Jenise, you are right, and I am very surprised. Salisbury steak, in my recollection, is ground, not chopped, and clearly has onion and other flavorings in it, in addition to clear brown gravy. The whole point of Joy of Cooking is that it has recipes for everything, for those of us who didn't learn how to cook in childhood. Because there is a swiss steak recipe. We have an old Better Homes and Gardens cookbook, maybe it's in there.
Jenise wrote:Today I tracked down another oddity from my childhood. My mother made something she called subgum. I completely forgot about it and couldn't have told you what was in it until reading a recipe in Bob's grandmother's book--in fact, I presumed my mother made up the name. It's essentially a chow mein, and the first known use of the word can be tracked to 1902 where "subgum chow mein" was on a list of Chinese dishes in a Chicago Tribune article. Webster's defines it as a meat and vegetable stir fry but most sources indicate that bean sprouts is a must ingredient and typically onions and celery are there too. Way back when, though, canned bean sprouts and recipes called for them without hesitation as fresh would have been very limited and very regional. In the BH&G book, it's described as a recipe for leftover roast pork. My own mother might have used leftover roast-something in hers and probably did--but since I detested recooked roasted meats I would have avoided it.
Subgum? That is odd. Nothing is too unlikely given the origin of chop suey, but I really wonder what the ultimate source of that dish is.