The sauce in the Chef Boyardee's raviloli and spaghetti canned products actually tastes very similar to old time slow cooked homemade Italian sauce. The first time, decades ago, I had real old time meat sauce cooked by an old Italian lady, I was struck by how similar they tasted.
That Vivaldi piece playing in the background has special meaning for longtime Sesame Street fans -- it was used in a film known as the "Sad Flower" film, shown immediately after the famous Mr. Hooper death scene.
There was a period in the '70s when American Home Food Products marketed "Chef-Boy-ar-dee" spaghetti sauce in a jar, under Hector Boiardi's standards for good taste and economy; he originally owned an Italian restaurant in Cleveland when he introduced his "Chef-Boy-ar-dee" line of boxed "spaghetti dinners" (emphasis on his homemade sauce) on grocers' shelves in 1929. American Home Foods bought him out in the late '40s, and he helped them expand his "brand" into canned pasta, and "pizza mix"...
That sauce is like sex in a canoe, f@#%ing close to water!Lol
TheZepmeister 1 year ago 4
That music is uber depressing but so pretty
JoJobabylove12 1 year ago
The sauce in the Chef Boyardee's raviloli and spaghetti canned products actually tastes very similar to old time slow cooked homemade Italian sauce. The first time, decades ago, I had real old time meat sauce cooked by an old Italian lady, I was struck by how similar they tasted.
flamesounds 1 year ago
whys everything so red O.o
crazysim9 1 year ago
@crazysim9 It came from a faded 16mm print.
jakestooge34 1 year ago
That italian dude looks just like my armenian friend Ara Kayayan.
chipdrusano 1 year ago
That Vivaldi piece playing in the background has special meaning for longtime Sesame Street fans -- it was used in a film known as the "Sad Flower" film, shown immediately after the famous Mr. Hooper death scene.
brithgob 2 years ago
The chef's bottled spaghetti sauce was discontinued years ago; Hector Boiardi died in June 1985. ConAgra markets his products today.
fromthesidelines 3 years ago
There was a period in the '70s when American Home Food Products marketed "Chef-Boy-ar-dee" spaghetti sauce in a jar, under Hector Boiardi's standards for good taste and economy; he originally owned an Italian restaurant in Cleveland when he introduced his "Chef-Boy-ar-dee" line of boxed "spaghetti dinners" (emphasis on his homemade sauce) on grocers' shelves in 1929. American Home Foods bought him out in the late '40s, and he helped them expand his "brand" into canned pasta, and "pizza mix"...
fromthesidelines 3 years ago
Comment removed
DevSodDribble 3 years ago