Jello salad

Jello salad
Cranberry Jell-O salad
Alternative names Gelatin salad, jelly salad, congealed salad
Type Salad
Place of origin United States
Region or state Pennsylvania
Main ingredients Gelatin, fruit, sometimes carrots

Jell-O salad (also called gelatin salad, jelly salad, congealed salad, or molded salad) is a salad made with flavored gelatin, fruit, and sometimes grated carrots or more rarely, other vegetables. Other ingredients may include cottage cheese, cream cheese, marshmallows, nuts, or pretzels. These salads were popular in the 1960s.[1]

Because of its many elements, the result has speckled bits of color against a colored gelatin background. For example, one might have lime green gelatin with brown nuts or pretzels, bits of white from cottage cheese, and red and orange from the fruit cocktail. Therefore, it has a "salad" appearance. The "salad" theme continues in variants containing mayonnaise or salad dressing. When one uses plain gelatin instead of sweetened gelatin, then the use of vegetables becomes more common, such as in tomato aspic.

The name comes from the brand name Jell-O, a common gelatin product. Jell-O salads are a common feature of US communal meals such as potlucks, most probably because they are inexpensive and easy to prepare. The origins of Jell-O salad can be traced back to a dish called Perfection Salad, by Mrs. John E. Cook of New Castle, Pennsylvania, which won third prize in a Better Homes & Gardens recipe contest.[1][2] In Utah, where Jell-O is the official state snack,[3] Jell-O salad is available in local restaurants such as Chuck-A-Rama.

A traditional Newfoundland cold plate also commonly includes variations of a Jell-O salad.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Polis, Carey (18 September 2012). "The State Of Jell-O Salad In America". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 9 June 2016.
  2. "Old-Fashioned Perfection Salad," RecipeCurio, Oct. 12, 2008
  3. "Utah loves Jell-O - official," BBC News, Feb. 6, 2001
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