Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (2024)

I have a rather serious unveiling this week. A serious gelatin mold unveiling. This is how emotionally invested in this I really am.

With great seriousness, I present: Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad.

Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (2)AuthorRetroRuth
Rating

Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (3)

From "Mealtime Magic" with Fancy Japanese King Crab Meat, 1950

Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (4)

Tested Recipe!

21 oz crabmeator fake krab

2 packages lime flavor gelatin dessert

2 tsp salt

2 cups boiling water

2 tbsp cider vinegar

2 tsp onion juiceuse bottled or cut an onion in half and run the flat of your knife over the cut side

1 tsp Worcestershire sauce

2 cups sour cream

1 cup finely chopped, drained unpeeled cucumber

Few drops green food coloringoptional

3 oz cream cheese

2 tbsp cream

Chicory, watercress or parsley

1

Flake crab or krab, saving sections for garnish.

2

Dissolve lime gelatin and salt in boiling water. Stir until dissolved. Add vinegar, onion juice, Worchestershire sauce. Chill slightly until thickened.

3

Fold in sour cream. Blend well. Fold in cucumber and crab (or krab).

4

Add enough green coloring to give a medium green ton to the mixture.

5

For mold, use lightly oiled 6-cup capacity funnel, available in hardware stores. Plug the hole at base with foil, pour in a little gelatin and chill to keep remaining gelatin from leaking out. Stand filled funnel upright in a large measuring cup. Chill until firm.

6

Unmold, mash cream cheese, stirring in cream. Beat until soft and fluffy. Frost top of the mountain to look like snow. Garnish around the mold with greens and remaining crab chunks.

Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (6)

CategoryGelatin, Main Dish, Salad, SeafoodCooking MethodGelatinTags#chicory, #cidervinegar, #crab, #cream, #creamcheese, #cucumber, #krab, #limegelatin, #onionjuice, #parsley, #watercress, #worcestershiresauce

Ingredients

21 oz crabmeator fake krab

2 packages lime flavor gelatin dessert

2 tsp salt

2 cups boiling water

2 tbsp cider vinegar

2 tsp onion juiceuse bottled or cut an onion in half and run the flat of your knife over the cut side

1 tsp Worcestershire sauce

2 cups sour cream

1 cup finely chopped, drained unpeeled cucumber

Few drops green food coloringoptional

3 oz cream cheese

2 tbsp cream

Chicory, watercress or parsley

Directions

1

Flake crab or krab, saving sections for garnish.

2

Dissolve lime gelatin and salt in boiling water. Stir until dissolved. Add vinegar, onion juice, Worchestershire sauce. Chill slightly until thickened.

3

Fold in sour cream. Blend well. Fold in cucumber and crab (or krab).

4

Add enough green coloring to give a medium green ton to the mixture.

5

For mold, use lightly oiled 6-cup capacity funnel, available in hardware stores. Plug the hole at base with foil, pour in a little gelatin and chill to keep remaining gelatin from leaking out. Stand filled funnel upright in a large measuring cup. Chill until firm.

6

Unmold, mash cream cheese, stirring in cream. Beat until soft and fluffy. Frost top of the mountain to look like snow. Garnish around the mold with greens and remaining crab chunks.

Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (7)

Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad

IngredientsDirections

Can you believe this thing? I can’t. I saw this cookbook and just about lost my mind. Talk about upping your gelatin game.

“I’m bringing an Under The Sea Salad mold to the party on Friday night, Judy. What are you bringing?”

“Mt. Fuji reproduced in crab-sour cream gelatin.”

Now that is a mid-century mike drop.

Anyway, I was lucky enough to discover this little wonder right before Halloween, which was fortunate because my friend Carolyn was having her annual get together with her friends, and they needed another insane craft project to reproduce while drinking. They were the ones responsible for last year’s epic Aquarium Gelatin, so I thought this (and another insane gelatin project that will be revealed at Christmas) would be perfect for them.

As they did last year, they leapt at the chance to play with gelatin on a grand scale. A mountainous grand scale. And they did it with a lot of alcohol and only the minimum loud complaining about how bad the gelatin mixture smelled.

Also, in a move I did not disagree with, they decided to use fake krab rather than real crab. And then proceeded to tediously shred it into little pieces. I was told this took forever.

Look at that gentle whisking.

And that bowl of…gelatin.

That is funky.

I was told at this point that the smell was intense and very, very bad. They also did not add additional food coloring. That is just…the normal color. Fun.

So, another byproduct of having scientists do projects and drink is that they start getting too involved in minutia. It was decided that since Mt. Fuji was big, the gelatin mold should also be big. It was also decided that the funnel I had procured was too small for a big mountain like Mt. Fuji. Also, there was too much potential for gelatin loss if they couldn’t get the seal at the neck end of the funnel just right.

The decision was made to make it in a large bowl instead of the funnel.

I was a little sad, because I wanted to make the gelatin in the funnel, but I understood their decision. But now we had the issue of the top to deal with.

