclical, but they would have had to be looking into a crystal ball to predict something called "depression cake" becoming popular again in 2020. Alas, here we are—stuck at home, whipping milk for strangers' applause on TikTok, boldly trying out new self-tanners without a care in the world about the repercussions, and baking cakes that hearken back to the days when our grandparents were our age.

Maybe you've heard it called something other than depression cake —poor man's cake, war cake, wacky cake, crazy cake. They're all the same milkless, eggless, butterless treat borne out of necessity and a lack of access to basic ingredients. And now, under stay-at-home orders and with panic-buying bringing us back to a freakishly familiar place, bakers have commandeered the 90-something-year-old cake and taken to calling it "quarantine cake."

"I came across a recipe for crazy chocolate cake, aka chocolate depression cake, a while back, and I tweaked it," Emily Hutchinson, creator of The Hutch Oven blog and judge on Hallmark Drama's Christmas Cookie Matchup, explains. "I got it to where it was worthy of sharing with my family, and they couldn't believe how delicious it was with no eggs, milk, or butter." So Emily kept baking it and kept sharing it with friends. Then, when the quarantine hit, Emily's friend Christina convinced her to share the recipe with a bigger group of friends—her 116,000 Instagram followers.

Why Is Everyone Suddenly Cooking Depression Era Recipes? (1)

She posted a video of the recipe, calling it quarantine cake on March 21. The likes and the views immediately rolled in, but so did the messages and the memories, Emily says: "The older generation of my followers, whom I adore, kept thanking me because some had lost their recipes for cake similar to mine or they couldn’t find their mother's or grandmother's recipe."

Interest is piquing in more than just Emily's little corner of the internet, though, and data from Google would suggest you've tried your hand at baking a depression cake—or you've at least been curious. Searches for "depression cake" are up 60 percent over the past month, right around the time states began shutting down. Pinterest has been overrun with similar desperate times call for staple-less recipes searches, too. Queries for "yeastless bread recipes" are up 4,400 percent and terms like "no egg cake recipe" and "canned ham recipes" are trending worldwide.

But all this digging for old-school, Depression Era recipes doesn't indicate an absolute regression to 1930s cooking. It's more like a game—like the results of a BuzzFeed quiz entitled "Tell Us Your Food Preferences, And We'll Tell You Which Decade You Actually Should Have Lived In And A Recipe To Make Tonight."

We're cooking from the highlight reel; we're looking for the outliers, shareable recipes that still have a pretty decent chance of tasting, well, decent, says Jane Ziegelman, author of A Square Meal: A Culinary History of the Great Depression. "There's a kind of cherry-picking taking place where we're going back and finding novelty recipes that are kitschy in a way. And we feel like it's almost fun to go back and cook these historical recipes."

Why Is Everyone Suddenly Cooking Depression Era Recipes? (2)

Then there's the flip side of the fun: our anxiety that the food scarcity and rationing that were prevalent during the Great Depression will return. We're not there yet, but online grocery orders remain difficult to fulfill, brand giants warn the entire food chain is about to break, and a partial collapse of the restaurant industry seems imminent—if it hasn't already happened.

"We're finding ways to cope with it," Jane says, "and one way is to kind of practice. We have the ingredients to make something now, but maybe we won't next week. And this isn't totally in the level of our consciousness, but we're wondering how we're going to do it if we don’t get whatever we need to make, say, an actual loaf of bread."

Enter: Reddit, a millennial's favorite coping mechanism. About a month ago, a recipe for peanut butter bread reemerged on the platform. It's a loaf of bread that calls for only five ingredients, none of which are butter, eggs, or yeast. The recipe was originally published in the 1932 Five Roses Cook Book from Canadian flour company Five Roses. In July 2019, Glen Powell (of the YouTube channel Glen & Friends Cooking) spotlighted it in an episode of his "Old Cooking Show," a series he started after opening an old box of cookbooks from his grandparents.

