I have a complicated relationship with my family's cookbook. Its sentimental because my Oma gave me the only spare copy she had left when I got married. She told me my brothers could fight over her copy when she's dead! It was put together by her and her cousins/aunts in 1987. Oma is one of the younger cousins and she will be 90 this year so there aren't too many folks left to ask questions about the recipes. The folks that put it together all spent their childhood years in the Texas panhandle and south plains during the dust bowl/great depression/WWII. Lots of the recipes reflect the need to feed a large family on the cheap. There are way too many recipes for salads that include mayo, jello, or a mixture of the two. Very few of the recipes titled salad include greens. Depending on who sent the recipe in, it may be perfectly formatted and the instructions clear... or it might be like my favorite ice cream recipe which list all the ingredients, steps, and then finishes with the line "add a pint of whipping cream before freezing" despite the fact that the ingredients listed above did not include whipping cream! The cake/pie/cookie/dessert recipes are generally all great but I am glad I didn't grow up eating some of the mains in this! Here are a few excerpts. Notes in red are from my Oma:
There is a handy index at the front that includes all the stuff that I assume was taught in home economics back in the day. The height/weight standards do not hold up to today's body positivity movement!
I never once ate gumbo with my family growing up but the recipe is in the cookbook. This answers the debate on white vs. dark. Just use the whole bird!
Brisket the Texas panhandle way. Because why are you going to burn the only tree in town just to cook lunch?
The "Main Dish" will forever live as a recipe I never try. There is another in there called "Melvin's Main Dish" that sounds equally as awful.
The vinegar pie confuses me. It sounds like you drop biscuit dough in boiling liquid so maybe it's a riff on dumplings?
Lastly, the beverages and miscellaneous section of the book. In true Baptist fashion, none of the drink recipes include booze.