32 Must-Try Retro Dinner Party Recipes (2024)

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32 Must-Try Retro Dinner Party Recipes (1)Ellie Martin CliffeUpdated: Jan. 05, 2022

    Turn on the bossa nova and fire up your fondue pot. A menu filled with these retro dinner party recipes will put you on par with Don and Betty Draper. Now, if only they'd show up.

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    Salmon Mousse Cups

    I make these tempting little tarts frequently for parties. They disappear at an astonishing speed, so I usually double or triple the recipe. The salmon-cream cheese filling and flaky crust will melt in your mouth. —Fran Rowland, Phoenix, Arizona

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    Taste of Home

    Contest-Winning Chicken Cacciatore

    My husband and I own and operate a busy farm. There are days when there's just no time left for cooking! It's really nice to be able to come into the house at night and smell this wonderful slow cooker chicken cacciatore. —Aggie Arnold-Norman, Liberty, Pennsylvania

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    Cucumber Canapes

    I always get requests for the recipe for these canapes whenever I serve them. They're delicate finger sandwiches with a creamy herb spread and festive red and green garnishes. —Nadine Whittaker, South Plymouth, Massachusetts

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    Taste of Home

    Mocha Baked Alaskas

    Make these baked Alaskas ahead of time—you can torch the completed desserts and freeze them up to 24 hours before serving. —Kerry Dingwall, Ponte Vedra, Florida

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    Seafood Bisque

    We live on the Gulf Coast, where fresh seafood is plentiful. I adapted several recipes to come up with this rich bisque. It's great as a first course or an entree, and it can be made with just shrimp or crabmeat. —Pat Edwards, Dauphin Island, Alabama

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    Brandy Old-Fashioned Sweet

    The concept of an old-fashioned dates back to the early 1800s and includes whiskey, bitters, cherry juice, sugar and water. This old-fashioned recipe, which is extremely popular in Wisconsin, uses brandy in place of whiskey and lemon-lime soda instead of water for a milder co*cktail. —Taste of Home Test Kitchen

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    Skillet Pineapple Upside-Down Cake

    For a change of pace, you can substitute fresh or frozen peach slices for the pineapple in this old-fashioned recipe. —Bernardine Melton, Paola, Kansas

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    Mexican Shrimp co*cktail

    It's up to you how to enjoy this co*cktail—eat it with a spoon as a chilled soup, or use tortilla chips or crackers for scooping. —Erin Moreno, Arcadia, Wisconsin

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    Pina Colada Molded Salad

    My gelatin ring gets a tropical twist from coconut, pineapple and macadamia nuts. It's a wonderful anytime treat. Now that I'm retired from teaching, I have more time for kitchen experiments. —Carol Gillespie, Chambersburg, Pennsylvania

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    Tuna Crescent Ring

    This is really easy to throw together, and I often use it when I am too tired to fix anything else. —Julia Bivens, Martinsburg, West Virginia

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    Taste of Home

    Marmalade-Glazed Carrots

    This side dish is ideal when you’d like to serve your vegetables in a different way for a special dinner. Cinnamon and nutmeg season baby carrots that are simmered with orange marmalade and brown sugar. —Barb Rudyk, Vermilion, Alberta

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    On holidays, a friend serves these creamy, cheesy potatoes when we gather together to celebrate with lifelong friends and grown children. —Carol Blue, Barnesville, Pennsylvania

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    Taste of Home

    A touch more lemon helped me trim the calories in our favorite shrimp scampi recipe. For those who want to indulge, pass around the Parmesan. —Ann Sheehy, Lawrence, Massachusetts

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    Classic Cobb Salad

    Making this ham cobb salad is a lot like putting in a garden. I plant everything in nice, neat sections, just as I do with seedlings. —Patricia Kile, Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania

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    Moist Lemon Angel Cake Roll

    Tart and delicious, this pretty cake roll will tickle any lemon lover's fancy. Its feathery, angel food texture enhances its guilt-free goodness. —Taste of Home Test Kitchen

