Sardines on Crackers with Hot Sauce
Canned sardines in mustard sauce or oil were a legitimate lunchbox staple across Appalachia and the rural South from the 1920s onward. Higher in protein and omega-3s than almost any other affordable food, and requiring no preparation. Coal miners carried them in tins. A tin of sardines with saltine crackers and hot sauce was a complete, portable, non-perishable lunch.
Canned sardines in mustard sauce or oil were a legitimate lunchbox staple across Appalachia and the rural South from the 1920s onward. Higher in protein and omega-3s than almost any other affordable food, and requiring no preparation. Coal miners carried them in tins. A tin of sardines with saltine crackers and hot sauce was a complete, portable, non-perishable lunch.
Ingredients
- 1 can (3.75 oz) sardines in oil or mustard sauce
Saltine crackers or light bread
- Hot sauce (Texas Pete or Louisiana Hot Sauce was traditional in the South)
- Lemon juice (optional)
- Sliced onion (optional)
- Crackers or bread for serving
Directions
- Open tin of sardines. Drain excess oil if in oil, or use the mustard sauce as a spread if packed in mustard.
- Lay sardines on crackers whole, or mash them slightly with a fork.
- Add several drops of hot sauce directly onto each cracker.
- A squeeze of lemon juice brightens the flavor significantly.
- Thin-sliced white or yellow onion alongside cuts through the richness.
- Alternatively: mash sardines with crackers and mustard sauce into a rough paste and spread on bread for a sardine sandwich.
Notes
Sardines were one of the most nutritionally complete canned foods available — high in protein, calcium (from the bones), vitamin D, and omega-3 fatty acids. Ocean fish making its way to landlocked Appalachian communities via the rural general store. Hot sauce was considered essential; lemon juice was for when you had it.
Source: ClaudeBilly — Historically Accurate 1970s Appalachian Lunches