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If you have a taste for nostalgia, these recipes are for you. Here's a look back at some of the most popular dishes from the '50s, '60s, and '70s.
This old-fashioned pecan pie isn't particularly fancy or different. But that's exactly why you'll love it! It's just a down-home comfort food with a nutty pecan filling.
Few foods are more fun to eat than a good old-fashioned cheese fondue. Not only is it a fun throwback to the fondue craze of the 70's but it is up there in some of the best foods for a small party.
Deflate the dough by lifting it up and around the edges and letting it fall with a slap into the bowl. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and put it in the refrigerator. Slap the dough down in the bowl every 30 minutes until it stops rising, about 2 hours, then leave the covered dough in the refrigerator to chill overnight.
1. In a rocks glass, combine the sugar cube, bitters and club soda. Muddle to a paste. Stir in the bourbon. Add ice and garnish with a two-inch strip of lemon peel.
3. Green Bean Casserole. One of the most enduring recipes on this list, green bean casserole has been a polarizing staple at family gatherings since its birth in a Campbell Soup Co. test kitchen ...
At least 10 of us women made this old-fashioned dressing to feed over 1,500 people at our church's fall festival. Everyone thought it was wonderful. It's the best dressing I've ever made.
The recipe for the old fashioned dates to the early 1800s, though not by that name. The term "old-fashioned cocktails" dates to 1880, [2] and recipes by that name appear in cocktail books of the late 1880s and 1890s, with Proulx (1888) of Chicago the earliest known.