Fond Junket memories from the Midwest

On a hot Midwest day this week, the following popped up in our family’s group social media page: “Does anyone have Granny and Granddad’s Homemade Ice Cream recipe?” Of course, the matriarch of the family (my mother) posted a photo of it, which I am attaching. The next day, another cousin asked, “What is junket?” That piqued my curiosity. I knew what junket was, but what I did not know was that Junket was celebrating their 150th Birthday. Nor did I know that Junket was in St. Louis, MO! As a fellow Missourian, when I discovered this, I shared YOUR STORY with all of the aunts/uncles/cousins/nieces/nephews in our group. Then I decided that I needed to share OUR story with YOU! My mother writes: “My family was poor, but we didn’t starve because we lived on a farm. Mother raised a lot of chickens and sold eggs to the grocer in town. She also sold cream since we had one milk cow, but we ate plenty on our cereal and made HOMEMADE ICE CREAM at least once a week in the summer time. (This would have been in the 1940s.) Their recipe is a little different from the one on your website (perhaps it’s because theirs was a family of 10!) My mother remembers making homemade ice cream with HER grandfather. I remember making it whenever we visited my grandparents–even over Christmas vacation! While Granny was in the kitchen, scalding the milk and preparing the Junket, Granddad would put ice in a gunny sack and break it up. That sack would then be placed on top of the ice cream machine to keep everything cold. As grand-children, we got to turn the handle, youngest first (according to birth year), when it was the easiest to crank–until eventually it would get too hard for us to turn and one of the uncles would finish it off. Then we would all indulge in that delicious homemade ice cream! Thank you Junket Co. for the memories!

I am so glad that I have rediscovered Junket!

It had been a long while since I had Junket and I had forgotten what a lovely, easy and quick dessert it is. I made it with maple syrup and it was a big hit.

I work as a personal chef and I look forward to making various flavors of Junket for my clients as well as using it to make a variety of cheeses. Also, I just started making ice cream fairly recently and will be trying Junket ice cream soon. Your company makes an excellent, easy to use product and I am so glad that I have rediscovered it!

Warm regards,

– Jennifer

Ruby Whipped Cream Cheese Pie

1 package (4-3/4 oz.) Junket® Danish Dessert pie glaze mix, either flavor
2 packages (3 oz. each) cream cheese, softened
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 pint (1 cup) whipping cream, whipped
1 baked 9-inch pie crust
Prepare Junket® Danish Dessert according to package directions for pie filling. Cool slightly. In small mixing bowl, beat cream cheese and sugar until well blended. Gently fold in whipping cream. Set aside 1 cup cream cheese mixture. Spread remaining cream cheese mixture in baked pie crust. Spoon Danish Dessert evenly over top. Garnish with reserved cream cheese mixture. Chill 3 to 4 hours or until firm.

The most marvelous magical refrigerator

My brother and I thought our maternal grandmother, our Nana Chisholm, had the most marvelous magical refrigerator. I don’t ever remember going to visit when raspberry Junket was not in it. Today, 50 years after her death, raspberry Junket remains a favorite with me. Of course, now I have to make it, because the magic refrigerator is long gone. I cannot buy it in any of the local markets, so I am very happy to have found it available online.

— EJF

My all-time favorite dessert as a child

My all-time favorite dessert as a child was a banana pudding (or ice cream) that my great-grandmother made and put in metal ice trays to freeze. It had bananas mixed in it. I have looked for something similar for years but haven’t been able to find it. I think the Junket was banana flavored, but I’m not sure. This would have been about 1950, and my grandmother died a few years later. I would love to be able to make it now!

— Jeanne

The kids loved them

I used to put vanilla junket into wine glasses and use food coloring to make them different colors. The kids loved them (broke a lot of glasses – from 5 & 10).

— Barbara

I remember the distinctive flavor and color of Danish dessert

I remember the distinctive flavor and color of Danish dessert, yet it has taken me most of a week to remember what we called it. Now I’d like to make my favorite childhood meal for my grandkids [chicken & rice, and Danish dessert]. Do you know if this product [mix] available in the Kansas City area?

— Nancy

Not one of them forgets the flavor

I have purchased Danish desert in stores and specialty shops for many years. Now it has doped out of sight. No one stocks it any more. I have served raspberry Danish dessert to many groups in my home and not one of them forgets the flavor, and if they are to be in the next group to meet they ask if I will have Danish desert Now, that says a lot about it.

— John

After possibly 55 years, I am reunited with Flibbity Jibbit!

After possibly 55 years, I am reunited with Flibbity Jibbit! When I was a little girl in the 1940’s, I remember very well having the little book at my Grandmother’s house. Well, we got home without the book. I think we even returned to Grandma’s house within a few days to search for it, but it was gone. I always feared that Granddad had tossed it into the wood burning stove without a thought that it was mine or of any importance. The book was gone. For years, when I happened to be at an antiques show, I would carefully look through old cookbooks and paper memorablia, but no Flibbity Jibbit. Then the internet came, and ebay became an easy place to look for such things. Still no Flibbity Jibbit. I am in the midst of cleaning out my elderly father’s home prior to putting the house on the market, and no, no precious book has appeared. But I was searching for some china and crystal identification online, and once again decided to look for Flibbity Jibbit. And here he is! I realize that I had been searching for Jello brand advertising, not Junket – which I do remember very well – and I had been creative in spelling Flibbity Jibbit! But here he is and now I can share him with my grandaughter! I look forward to being able to print the little book. THANK YOU for preserving my childhood memory!

— Caroline

Our mothers would custard up a storm

Hi there, My husband and myself, were talking about Junket Custard. Our mothers would custard up a storm. I’m from a family of seven children. It was good desert. A penny went further in those days and we all had full bellies. My husband Norm also could remember their full bellies. We were talking about it tonight wondering if you still had your product? Computers are wonderful things!!!! I would like if we could find out if there is a retailer for your product in Canada?

— Carol & Norm