A simple baked supper like this feels right at home in the old Victory Garden spirit, where a cook made the most of a few dependable ingredients and let the oven do the steady work. This 5-Ingredient Oven 1940s Victory Garden Bake brings together garden vegetables, pantry soup, and a concealed baked protein tucked underneath so the whole dish comes out tender, savory, and ready for the table with hardly any last-minute fuss. It is the sort of practical meal that suits a busy evening beautifully, especially when you want dinner handled hours ahead.
Serve this hearty bake with buttered bread, a crisp cabbage slaw, or simple sliced tomatoes if the garden is generous. It also goes nicely with pickled beets, applesauce, or a dish of green beans, and for a fuller supper you can spoon it over mashed potatoes, buttered noodles, or plain rice to catch every bit of the rich sauce.
5-Ingredient Oven 1940s Victory Garden Bake
Servings: 6
Ingredients
1 1/2 pounds boneless skinless chicken thighs
Directions
1. Heat the oven to 325°F and lightly grease a 9-by-13-inch ceramic baking dish. Spread the sliced potatoes across the bottom, then scatter the carrots and onion over them to make a good vegetable bed.
2. Nestle the chicken thighs down into the vegetables so the protein stays mostly concealed beneath the top layer. Spoon the condensed tomato soup evenly over everything, spreading it gently so the surface is well covered.
3. Cover the dish tightly with foil and bake for 2 hours, until the vegetables are soft and the chicken is fully tender. Remove the foil for the last 20 minutes so the top can darken a little around the edges and the sauce can thicken.
4. Let the bake rest for 10 minutes before serving. Spoon down through the vegetables to bring up the concealed chicken with each portion, making sure everyone gets plenty of the rich sauce and soft garden vegetables.
Variations & Tips
Use pork instead: Boneless pork shoulder slices or thick pork chops work nicely in place of chicken. Keep them tucked under the vegetables so they stay moist during the long bake.
Add a little pantry seasoning: If you do not mind stepping past the strict five-ingredient spirit, a pinch of salt, black pepper, or paprika gives the sauce a little more depth without changing the old-fashioned character of the dish.
Make-ahead advantage: Assemble the whole dish in the morning, cover, and refrigerate. When supper time nears, set it out while the oven heats, then bake as directed for an easy evening meal.
Stretch it further: For hungry folks, spoon this bake over toast, rice, or mashed potatoes. That was a familiar thrifty trick in many Midwestern kitchens, and it turns one pan into a very filling supper.
Vegetable swap: Parsnips or celery can stand in for part of the carrots or onion if that is what you have on hand. The bake was born from practical cooking, so a little flexibility suits it just fine.