My kids haven’t seen Close Encounters of the Third Kind yet and I thought it would be a fun surprise to recreate the meal eaten in the mashed potato scene and watch the movie with the movie dinner. (I can’t wait to see if they put two and two together when that scene comes up lol.)

Obviously there’s mashed potato. And I can see sweet corn. Kids are drinking milk. But I can’t tell what the little meat things are. I assumed they were crumbed rissoles but having not been raised or lived in the US, I’m unsure if I’m missing a common protein that was eaten at dinner around the late 1970s. Meatloaf has also been suggested but in my country we never have mini meatloaves that I’ve seen so I’m unsure how accurate that is.

EDIT: Middle bottom, you can see a partially eaten meat thing which looks pink inside: https://imgur.com/ejrvG3b

I also can’t tell what is in the bowls beside Roy and his sons - to the top left of Roy’s plate, right hand side of Toby and top right of Brad’s plate. Maybe Ronnie and Silvia have one of these bowls too but I can’t tell. You can see Brad eat out of his bowl at one point and it looks like something pale (I wondered coleslaw or macaroni).

EDIT: Screenshot of side https://imgur.com/1I1X3cI

Anyway, anyone know or have an idea of what the little meat things are and what are in the side bowls?

  • zabadoh
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    2 months ago

    It looks like there are 2 kinds of brown things.

    One type that is a lighter brown looks spheroid, possibly potatoes or dinner rolls.

    Another type is a darker brown, looks like fat cylinders, possibly deep fried breaded fish/salmon/crab cakes, as others have said.

    The lighter brown ones could also be fish/salmon/crab cakes, but from a different manufacturer, or just shaped differently.

    • Che Banana@beehaw.org
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      2 months ago

      This would be my take, some sort of fish cake (tuna, since they were Midwest, salmon cakes more likely on the Pacific coast).