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    Growing my own vegetables and herbs helps keep things fresh in the kitchen, but frozen peas make this side is a breeze to prepare. —Tanna Richard, Cedar Rapids, Iowa

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    Taste of Home

    Martini

    Martinis recipes can be made with either vodka or gin. Our taste panel's preference was for the gin, but try them both and decide for yourself. Be warned, this is a strong and serious drink. —Taste of Home Test Kitchen

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    Bacon and Garlic Green Beans

    Adding white wine, lemon juice and garlic gives a little kick to green beans. It was enough to turn our old, traditional holiday side into a year-round favorite. —Shannon Reynoso, Bakersfield, California

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    Taste of Home

    Garlic-Herb Mini Quiches

    Looking for a wonderful way to impress guests? You’ve got it—and you need only five ingredients to make these tasty apps! —Josephine Piro, Easton, Pennsylvania

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    Puff Pastry Chicken Potpie

    When my wife is craving comfort food, I whip up this chicken pot pie with puff pastry. It's easy to make, sticks to your ribs and delivers soul-satisfying flavor. —Nick Iverson, Denver, Colorado

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    Taste of Home

    Deviled Egg Spread

    I tried this egg salad at a luncheon and had to have it. I punched it up with pickled banana peppers. It’s a hit with my kids and picky mother. —Lisa Easley, Longview, Texas

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    Taste of Home

    Caramelized Onion Dip

    Once you taste this fabulous caramelized onion dip, you'll never go back to store-bought french onion dip. While it takes a little longer to make, I promise it's worth every minute. —Kelly Gardner, Alton, Illinois

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    Sage Chicken Cordon Bleu

    It's nice to surprise the family with special meals like this during the week. I usually double the recipe so we can enjoy leftovers the next day. —Martha Stine, Johnstown, Pennsylvania

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    Italian Pineapple Trifle

    My grandmother made this rich, tempting trifle every year for our family’s Christmas Eve celebrations. Now I make it to carry on her special tradition. It’s an easy, delicious no-bake dessert everyone will love. —Ann-Marie Milano, Milton, Massachusetts

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    Lobster alla Diavola

    I’ve cooked lobster alla diavola (devil’s style) since I was first married. We serve lobster at family celebrations, usually with linguine or capellini. —Marcia Whitney, Gainesville, Florida

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    Pickled Green Beans with Smoked Salmon Dip

    I came up with this appetizer for my son, who's big on delicious but healthy food. The lighter beans-and-dip combo has won over even finicky eaters. —Dinah Halterman, Harmony, North Carolina

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    Taste of Home

    Marinated Almond-Stuffed Olives

    Marinated stuffed olives go over so well with company that I try to keep a batch of them in the fridge at all times. —Larissa Delk, Columbia, Tennessee

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    Taste of Home

    Ring of Piggies

    This charming plate of piggies looks like a holiday wreath when I drape fresh rosemary in the center. It’s a cute display for merry get-togethers. —Julie Peterson, Crofton, Maryland

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    Originally Published: December 05, 2018

    32 Must-Try Retro Dinner Party Recipes (30)

    Ellie Martin Cliffe

    Ellie has spent almost 20 years writing and editing food and lifestyle content for several well-known publishers. As Taste of Home's content director, she leads the team of editors sharing tasty recipes, cooking tips and entertaining ideas. Since joining Taste of Home 13 years ago, she has held roles in digital and print, editing cookbooks, curating special interest publications, running magazines, starring in cooking and cleaning videos, working with the Community Cooks and even handing out cookies and cocoa at local holiday events. Gluten- and dairy-free since 2017, she’s a staff go-to on allergy-friendly foods that actually taste good.If she's not in her plant-filled office, find Ellie in her family’s urban veggie garden, in the kitchen trying new GF/DF recipes or at a local hockey rink, cheering on her spouse or third grader.

