Vintage Recipes For Modern Cooks

By Amanda Pagan, Children's Librarian
June 10, 2020
Stavros Niarchos Foundation Library (SNFL)
Chocolate layer sponge cake.

Chocolate layer sponge cake. George Arents Collection. NYPL Digital Collections. Image ID: 1191108

Attention cooks! 

Recipes are a piece of history that are often passed down through a single family for generations. While this is a delicious way to connect to our pasts, it is not uncommon for newer cooks to be put off by some of the ingredients. For instance, adding a pound of lard to the batter might have made Great-Aunt Tilly’s cakes taste amazing, but is that healthy? Great-Great Grandma Rosie’s walnut cookies might be a holiday staple, but they also might be putting grandchildren with allergies at risk. 

Personal taste isn’t the only reason recipes change. Access to ingredients is a common reason cooks often have to use substitutions. If an immigrant family cannot find a staple from their home country, they will often have to adapt to whatever foodstuffs are at hand. Food shortages in general can force society at large to change their cooking. 

If you have ever wondered why a vintage recipe or cookbook calls for certain ingredients, try looking into the year it was published to see what was happening during that time period. For example, because of the lack of refrigeration and the lack of food in general, the gelatin packets sold by the Jello-O company served as an easy way to stretch out a meal during the Great Depression. Women’s magazines and cookbooks were flooded with recipes that taught how to prepare Jell-O salads and other concoctions.

Jelly trifle

Jelly trifle. George Arents Collection. NYPL Digital Collections. Image ID: 1195920

Basically, you would fill a mold with the gelatin and then add in bits of other foods such as vegetables, or even meat in some cases. The gelatin acted as a preservative that would help the vegetables last longer than their original shelf lives. Thousands of Americans were doing this through the Great Depression, World War II, and even into the relatively calm years of the 1950s. Because it was so well-known and so familiar to society’s palette, Jell-O recipes continued to be prepared and altered by future generations for decades after. The heyday of Jell-O is just one example of how recipes can alter and develop thanks to larger global events. 

There are always new fad-diets and foodstuffs that come and go, so it’s a good thing to have a tried and true list of recipes you and your family can fall back on. Fortunately, our team at the NYPL have gathered together plenty of resources to help you plan any and all future feasts. 

Here we’ve gathered a list of cookbooks that feature vintage recipes updated for modern cooks and bakers. Enjoy!

Vintage and Classic Recipes

More Resources:

Summaries provided via NYPL’s catalog, which draws from multiple sources. Click through to each book’s title for more.

Staff picks are chosen by NYPL staff members and are not intended to be comprehensive lists. We'd love to hear your ideas too, so leave a comment and tell us what you’d recommend. And check out our Staff Picks browse tool for more recommendations!