The Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad Sixties Cookbook

© 2012 by Rick Rodgers and Heather Maclean

Photographs © 2012 by Ben Fink

Published by Running Press,

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ISBN 978-0-7624-4573-8

Library of Congress Control Number: 2011944644

E-book ISBN 978-0-7624-4574-5

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Digit on the right indicates the number of this printing
Cover design by Melissa Gerber

Interior design by Melissa Gerber

Edited by Jennifer Kasius

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TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION: MARTINIS AND MEATBALLS
CHAPTER 1: PARTY LIKE A PLAYBOY
CHAPTER 2: FOOD TO DRINK BY: APPETIZERS AND HORS D’OEUVRES
Blini and Caviar
Clam Casino Dip
Oysters Rockefeller
Crab Rangoon
Deviled Eggs
Sweet and Tangy Meatballs
Real Onion Dip
Piggies in Blankets
Pimiento and Walnut Cheese Ball
Quiche Lorraine (or Julia)
Flower Drum Song Barbecued Ribs
Rumaki-a-rama
Shrimp Cocktail with Bloody Mary Sauce
Coconut Shrimp with Hot Chinese Mustard and Duck Sauce
Spam and Pineapple Kebabs
Eat-by-the-Barrel TV Mix
CHAPTER 3: VICHYSSOISE, ICEBERG, AND ASPIC . . . OH MY! SOUPS, SALADS, AND SANDWICHES
Tomato and Shrimp Aspic
Iceberg Lettuce Wedge with Blue Cheese Dressing and Bacon
Waldorf Salad
Manhattan Clam Chowder
Blender Gazpacho
Vichyssoise
Sixties Secret Grilled Cheese Sandwich
Cream of Tomato Soup
Date Nut Bread and Cream Cheese Sandwiches
Sloppy Joes
Stacked Salmon and Egg Salad Sandwich
CHAPTER 4: COMPANY FOOD: MAIN COURSES
Beef Wellington
Hungarian Goulash Gabor
Cold War Beef Stroganoff
Pan-Fried Steak with Butter
Yankee Pot Roast
The Ultimate Meat Loaf
Spaghetti and Meatballs Sophia
Souped-Up Swedish Meatballs
Puerto Rican Pork Chops with Mojo and Onions
Bangers and Mash
Baked Ham with Soda Pop Glaze
Leg of Lamb with Gravy and Mint Jelly
Miss Roaster Chicken
Potato Chip Baked Chicken
Soulful Fried Chicken
Chicken Divan
Chicken Breasts Kiev
Chicken à la King
Roast Turkey with Gravy
Not-Quite Fish Sticks
Duck à l’Orange
Shrimp Scampi
Crab-Stuffed Shrimp
Lobster Newberg
Matterhorn Fondue
“Don’t Mess with Mom” Tuna and Noodle Casserole
Chile Rellenos Casserole
CHAPTER 5: BEST SUPPORTING PLAYERS: VEGETABLES AND SIDE DISHES
Asparagus aux Blender Hollandaise
Creamed Corn
Green Beans in Mushroom Sauce
Not-from-a-Box Macaroni and Cheese
Grandmother’s Noodles with Sour Cream and Poppy Seeds
Potatoes au Gratin
Butter-Whipped Potatoes
Steakhouse Creamed Spinach
Candied Yams with Marshmallow Topping
Everyone Loves It Stuffing
Homemade Biscuits
Buttermilk Dinner Rolls
CHAPTER 6: SHOWSTOPPERS: DESSERTS
Tip Toe Inn’s Lattice-Topped Cherry Cheesecake
Rocky Road Cupcakes
Pineapple Upside-Down Cake
Southern Caramel Cake
Soused Grasshopper Pie
Tart-Tongued Lemon Meringue Pie
Perfect Pie Dough
Nesselrode Pie
Daiquiri Lime and Gelatin Mold
Flaming Baked Alaska
Creamsicle Orange and Vanilla Cake
Secret Ingredient Two-Chip Cookies
Cherries Jubilee
Crêpes Bardot
Strawberries Romanoff
CHAPTER 7: EXECUTIVE COCKTAILS
Bloody Mary
Black Russian
Blue Hawaiian
Brandy Alexander
Daiquiri
Grasshopper
Mai Tai
Manhattan
Mint Julep
Martini, Very Dry
Negroni
Old-Fashioned
Screwdriver
Stinger
Tom Collins
Vodka Gimlet
Whiskey Sour
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
A NOTE ON TRADEMARKS
INDEX
INTRODUCTION
MARTINIS AND MEATBALLS

W
hether you’re a child of the Sixties or a child of parents shaped by them—we’re one of each—the decade holds a special place in all of our hearts, returning frequently in movies and television series to redominate modern popular culture from dress and décor to dinner parties. We are referring to the era before the 1967 Summer of Love, the turning point when fashions changed from skinny ties to love beads, and the food on the table morphed from grasshopper pie to whole-wheat brownies (psychedelics optional).

We long for the time when Frank and the Rat Pack romanced us with their crooning, and everyone in the family could sit in front of the television and watch the same show without fear of Mom and Dad blushing. (Joey Heatherton on
The Hollywood Palace
was about as racy as things got.) The Vietnam War was hardly on anyone’s radar, and Westerns provided most of the gunfire on TV. It was a time when there was more time; when you couldn’t be reached by cell phone, text, or Twitter twenty-four hours a day. The workweek was shorter, weekends were sacred, and everyone was home for dinner.

Which bring us to the food. Just as the Sixties was an era of contradictions, so was its cuisine. Not that many people used
that
fancy word to describe their cooking! In the Fifties, mothers (for the lady of the house did the cooking while Dad worked) learned to embrace convenience foods, and many a formerly handmade dish was magically prepared with canned soup and frozen vegetables, and this trend carried over into the next decade. But, and this will be on your pop quiz, it was also when Julia Child introduced Americans to the fine art of cooking. She, and other “celebrity chefs” like James Beard (who had first been on television in
1946), proffered sumptuous recipes with simple instructions that anyone could follow. Julia illuminated the very modern idea that the journey of preparing food was as important and rewarding as eating it. The Sixties were actually the beginning of the gourmet movement in America.

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