Hundreds of posts about it—with thousands of upvotes—now live on Reddit, mostly praising the recipe, sometimes poking fun at the whole thing. Ironically, Glen can't participate in the conversation, nor is he seeing any kickback in views from the recent spike in interest. He's been banned from any recipe-related subreddits, you see, after his YouTube video about making the OG recipe for Coca-Cola (yes, the Coca-Cola—Glen found the instructions in his stack of old cookbooks) landed on Reddit one too many times. "They banned any content from my channel because they said I was getting people to [post the video too many times]," Glen laughs. So the only thing you'll find that points the peanut butter bread recipe back to Glen & Friends Cooking is a description of the video, copied and pasted from the YouTube channel.

Still, Glen gets the appeal of it all…even if he can't comment back letting people know as much: "With the current COVID-19 pandemic—sheltering in place and social distancing and restaurants being closed—people are looking at it a little more closely, at how we can apply what happened then to what's happening now," Glen says.

"I see a lot of make-do recipes in the 1930s cookbooks that are sort of related to [the shortage of ingredients]," Glen continues. He's got many books with instructions for how to make mock chicken, plus one from Chicago with a recipe for mock possum.

Why Is Everyone Suddenly Cooking Depression Era Recipes? (4)

We're still in the mock bread phase—perhaps an indication that we haven't completely dived off the deep end quite yet. What's more: We're returning to this kind of pure place when it comes to cooking. Sure, you can still get umpteen recipes and stories about what to cook at the click of a button—it's 2020, lest we need to remind you—but you can also get thousands of Google returns about how to cook now.

"There's one thing that I've seen which is really positive and really encouraging to me," Jane says. "I've seen bunches of articles by food writers that aren't so much looking at recipes but are trying to teach people basic laws of food and cooking. We're learning sort of how it all works—how to cook without a recipe, how to keep produce fresh longer, how to make substitutions. We're getting an education in how food works that's going to make us much better cooks if we can hang on to that."

So if nothing else—when the yeast returns and the peanut butter bread goes away for another eight decades, and the eggs aren't hard to track down anymore so the depression cake goes back into its vault—let's hang on to that.

Feeling inspired? Try your hand at our riff on these three recipes that reigned supreme in the 1930s.

Why Is Everyone Suddenly Cooking Depression Era Recipes? (5)

Wacky Cake

Call it what you want—you'll love it, promise.

GET THE RECIPE

Why Is Everyone Suddenly Cooking Depression Era Recipes? (6)

Cabbage Soup

The ingredients = cheap pantry staples.

GET THE RECIPE

Why Is Everyone Suddenly Cooking Depression Era Recipes? (7)

Ritz Mock Apple Pie

An apple pie...with no fresh fruit. (Yes, really!)

GET THE RECIPE

Why Is Everyone Suddenly Cooking Depression Era Recipes? (8)

Sarah Weinberg

Deputy Editor

Sarah Weinberg is the deputy editor at Delish and has covered food, travel, home, and lifestyle for a number of publications, including Food Network Magazine and Country Living. She's originally from the Bay Area, has an unhealthy affinity for the Real Housewives of Anywhere, and harbors strong feelings about fruit salad.

Why Is Everyone Suddenly Cooking Depression Era Recipes? (2024)

FAQs

How did the Great Depression affect culinary? ›

Therefore, many food items were rationed, which meant that you could only get a certain amount. In addition, there were also not very many choices when it came to food. Sometimes, people would get together for potluck dinners, where everyone would bring a different dish to share.

What was the most eaten food during the Great Depression? ›

During the Great Depression, corn meal was one kitchen staple that was typically easily accessible and cost-effective. To utilize this ingredient during hard times, home cooks began making Johnny cakes, a Northeastern bread that became particularly popular during the Great Depression.

What did poor families eat during the Great Depression? ›

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 is the poor mans meal? ›

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.