We went with some fancy cream cheese sculpting over a piece of cucumber that we then covered with more cream cheese. I think the look came together pretty well.

Careful. Careful.

And, a cross-section in case you were interested. It actually set up very well! And it was pretty. At least to me.

Now, we just had to release it where it would do the most damage.

“This is bad.”

“I know, you could tell by the smell. Is it the fake crab?”

“No, that’s actually the best part. The chunky bits make it taste better. It’s just so sweet.”

The Verdict: Yuck

From The Tasting Notes –

Of course, this was way too sweet. I mean, the basis is dessert gelatin, so of course it was. The fake crab actually helped tie the flavor together into something that you could actually eat. The whole thing ended up tasting a bit like a really sweet tartar sauce with fake crab bits floating in it. So, not gag-inducing, but who wants to eat gelatinized tartar sauce? Not me. Not even Tom. But Carolyn and her friends had a great time making it, and it ended up being a pretty easy gelatin and the finished product was pretty in a…green sort of way. This would be a fun one if you were having a dinner party where you wanted to simultaneously impress and horrify your guests so that they didn’t invite themselves over again. Like Thanksgiving.

And, here is a little bonus for you. Carolyn and I tasting it in her kitchen. We didn’t love it.

  1. Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (20)

    Robert Reyeson November 8, 2017 at 8:27 am

    Odd question, would plain unflavored gelatin and lime juice work better in this recipe are a replacement for lime flavored gelatin?

  2. Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (21)

    jenon November 8, 2017 at 9:42 am

    no…..just no. I absolutely adore crab (and krab) but this is just flat out nasty lol

  3. Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (22)

    Bam-Bamon November 8, 2017 at 10:28 am

    The looks on your faces was PRICELESS! Thank you for a great laugh! Once we finally finish Mad Men we’re doing a dvd finale party with gelatin entrees and desserts so I’m taking notes of your wins and losses.

  4. Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (23)

    Katieon November 8, 2017 at 10:42 am

    WOW! Another impressive construction! It is pretty to look at, but since I am not a fan of seafood, I can not imagine the flavor combinations of seafood and (sweet) lime flavored gelatin. A good project for Carolyn and the scientists….and, of course, the alcohol must have helped, too! I am anxious to see the reveal of the other project that you said would be coming at Christmas! You are all brave to take on these projects, and we get to enjoy the photos and stories, win-win all around!

  5. Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (24)

    Timothyon November 8, 2017 at 10:51 pm

    Analytical expressions indeed, more retro co*cktails you need.

  6. Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (25)

    Lisa B.on November 9, 2017 at 2:06 am

    No. Nonononononono.

  7. Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (26)

    Freezyon November 9, 2017 at 2:28 pm

    If this is mid-century’s take on Mt. Fuji, I’d hate to see a mid-century version of The Great Wave off Kanagawa!

  8. Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (27)

    Carolynon November 10, 2017 at 8:42 am

    This is what I was saying as my spoon headed toward Mt. Fuji. Seriously.

  9. Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (28)

    ElleElleon November 10, 2017 at 12:07 pm

    Well, at least you had fun making it! I love the look on Carolyn’s face: “Wait for it, wait for it.”

  10. Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (29)

    Aliceon November 11, 2017 at 4:52 am

    Here in Italy we have only real crab on sale… what exactly is fake crab?
    Love the lokk on the faces of the brave people who tried it 🙂

  11. Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (30)

    RetroRuthon November 11, 2017 at 1:54 pm

    Hi Alice!

    Fake crab is a processed fish product (usually white fish) that is sweetened and then formed to look like crab legs!

  12. Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (31)

    Martyon November 22, 2017 at 9:45 pm

    At least it looked pretty? 😉

    The looks on everyone’s faces are priceless! Hope you guys have a fantastic Thanksgiving!

  13. Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (32)

    Susanon November 30, 2017 at 6:06 pm

    My husband says it looks “Fujiyummy.”

    We will never know, and I may be sleeping in the guest room tonight…

  14. Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (33)

    Ted D. Nichols, Jr.on December 12, 2017 at 11:34 am

    I love reading your posts. Going all the way back to 1984, I was in Community College for Hotel & Restaurant Management and Food Services Management simultaneously. It was a frantic fun time. In 1985 I participated in the North Carolina Culinary Olympics. One of my items was a beef stroganoff in puff pastry boxes. One of the Judges, from an Austrian Country as best I recall, commented “Your entree looks like leetle coffins”. I got a bronze medal. Still happy. I do Night Audit in a Hotel currently but still hope one day to own and operate a stainless steel diner. Sigh.

  15. Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (34)

    Brian Meyeron September 24, 2018 at 10:13 am

    Do you happen to know the source material for the “Mealtime Magic” vintage photo you used? Thank you.

  16. Mt. Fuji King Crab Salad, 1950 – A Vintage Gelatin Recipe Test - Mid-Century Menu (35)

    Manonon March 10, 2021 at 2:57 pm

    I was thinking that with lemon instead of lime would work!

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