Grandma's Cream Cheese Jell-O Salad {Vintage Family Recipe} (2024)

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Vintage Recipe

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Grandma's Cream Cheese Jell-O Salad {Vintage Family Recipe} (1)

This is a much-beloved cream cheese Jell-O salad in our family. My grandmother Lois made it year round even though it is a holiday Jell-O salad. I can say with all confidence that this is the salad that endeared me to gelatin-based salads. I know it is easy to mock some of those creative concoctions but everyone who tries this one raves about it. The secret is the layer of cream cheese mixed with gelatin.

The first time I made this, I was a teenager and made it in a cake pan. I put on the table and watched in horror as the red layer slipped off of the other layers. Actually, it split in half as it slid off. It became known as the “parting of the Red Sea incident” and is still mentioned every time I bring this salad (by request, I might add) to a family dinner.

Since I have a very big family, I usually use large boxes of gelatin and use a bundt cake pan as the mold for the cream cheese Jell-o salad (as shown in the photos). I double the amount of cream cheese and 1/2 & 1/2 that the recipe calls for.

Here is a tip I discovered quite by accident while reading a gelatin salad recipe: Use less of the cold liquid that is required when using a mold. This makes the gelatin a bit more firm and it will hold its shape better. Since discovering this secret, I’ve never had trouble with my molded salads again!

I made a video to show how easy it is to make. Here is a link to the recipe: Grandma’s Cream Cheese Jello Salad Recipe 3×5 card

Grandma's Cream Cheese Jell-O Salad {Vintage Family Recipe} (2)

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  1. I have never molded Jell-O salads. I use a 13×9 pan and cut into squares.

    To me, Jell-O flavoring is weak these days. I prefer to use less cold water in any Jell-O recipe, including cakes. I often wonder what Jell-O tasted like when it first came out and if the company has altered the recipe.

  2. I know that their sugar free version tastes different than the regular version. I’m sensitive to aspartame so I can really tell when I’ve accidentally eaten the sugar free Jell-O.

  3. Christmas jello mold—lg lime jello-2 cups hot water-1 cold. Let gel until sloppy but not completely set. Together whip 8 oz cream cheese with 1/4 cup salad dressing (not mayo). When smoothed from mixing—slowly add chilled jello a little at a time until all added. Depending size I add small drained crushed pineapple—line bunds pan with marching cherrie, pour jello into pan—refrigerate overnight. Green & red Xmas colors.

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Grandma's Cream Cheese Jell-O Salad {Vintage Family Recipe} (2024)

FAQs

Why did people in the 50s eat so much Jell-O? ›

After World War II, when food shortages and rationing ended, gelatin became a creative kitchen tool, as well as a shortcut. Congealed molded dishes quickly earned a place at the table as impressive salads. According to Clark, mid-century meals had more courses than we serve at home today.

What happened to Jell-O salads? ›

Jello salad fell out of fashion in the 1960s and 70s. The rise of Julia Child and the popularization of French cooking in the United States made the jello salad appear less elegant, and dieting trends eventually turned against sugary food like Jell-O.

When were Jell-O recipes popular? ›

“Jell-O salads first became popular in the 1930s but reached their highest expression as part of the processed food school of cooking that sprang up after the war,” said Wyman. This was an era of packaged foods and TV dinners, and it was the golden age of gelatin desserts.

Why do hospitals always serve Jell-O? ›

Why do hospitals serve so much Jell-O? There are a few reasons: Jell-O is easy to swallow and digest, making it suitable for patients who have difficulty eating solid foods or have digestive issues.

Which state eats the most Jell-O? ›

Utah is famously known for its per capita consumption of Jell-O—so much so that two decades ago, in 2001, the Utah State Legislature voted to name Jell-O its official state snack. But apart from Utahns' hearty consumption of Jell-O, the roots of the connection are shrouded.

Why is Jell-O no longer popular? ›

Jell-O shifted to single-serve cups and more convenient options as competition for snacks and desserts grew. Kraft in the early 2000's shifted the focus of Jell-O's advertising away from kids and toward adults. It pitched sugar-free Jell-O, for example, as a treat for Atkins dieters.

Why wouldn t you want to use pineapple in a jello salad? ›

Bromolain in pineapple, papain in papaya and actinidin in kiwi are all enzymes capable of breaking down proteins, hence the warning that these fruits cannot be used in Jell-O. But canned fruits are fine because the pasteurization process they undergo destroys the proteolytic enzymes.

Why was Jell-O so popular in the 1970s? ›

It's cheap, aesthetically pleasing (by the standards of the day), and relatively easy to prepare.

What is the oldest Jell-O? ›

The original gelatin dessert began in Le Roy, New York, in 1897, when Pearle Bixby Wait trademarked the name Jell-O. He and his wife May had made the product by adding strawberry, raspberry, orange, and lemon flavoring to sugar and granulated gelatin (which had been patented in 1845).

What was the first color of Jell-O? ›

The first four JELL-O flavors were orange, lemon, strawberry, and raspberry. Lime was introduced in 1930.

What was Jell-O originally called? ›

Although the exact history of how Peter Cooper created the product is unknown to us today, we do know that in 1845 he secured a patent (US Patent 4084) for a gelatin dessert powder called “portable gelatin.” His invention was a basic edible gelatin that had no flavoring to it.

Why were the 50s obsessed with gelatin? ›

It was economical: A housewife could stretch her family's leftovers by encasing them in gelatin. And, since sugar was already included in the flavored mixes, the new packaged gelatins didn't require cooks to use up their household stores of sugar.

Why did people eat so much Jell-O? ›

During the Great Depression and World War II era, Jell-O was pitched as an affordable food, a way to turn a few ingredients into a family meal people could use to stretch their dollars.

Why do they give old people Jell-O? ›

Jelly Drops are made from 95% water. But they also contain electrolytes which aid in boosting hydration. In this way, they can be more hydrating for more intensely dehydrated people than consuming a glass of water.

Why do elderly eat Jell-O? ›

Many seniors may have difficulty swallowing, and jello is easy to consume. This is very important for when seniors have trouble swallowing medications and pills. A pill can be crushed up and stirred into jello for easy consumption, or pressed deep into the jello as a whole to help facilitate swallowing.

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