RamblingMad
I'm an 80s kid too.
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2019
- Messages
- 8,005
It's not good. Their tomato soup may be the exception.
As a kid I liked campbells chicken noodle. Now I can’t eat it. I still buy it for my kids. They eat is about once a year. I use progressive tomato soup for tomato soup and grilled cheese.
I'm sorry, there's absolutely nothing in that recipe that my stomach would handle when sick.
Tomato soup goes really well with crunchy cheetos too.I buy the healthy request campbell''s tomato soup. I make it with milk and top it with popcorn or chips. yum!
I understand...I had a cream of asparagus at a local Italian place once that I can still practically taste when I close my eyes and imagine it.Not a fan of Campells soups. Best soup I ever had was the fresh summer pea soup at Cafe Brio in Victoria, BC... It was life changing experience....
http://cafebrio.com/
I didn't just start out in Pittsburgh and live all of my life here in western PA, but I also worked at Heinz, so eww no, LOL.How about Campbell's ketchup?
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I posted before reading your post, so yes, we do have Lipton's noodle soup as that is what I meant for non-homemade. I never liked Tomato soup, so growing up it was Lipton's and a grilled cheese with Kraft American cheese, dusted with garlic salt after buttering the bread, and sliced pickles after it is grilled in a pan....and chicken noodle is Lipton's from a packet (not sure if you have those in the States).
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Butter two pieces of white bread, put one piece butter side down in a hot pan, put on two thin slices of cheese (medium cheddar is best but honestly, it's usually Kraft singles around here), cover with the other piece of bread (butter side out) and let it crisp up on the first side before flipping to crisp up the other side. My DS puts the sandwich together on dry bread and melts butter in a pan before laying it down but to me, that way takes way too much butter and leaves the sandwich greasy.I posted before reading your post, so yes, we do have Lipton's noodle soup as that is what I meant for non-homemade. I never liked Tomato soup, so growing up it was Lipton's and a grilled cheese with Kraft American cheese, dusted with garlic salt after buttering the bread, and sliced pickles after it is grilled in a pan.
Hmm, there's another good question, how do you make grilled cheese.
Heinz had regional manufacturing plants. There’s still a Heinz Ave. in Berkeley, California and some of the Heinz buildings are still there. They’re long gone.I didn't just start out in Pittsburgh and live all of my life here in western PA, but I also worked at Heinz, so eww no, LOL.
I spent 8 months working an internship in 1993 doing all sorts of weird things to ketchup in the chemical lab. I couldn't eat ketchup for years, LOL.
Check the labeling. I would wager to guess that Knorr has as much if not more sodiumSame. I think Progressive Tomato Basil is the best canned tomato soup on the market, although Rao's now sells jar soup and they have a tomato basil as well. Need to try that one next. Their Pasta e Fagoli and Minestrone are fantastic.
I also used to eat Campbells Chicken and Stars or Chicken Noodle religiously as a kid. It tastes like ocean water to me now. Just insanely salty and the chunks of mystery meat chicken in it are SO unappetizing. I now exclusively use Knorr powdered soup mix envelopes (Fideos de Pollo) when I want chicken soup, or I make it homemade from scratch.