{"version": "1.0", "type": "rich", "title": "Thinking back on the stereotype of the young midcentury husband either angrily berating or reassuringly indulging his wife for...", "author_name": "kontextmaschine", "author_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "provider_name": "kontextmaschine", "provider_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/post/617541223095451648/", "html": "<p><a class=\"tumblr_blog\" href=\"/post/617532486770114560/\" target=\"_blank\">kontextmaschine</a>:</p><blockquote><p>Thinking back on the stereotype of the young midcentury husband either angrily berating or reassuringly indulging his wife for burning dinner.</p><p>But, famously, the aftermath of WWII saw a lot of new modern home appliances. Before, especially outside town limits, a home hot meal was more likely a stew, soup, casserole, shank of meat for collective slicing, or at least made in large batches; often heated with manually fueled fire in cast-iron stoves or even fireplace cauldrons with high thermal mass that smoothed things out</p><p>Meanwhile, if your tastes (which is to say &ldquo;class&rdquo;) ran past &ldquo;worker&rdquo; or &ldquo;struggling farmer&rdquo; you quite possibly had home meals prepared by domestic workers (and unmarried men tended towards collective settings like pubs, boarding houses, mess halls, clubs, and cafeterias)</p><p>So I guess I&rsquo;m saying to make sense of the trope I don&rsquo;t have to attribute it all to period women being uniquely incompetent, or period men being uniquely critical and condescending (though there&rsquo;s still room for that!), but consider that cooking individual personal cuts of meat in a sheet-metal gas or electric oven such that &ldquo;ideal&rdquo; and &ldquo;inedible&rdquo; could be separated by such a narrow time or heat level was still a fairly novel practice for much of the country</p></blockquote>\n<p>I guess a reasonable question would be &ldquo;was this a trope in any other country that had the same previous food culture&rdquo;, maybe delayed a bit for appliance spread</p><p>but\u2026 did any? Did they move on <i>to</i> the same one? We inherited a lot of ours from England but by the time they were much more concentrated urban. Centuries ago, they <a href=\"https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turnspit_dog\" target=\"_blank\">bred lineages of dogs</a> to turn roast beef spits Flintstones-style in collective-feeding tavern settings, later &ldquo;bully&rdquo; corned beef cuisine came from the industry and campaigns of an empire.</p><p>In 1950 the backwater of London was like, Jharkhand and Alberta, what cuisines did they have?</p><p>The &ldquo;American breakfast&rdquo;, bacon eggs and simple toasted bread, is something you can prepare individually from moderately storeable common raw supplies (in high-protein areas, at least), the &ldquo;lighter&rdquo; &ldquo;continental breakfast&rdquo; of any-season fruit and pastries needs a <b>much</b> thicker farm, market, and baking infrastructure behind it</p>"}