Was there enough food during the Great Depression? ›

Town families could not produce their own food. Many city dwellers often went hungry. Sometimes there were soup kitchens in larger cities that provided free meals to the poor. Winters were an especially hard time since many families had no money to buy coal to heat their houses.

Was there a shortage of food during the Great Depression? ›

In some parts of the country, prices for crops dropped so precipitously that farmers could not earn enough to pay their mortgages, losing their farms to foreclosure. In the Great Plains, one of the worst droughts in history left the land barren and unfit for growing even minimal food to live on.

What did dogs eat during the Great Depression? ›

Great Depression (30's - 40's): Canned pet food became 90% of the pet food market. WWII (1939-45): “Non-essential” pet food was not a priority during wartime and rationing. Dry pet food + dog biscuits became the food that people could afford.

What did the average person eat during the Great Depression? ›

Food was always home cooked, and people usually ate bread, vegetables, meat, etc. The most common meal was made of a composite dish with one portion of proteins (meat, eggs, fish, cheese, pulses), one portion of potatoes, pasta, or bread, and two portions of vegetables, followed by fruit as dessert.

How did people afford food during the Great Depression? ›

Great Depression bread lines, food lines, and soup lines worked hard to feed those who could not afford to feed themselves. These lines, run by charities like the Red Cross, saw hundreds of people lined up for bread, soup, or a hot beverage.

What unusual dessert became popular during the Great Depression? ›

Water Pie. Water pie — made with just six ingredients: water, flour, sugar, vanilla extract, butter, and a pie crust — may seem like a fun hack today, but during the Great Depression, it was simply a dessert that reflected the circ*mstances for many Americans.

What did farmers eat during the Great Depression? ›

Farm Families and the Great Depression

Farmers could grow their own food in large gardens and raise livestock to provide meat. Chickens supplied both meat and eggs, while dairy cows produced milk and cream.

Where did people get free food during the Depression? ›

People starved during the depression. There were soup kitchens and Flo houses and churches that offered food, it may have been free to the poor who relied on it but it all cost someone just like today.

What is the cheapest food to live off of? ›

Cheapest Foods to Live On:
  • Oatmeal.
  • Eggs.
  • Bread.
  • Rice.
  • Bananas.
  • Beans.
  • Apples.
  • Pasta.

How can I eat if I have no money? ›

Your local food bank can help you find food today, even if you need temporary help. They partner with food pantries, soup kitchens, and meal programs in your local community to give away free food. Enter your zip code to find the food bank partnering with Feeding America.

What happened to food prices during the Great Depression? ›

During the Great Depression, food prices plummeted. This was due to a combination of factors, some of which were not related to the recession itself. The 1920s had seen an oversupply of food. Bumper harvests in 1929 saw even more oversupply.

What happened in 1929 that hurt the food industry? ›

Following the stock market crash of 1929 and the onset of the Great Depression, factories began to close. Many workers lost their jobs. The newly unemployed looked on helplessly as their resources dried up and their families went hungry.

Was food more expensive during the Great Depression? ›

However, in general, groceries were much cheaper than they are today. For example, a loaf of bread might have cost 5 cents, a dozen eggs might have cost 18 cents, and a pound of hamburger might have cost 25 cents.

Why was food bland during the Great Depression? ›

Along with wariness of foreign foods and spices, the reduced income of many American households meant that many of the meals being served during the Great Depression were often on the bland side.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Cheryll Lueilwitz

Last Updated:

Views: 5932

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (74 voted)

Reviews: 89% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Cheryll Lueilwitz

Birthday: 1997-12-23

Address: 4653 O'Kon Hill, Lake Juanstad, AR 65469

Phone: +494124489301

Job: Marketing Representative

Hobby: Reading, Ice skating, Foraging, BASE jumping, Hiking, Skateboarding, Kayaking

Introduction: My name is Cheryll Lueilwitz, I am a sparkling, clean, super, lucky, joyous, outstanding, lucky person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.