Potted Meat and Crackers
Potted meat — seasoned, canned ground meat — was the poor man's pâté. Armour Star was the dominant brand, and a can cost mere pennies. Spread on saltine crackers with a little hot sauce, it was the lunch of loggers, field workers, and schoolchildren across rural America in the 1960s and 1970s. Not glamorous, but filling and requiring no preparation whatsoever.
Potted meat — seasoned, canned ground meat — was the poor man’s pâté. Armour Star was the dominant brand, and a can cost mere pennies. Spread on saltine crackers with a little hot sauce, it was the lunch of loggers, field workers, and schoolchildren across rural America in the 1960s and 1970s. Not glamorous, but filling and requiring no preparation whatsoever.
Ingredients
- 1 can (3 oz) potted meat (Armour Star was traditional)
- Saltine crackers
- Hot sauce (optional)
- Yellow mustard (optional)
- Dill pickle slices (optional)
Directions
- Open can. Use a knife or cracker to spread potted meat onto individual saltine crackers.
Add a drop of hot sauce if you like heat.
- A thin smear of yellow mustard underneath the potted meat extends it further.
Pickle slices on top cut the richness.
- No preparation, no cooking, no utensils beyond what you carry.
- Pair with a cold biscuit for more substance.
Notes
Potted meat was Depression-era survival food that remained in mountain lunch pails through the 1970s and beyond. The ingredient list is not something to examine too closely, but the product is safe, high-protein, and shelf-stable for years. In rural communities without refrigeration, canned meats were not a choice but a necessity.
Source: ClaudeBilly — Historically Accurate 1970s Appalachian Lunches