    32 Must-Try Retro Dinner Party Recipes (2024)

    FAQs

    What was a popular dinner in the 80s? ›

    Because we all loved the apricot chicken, tuna mornay and shepherd's pies of the 80s so much, they're back – bigger and better than ever. Make Nana proud by cooking your favourite old-school meals all over again or discover what recipes you've been missing out on these past few decades!

    What was a typical meal in the 1960s? ›

    Dinner: American palates became more sophisticated thanks to Julia Child, but many 60's meals were still dominated by convenience foods like this terrifying olive,celery and cheese jello salad. Buffet dinners of beef stroganoff, green beans amandine and flaming cherries jubilee were popular.

    What was 70s hippie food? ›

    The cuisine that the counterculture took to in the late 1960s, and then helped introduce to the mainstream in the 1970s, embraced whole grains and legumes; organic, fresh vegetables; soy foods like tofu and tempeh; nutrition-boosters like wheat germ and sprouted grains; and flavors from Eastern European, Asian, and ...

    What was for dinner in the 70s? ›

    Hosting a fondue dinner party was popular in the 1970s, and fondue pots were the ultimate wedding gift during that decade. The Swiss dish consisting of melted cheese served in a communal pot was enjoyed by dipping chunks of bread into the cheese using long-stemmed forks.

    What foods were popular in the 1970s? ›

    18 retro dishes from your childhood
    • Bombe Alaska. Nothing screams the 70s quite like sponge, ice cream and meringue drenched in rum and set on fire, right? ...
    • Vol-au-vents. ...
    • Mini ham and pineapple pizzas. ...
    • Battenberg cake. ...
    • Scotch eggs. ...
    • Cheese fondue. ...
    • Crepes Suzette. ...
    • Apricot chicken.

    What were the most popular dinners in the 1950s? ›

    1950s Dinners

    You'd find hearty main dishes like Salisbury steak, beef stroganoff and meat loaf on a '50s dinner menu, plus scrumptious sides. Casseroles were also popular, particularly those featuring seafood or ham.

    What appetizer goes with an old fashioned? ›

    5 Things to Eat with an Old Fashioned
    • Roasted Almonds with Paprika and Orange. ...
    • Pimento Cheese Deviled Eggs with Toasted Pecans. ...
    • Grilled BBQ Chicken Wings. ...
    • Iceberg Wedge Salad with Homemade Blue Cheese Dressing. ...
    • Bacon-Brown Sugar Pork Tenderloin.
    May 1, 2019

    What is the most nostalgic food? ›

    28 Nostalgic Childhood Dishes That Take Us Back In Time
    • 01 of 28. Sloppy Joe Casserole. Southern Living. ...
    • 02 of 28. Corn Fritters. Caitlin Bensel, Food Stylist: Torie Cox. ...
    • 03 of 28. Old-Fashioned Meatloaf. ...
    • 04 of 28. Ice Cream Cake. ...
    • 05 of 28. co*ke Float. ...
    • 06 of 28. Walking Tacos. ...
    • 07 of 28. Cheeseburger Casserole. ...
    • 08 of 28. Pizza Sliders.

    What is considered retro style? ›

    In the fashion scene, retro clothing refers to garments that replicate and draw inspiration from past styles. Vintage inspired pieces that .Retro clothing provides a way for vintage styles and patterns to come back into the fashion of today.

    What snacks did they eat in the 60s? ›

    However, packaged snacks were not about to concede to the fast food trend. Peanut M&Ms, Atomic Fireballs, Certs Mints, Hot Tamales, PEZ candy, Pixy Stix, Smarties Candy Necklaces and Marshmallow Peeps were all candies developed during this decade.

    How do you throw a 60s party? ›

    Throwing a 60s party is a groovy idea; you could encourage guests to come in hippie attire, play classic rock music, serve retro snacks like cheese fondue and deviled eggs, and decorate with psychedelic patterns and lava lamps.

    What dessert was popular in the 60s? ›

    It was a decade of flambée, fondue, Jell-O and junket.

    What was the most popular food in 1965? ›

    1965: Onion Dip

    The advent of packaged soup mixes made easy, entertaining-friendly dips a popular '60s go-to.

    References

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