The ’60s were a wild time, and one of the wildest things about it was the food! I mean, look at this ‘60s-era ad we came across from Skippy Peanut Butter and Hellman’s Mayonnaise. It is really something else:

That's right, they wanted people to eat peanut butter and mayonnaise sandwiches!
The ad suggested people try the basic "lunchbox special" — which was just peanut butter and mayo — or "fancy" versions, which augmented the PB and mayo:

Since we're the adventurous sorts, we — Asia, Mike, and Krista — decided to give this "brand new flavor promise" a try.

Here were our rules — We'd each make (and take a sizable bite out of) four of the sandwiches: the lunchbox version, double crunch, apple fandango, and crazy combo.
First, we made the basic lunchbox version (just peanut butter and mayo):

Asia
Mike
Krista
Next we tried the double crunch (peanut butter and mayo plus bacon and pickles):

Asia
Mike
Krista
Next up: apple fandango (peanut butter and mayo plus sliced apples and jam):

Asia
Mike
Krista
And lastly, the crazy combo (peanut butter and mayo plus salami, sliced eggs, and onions).

Asia
Mike
Krista
Final Thoughts:

Asia
Oh, '60s, you tried it. The original combo wasn't that bad, but once onions, boiled egg, salami, and relish got involved, this flavor experiment got a little out of hand, IMO. If I had a time machine, I would go back and buy out all of the magazines that had this ad in them before some unsuspecting person could get any "doubly delicious" ideas. I will never look at a jar of mayo the same way again.
Mike
This ad seems pretty wacky from the vantage of 2018, but last year Burger King sold mac 'n' cheese deep-fried in a Cheetos crust, and that will undoubtedly seem pretty weird in 55 years.
Still, I can't help but think about how this ad came from a pre-internet age (with a far from developed mass media), so regular folks really had no way to reject it or spread the word that these recipes were not, in fact, "together tremendous." If a brand proposed something like this today, it would be flamed to hell in 15 minutes on Twitter, but back then brands could promote a bad-faith concept like this designed to increase sales of two of their products, and suffer no repercussions for it.
Krista
What were they thinking back then?! In all honestly, I don't know why or how this ad got approved. It was a good effort, but PB and mayo will NEVER BE A THING. Oh, and I won't be able to eat peanut butter for a while now thanks to this little experiment.
Together Tremendous!
