I didn't choose Betty. She chose me.

I didn't choose Betty. She chose me.
The Betty Crocker Kitchens 1940
Showing posts with label Betty Crocker Vintage Ad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Betty Crocker Vintage Ad. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Vintage Betty Crocker Billboard

 


I really love this old billboard and the vague weirdness of the placement of Betty vs. the food. She's not holding up the pancakes but they are at shoulder height. And she doesn't look all that happy nor convincing that the pancakes will be perfect. See a full-res image here.

In case you're  wondering, I'm still hard at work on the new Betty Crocker project. It requires a lot of research, on top of the research I already did for my book and documentary film on Betty Crocker. If you would have asked me back in 2007 if I would still be researching Betty Crocker I would have stared at you blankly. Now today, I might do the same thing, but that's only out of exhaustion. (Happy exhaustion, I swear!)

Keep on being curious.

Tuesday, February 13, 2024

Happy Vintage Valentine from Betty Crocker and Friends

Nothing says I love you and only you like baking a cake. (I can't help but wonder what baking a pie says?) Enjoy these vintage ads and don't forget to love yourself this Valentine's Day! 








 

Monday, February 5, 2024

Happy Betty Crocker Vintage Valentine

Love letters to Betty! From the Betty Crocker website and from my book Finding Betty Crocker
Betty Crocker came into homes across the United States on the radio. Debuting in 1924 with “The Betty Crocker Cooking School of the Air” and the “Betty Crocker Home Service Program,” Betty kept homemakers company where they needed it the most—at home—with friendly, woman-to-woman chats. 

Considering the personal, “girl talk” vibe of Betty’s programming, it’s no surprise that her attention oftentimes turned to matters of the heart. From interviews with “attractive bachelors” on the type of girls they’d consider marrying to a weekly segment featuring “Recipes for Romance,” the food-love connection became a common theme throughout Betty’s radio run. Finding in Betty a wise and sympathetic friend, listeners often wrote into the Home Services Department at Betty’s parent company to express appreciation for her support and products and to seek relationship advice. 

In honor of Valentine’s Day, I combed the archives for some sweet letters to share with you. Here are a few, all from the early 1930s, guaranteed to make you go “awwww.” 

“Please don’t think I am crazy for writing this: but after listening to your program while making eight pumpkin pies, I came to the conclusion that you did not think it was possible for a woman to be happy and jolly married to a garage man coming in at any hour. Well I wish to inform you that it is possible; because I am married to just such a man. I am 34 years of age. We have three boys as healthy as you can find, besides I look after my sister’s two orphaned children and board my father and brother. Am I happy? Why I’m the happiest woman there is, because laughing and joking is ¾ of my life. Of course I don’t have much time to go out much, but I love to have company in. And when my husband comes home it’s to rest; he said when he locks his garage at night he leaves his troubles there and I don’t bother him with any troubles. I am closing saying life is just what we make it: by not expecting what is impossible.” —Mrs. C. E. McComber, Willimantic, Connecticut 

 “I have enjoyed the ideas of the men concerning their wives. I don’t know just what my husband would say about me. However it should be something nice, for I always try to feed him well. You know the old saying about the way to a man’s heart. I have used your recipes on him ever since I married him, and that is now nine years ago. He is a model husband so I guess they have agreed with him.” —Mrs. Rolla E. Duruyu, Clark, South Dakota 

“I look forward to your cooking school as much as my husband looks forward to the hunting season, a man who lives every day in the year ‘til the season comes. Now my husband and son eat almost everything I prepare. In my last sack of Gold Medal Flour there was a recipe for cinnamon coffee cake and I made it for dinner and I’ll tell you it was delicious. When I make something good, my husband says, ‘I bet Betty Crocker told you how to make that.’” —Mrs. Lillean Dennick, Ruffsdale, Pennsylvania 

 “I always listen to your broadcasts whenever I can and I’ve been so very interested to hear about those contended husbands. My husband thinks I am a wonderful cook and every time he gets to raving about it, I tell, ‘Betty Crocker,’ ought to hear him, for he is the most contented husband I ever heard about. We have been married 45 years last September and we are more in love with each other all the time.” —Mrs. J.W. Rich, Houston, Texas

Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Ladies and Gents, Vintage Betty Crocker!

Oh Vintage Betty! What were you thinking? Blobs of frosting masquerading as "sugar plums?"

Can you imagine decorating your Christmas tree with frosting? Cake, yes. Tree? Ah... no.



Thursday, July 14, 2016

Betty Crocker NOT wearing red!

Seeing vintage ads with Betty Crocker not wearing red gives me a special thrill. 

When I was doing research at the General Mills archives I saw a large portrait of Betty at a recipe file cabinet wearing a green outfit. It was lovely.














Saturday, February 13, 2016

Vintage Betty Crocker Keepin' it Classy



For super obvious reasons I didn't include any of these vintage Betty Crocker cake mix ads in my book on Betty.

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Vintage cake Ads


It's a toss up if you ask me - kissin' cake sounds good, but so does Betty Crocker's Pineapple Festival Cake. Notice what color Betty ISN'T wearing?

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Ladies and Gentlemen, Start Your Cookie Presses!

It's that time of year again! Happy Baking! 

(Don't you just love how much Betty Crocker's people back in the day loved a good "gingie"?) 







Saturday, April 20, 2013

Vintage Betty Crocker Cake Ad

Midwinter Carnival Cake because it feels more like winter than spring today. But that should change any minute now, right? Anyway, get busy baking this Midwinter Carnival Cake now that you have the recipe and bake your winter blues away.

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Betty Crocker Vintage Baked Alaska Recipe




Betty Crocker's Baked Alaska recipe has a special place in my heart because it is the only thing I remember baking in  my 6th grade  Home Ec class. At the time, Home Ec was mandatory for all 6th graders at my school. I was in a "pod" of 4 students in Kitchen Station #1. My pod mates were Brenda Bliss, Kyle Holen and one other male student that I can't seem to remember. (A lovely side note: I'm still great friends with Brenda and Kyle!) 

The Baked Alaska mystified me. How could we put ice cream in the oven without it melting all over? It particular, I remember whipping up the meringue. It took forever. And the Baked Alaska turned out beautifully. 

Years later, while writing Finding Betty Crocker, I reflected on my one Home Ec memory quite frequently. And I was surprised to hear a former Betty Crocker home economist tell me about serving Baked Alaska at the Betty Crocker Search for the All-American Homemaker of Tomorrow Scholarship banquet the year Alaska became a state. (I know what year that was, do you know? Without googling it? )

It was no easy feat to whip up hundreds of Baked Alaska for the banquet, but, of course, Betty's staff pulled it off without a hitch.





Thursday, December 24, 2009

Happy New Year!

Don't forget to served corn sausage pie in the new year! And then just sit back and watch the forks fly!