Saturday, April 25, 2026

In Which We Gel


How do you get gelatin? Originally, it was just the boiled down remains of slaughtering, horns and hooves and fish heads, all the crap nobody wanted to eat.  It was the scrap of scraps.  It rendered out a squishy, fairly clear glop.  Some misguided chef somewhere realized you could suspend more edible bits in it and, voila, in a marketing masterpiece, they called it aspic and somehow it became fancy.  No excessively fancy Victorian or Edwardian dinner was complete without it.  It was not sweet particularly, but was often part of the fish or meat course. Food scientists discovered an easier way to make it, they added sweeteners and fruit flavor and what did they have? They had jello, baby. 

That brings us up to the madness of the post-World War II era.  Homemakers of the time were wild for any product that made the drudgery of domestic life easier.  Canned food, frozen food, and anything labeled "instant" was a big hit.  Jello fit right in plus it had the added panache of aspic's reputation as gourmet grub.  Bridge clubs everywhere were swept up in a frenzy for it.  "The girls" couldn't get enough; a luncheon consisting of coffee, cigarettes, gin, jello, and gossip was guaranteed to get you through another week of your loveless marriage and those fucking kids.  

Hearkening back to its roots as a medium in which you could suspend all manner of random crap, recipes proliferated claiming to be "salads" since that implied health and slenderizing. One of the most popular of those so-called salads was for Ambrosia, which was a mixture of jello, whipped cream, canned fruit cocktail, and the always disgusting dried coconut.  

As a baby gay in the mid-60s, how mrpeenee longed for Ambrosia without coconut.  Dried coconut, in mrpeenee's unshakable opinion, is unfit for human consumption.  I would just as soon chow down on a piece of shag carpeting.  mrpeenee's mother (mapeenee) absolutely refused to consider this very minor modification.  "Coconut is in the recipe," she would state adamantly.  A recipe in her world was something that might as well have been etched in stone.  Looking back I can only sympathize with the poor dear.  She had four kids and a husband whose only contribution to housework was to open yet another bottle of cheap scotch. Her life was not easy breezy.

But that was then, and now it's a new day, a day in which mrpeenee is fully capable of making his own damn jello, anyway that I want to.  The internet was only too happy to provide me with thousands of recipes for ambrosia.  I landed on one called Orange Fluff which expanded its madness to include Cool Whip, miniature marshmallows, and vanilla instant pudding in the mix.  I have now made it twice and it is just as delicious as I dreamed all those many years ago in the suburban swamps which formed me. 

I know this kind of cooking (or "cooking".  The preparation only calls for boiling water and stirring) is often sneered at, but I am here to vouch that it is tasty in the extreme.  It may not be Julia Childs, but neither am I.  What it is is a product of those mid-century women's magazines just as much as I am.  Here's to you ladies. 

Boys for whom I would firm up: 

That's what I need to help me in the kitchen.


Boeuf al a mode


Just a simple boy wondering where the fuck his underwear is.


Wheeee


There are some men for whom clothes are not only overrated, they are almost a crime.


Exhibit A


The strain of trying to think.  Don't bother sweetie, it's not what you were meant for.

14 comments:

  1. I've never had aspic (not sure I want to) , but loved jello my mum made when I was a kid. Only later I realised it is a cheap and we didn't have much money. She still makes a nice dessert with fruits and jello.

    Last 3 dudes are fantastic

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Aspic is jello without any flavor. It is just as tasty as that sounds.

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  2. That why I can't call myself a vegetarian because I enjoy gelatin laden desserts, midget gems and wine gums, the vegetarian alternative, agar agar has a strange texture. When my sister was teething my mother would give her a bone to gnaw on. I would like to gnaw on bone 1 and 5 please. Mmmm mouth watering.

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    Replies
    1. My friend Diane is a vegetarian and when I join her for a vegetable-based meal, I'm always reminded how much I like gnawing on bones.

      Delete
  3. You had to mention Jello salads. You've given me a week's worth of nightmares. I remember looking at photos of the monstrosities and wondering who threw up.

    The models all look more delectable than those salads, although the last needs some Rustoleum or something to hide that tattoo.

    Anonymous, too

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I didn't even notice the tattoo, I was so taken with all his curves.

      Delete
  4. Jelly - as we call it over here - was always on the menu when we were kids, principally as one of the layers in trifle. I remember it being a real treat, but then again, we also basically lived on tinned and/or packet (and later, frozen) food, so hardly had gourmet tastes.

    If only #1 were real and not Photoshopped... I'll settle for #3 and the local gardener at #5 please... Jx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I prefer fresh , but have no problem with canned (tinned) food. Like you, I would likely have starved without it as a little baby gay.

      Delete
  5. I believe I have two, yes, two Jello recipe books. I don't refer to them much, but enjoy knowing they're there.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm sure they're a great comfort to you in your declining years.

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    2. That makes two of us with Jello recipe books, Norma.

      Jello was doing fine until Bill Cosby ruined it for the rest of us.

      Delete
  6. 2- He must be a ballet boy with that sweet ass and pose.
    4- Lickety split, in more ways than one :)
    7- The brooding, silent type. You bet he’s more than versatile ! :)
    -CA jock

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  7. Ah, so that's what Ambrosia salad is! In Edward Scissorhands, Joyce harps on about her ambrosia salad at the barbecue, but I don't remember seeing what it looked like. I'll give it a miss, thanks.

    I wouldn't want to miss Exhibit A or The Thinker, though.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Had an aunt who made what she called Hawaiian Ambrosia.
    She learned the recipe when a stewardess for Pan Am in the early 1950’s, as she served on their far east route from California to Hawaii, Tokyo, Taipei, Hong King and Manila.
    The Hawaiian Ambrosia was made with chopped up tropical fruits, tangerine segments and cherries soaked in macadamia nut liqueur and tropical fruit juice, mixed into whipped topping and some sour cream, then topped off with fresh shredded coconut and crushed macadamia nuts. Rj :-)

    ReplyDelete

In Which We Leave Town

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