The DU Lounge
Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsWhen you were a kid, did you eat your sandwiches with the crusts on or cut off. I ate mine with the crusts on as it was
supposed to give you curly hair.

Americanme
(213 posts)I don't remember ever being given the option of crust removal.
debm55
(44,778 posts)
hlthe2b
(109,939 posts)We were not poor, but we did NOT waste.
debm55
(44,778 posts)
my parents would not put up with that....NOPE
OldBaldy1701E
(7,960 posts)Then we would have gotten something along the lines of, "You are not leaving until you eat that crust.", or "Do I look like I am made of money?"
hlthe2b
(109,939 posts)
OldBaldy1701E
(7,960 posts)But, that was dad, not mom. She just had 'The Look' (Pat.Pen.), which would shrink you into a crying little ball in a second.
Glorfindel
(10,114 posts)and saved them in the freezer for bread pudding or for dressing at Thanksgiving.
debm55
(44,778 posts)
anciano
(1,815 posts)and the two end pieces of the loaf have always been my favorite slices.
debm55
(44,778 posts)
SheltieLover
(68,651 posts)
JoseBalow
(7,591 posts)
KarenS
(4,969 posts)debm55
(44,778 posts)
debm55
(44,778 posts)
Midnight Writer
(24,066 posts)stopdiggin
(13,776 posts)We have neither the time nor patience ... (nor, likely, the spare change in grocery budget .. )
And if you don't feel like eating it ... "Fine - your choice." "See ya back here for dinner."
debm55
(44,778 posts)
rsdsharp
(10,841 posts)Suggesting going crustless would have triggered scorn only a sergeant could heep.
No thanks.
debm55
(44,778 posts)
Phoenix61
(18,369 posts)debm55
(44,778 posts)
justaprogressive
(3,879 posts)because I was getting British sandwiches (2 slices bread with a single piece of bologna). Needed every bit!
*When I first saw a submarine sandwich I fainted.
debm55
(44,778 posts)
ProfessorGAC
(72,881 posts)I don't think it ever would have occurred to my mom to cut the crust off.
She grew up pretty poor.
debm55
(44,778 posts)
SheltieLover
(68,651 posts)Wasting food was never even considered.
debm55
(44,778 posts)
surfered
(7,022 posts)debm55
(44,778 posts)
AllaN01Bear
(25,330 posts)debm55
(44,778 posts)
patphil
(7,872 posts)debm55
(44,778 posts)
Srkdqltr
(8,427 posts)markodochartaigh
(2,942 posts)I think that I was in my twenties before I knew that there were some people who didn't eat the crust.
debm55
(44,778 posts)
SheltieLover
(68,651 posts)Nice to see you again!
debm55
(44,778 posts)
TexLaProgressive
(12,516 posts)Part of my growing up was in New Orleans. We ate aa lot of French bread and baguettes. There would be non violent argument as to who got the nose of the baguettes. I like waffles over pancakes because more crusty and also less than fluffy biscuits. Once i found a paper sack of bread curst that my aunt was going to feed to the duck, geese and swans. I was home alone and watching TV. I ate them all. I also like pie crust and pizza bones.
debm55
(44,778 posts)
stillcool
(33,940 posts)that told him that. Whichever way you were supposed to get curly hair he did the other. Never heard that from anyone else.
debm55
(44,778 posts)
stillcool
(33,940 posts)debm55
(44,778 posts)
electric_blue68
(21,572 posts)For end crusts...Italian, French baguettes, rye (NO caraway seeds!), pumpernickel!
debm55
(44,778 posts)
marble falls
(65,716 posts)debm55
(44,778 posts)
chowmama
(798 posts)I think if your parents were from a wartime and rationing background, that wasn't a thing. We'd have had to sit at the table until we ate them.
Ironically, Mom continued to save every scrap, in the refrigerator until it became moldy and she could justify throwing it out. When we visited as adults, we always tried to get her to let us clean out the fridge. She felt guilty about every discarded bit. Next time we came, it would be just as bad. At least they never ate any of it.
And as a kid, I had strategies to keep from eating the food I didn't like. Our kitchen table had structures underneath it that were effective shelves - a lot of food got surreptitiously shoved under there. And once I wore a plastic 'crafts' apron to the table because I knew she was serving overboiled canned mixed vegetables. I hated them. Those pockets held a lot. Not knowing what else to do, I buried the whole mess in the hamper, under the other dirty laundry. It must have been awful by the time she found it.
But she never admitted to cleaning it up or emptying the underside of the table. Dad would have gone volcanic. It just quietly disappeared.
debm55
(44,778 posts)
radical noodle
(10,210 posts)Waste not, want not. Besides, my mother worked and didn't have time to deal with cutting off the crusts.
debm55
(44,778 posts)
area51
(12,320 posts)Sometimes I'd pull off the crusts and eat them first.
debm55
(44,778 posts)
dai13sy
(557 posts)debm55
(44,778 posts)
boonecreek
(983 posts)My father said it would put hair on my chest.
He was right, it worked!
debm55
(44,778 posts)
Emile
(34,872 posts)debm55
(44,778 posts)
surrealAmerican
(11,628 posts)We used wonder bread or its off-brand equivalent. The crust was the only thing that held that stuff together.
debm55
(44,778 posts)
Aristus
(70,055 posts)I always wondered what the deal was with kids not liking the crust. I always associated the crusts-off thing with impossibly-picky, wimpy kids.
debm55
(44,778 posts)
beemerphill
(557 posts)We were taught that food was not to be wasted. That meant eating the crust and cleaning your plate. We could take anything we wanted, but we had to eat itperiod!
These habits have stuck with me all my life and I see no reason to change now.
debm55
(44,778 posts)
werecat2020
(2 posts)I still occasionally enjoy peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. I will often eat the crust first, saving "the best part" for last, the soft middle part of the bread that also has more peanut butter and jelly and has that burst of flavor. And if bread is still perfectly edible and safe to eat, though maybe not quite soft enough any more for the perfect PB&J sandwich, just lightly toast the bread. In that scenario, I might add some garlic, olive oil, and herbs, instead of peanut butter and jelly. Anyway, yes, and especially being working-class and paying for my own food, I am conscious about the whole "hey, that's perfectly good food" thing.