Long before the candle parties, makeup parties, sex toy parties, and home decor parties, were Tupperware parties. I remember them very well. Every other month or so one of the moms on the block would host a party where the neighborhood would gather to see all the latest wares from a goliath plastic food container company so they could order stuff to make their lives easier (and keep their foods fresher).
Personally I hated Tupperware because the containers would easily warp and stain... and the soft plastic would scratch with little effort, always making me wonder how much plastic was ending up in our food. My mom still had a bunch of the stuff when I cleaned out here cupboards... all of it warped, stained, and scratched.
With the exception of this thing, which I kept and still use from time to time...
Guaranteed delicious microplastics in every bite!
Today it was announced that Tupperware is bankrupt.
Which isn't too shocking. Who has time for food storage parties when you can just order cheap crap from Amazon and get on with your life? Or, if you're me, replace as much kitchen stuff as possible with glass and metal (well, except for stuff that sits out on the counter because I have cats).
Still... I do have some fond Tupperware memories too. It would be tough growing up in 1970's rural America and not have fond memories.
There were the Tupperware popcicle molds which you could fill with Kool-Aid (or Jell-O or Jell-O Pudding, if you were bougie). There was the Tupperware cereal keeper containers which made it so that your Fruit Loops didn't go stale as fast. There was that famous Tupperware cake taker that got pulled out when grandma was taking a cake somewhere and you got excited for a slice.
But then there was everything else, which usually meant you were getting gross leftovers instead of new deliciousness. That's the darker side of my childhood that most people don't want to discuss. Though, as an adult who has to actually pay for my own food, I'm thrilled to have modern food storage technology!
I'd just prefer that my food not be stored in plastic and cost a fortune, so I guess childhood memories are all the Tupperware I need.
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My Mum and grandmothers were all into Tupperware.
I’m still using some of it!
But I did get rid of a lot because it was old/stained/sticky and none of it went in the dishwasher.
We had the popsicle makers and the cereal containers same as you.
We also had a lot of the other things they made as well.
But when I moved out of home and was setting myself up, I really hated the Tupperware business model. Like, how can I just buy more when I need it. I thought it was dumb to have to find someone that would sell the stuff. So I went with Decor. 🙂
So much Tupperware growing up. And the parties? All the time through the late 80s. Yup. I feel ya. And we had that colander too. I saw a great pun headline about them goin bankrupt over on Reddit. I’m paraphrasing, but it went something like, “Tupperware is bankrupt? But I thought their finances were airtight!” I laughed.