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Originally Posted by
Paul S.
Adding to the list, Camp Pie supposedly dates to before the Crimean War and was used as a ration item. It is found on the shelf of every supermarket in Oz next to bully beef. I like it fried as a breakfast meat, but it's a non-starter for the wife. Do they still sell it in the U.K.?
I can't say that I've ever heard of it but it may still be sold here under a different name. I take it that it's a tinned meat intended to go into a pie rather than a meat pie that's been canned? What type of meat is it, beaf, pork or something else?
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04-04-2017 01:50 PM
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But, the greatest of all proper ANZAC biscuits. I really didn't know what they were when I went to Oz. The tastiest biscuits known to man. Our cooks used to make a tray of them and leave them on the serving bays in the kitchens. The Poms have never heard of them and I've never seen them here.
Maybe one of you ANZACS can explain...........
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I love corned beef especially with a hearty mustard. Back when the army baked their own bread I would barter for a loaf. In the field especially in the summer because the fat would melt in the can. Cut a couple thick slices then spoon the corned beef and rendered fat on it with a huge spoonful of mustard. Wash it down with a couple ice cold beers at the end of a long day. Of course that's when I was in my early 20's and worked it off. I now treat myself to maybe two cans a year now.
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Not to get off topic, but what the h*ll is vegemite
? I've heard it mentioned but as a yank, have no clue what it is...
Russ
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Originally Posted by
RASelkirk
If you click on the word in your post it'll show you. Here's a link...
Vegemite - Wikipedia
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Originally Posted by
WarPig1976
Spinning off from another thread, what foods do we consume today that started as military rations? I can think of three off the top of my head.
SPAM=WW2
M&Ms=WW2
Goldenbergs Peanut Chews=WW1
Any others?
HMMM, I thought Spam came out for WW 1?
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Originally Posted by
Merle
HMMM, I thought Spam came out for WW 1?
I could be wrong....
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Originally Posted by
Steve762
Per spam.com introduced in 1937.
OK, thanks. It was not introduced for WW1; makes me wonder what I was remembering.....
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Processed cheese was invented by Kraft in WW1.
Probably one of the biggest foods developed in WW2 is one we never think of as having come from the military. We consume millions of tons of it every year without giving its origin a thought. It’s found around the globe and common as a bag of chips (crisps in the UK
).
It’s the cheese flavoring in many of the snack foods we eat today. Dehydrated cheese powder is light weight and lasts a very long time. Just what the US military was looking in WW2.
The military used the Spray-drying method to dehydrate other foods, like milk, eggs and ……….
Object of Interest: Cheese Powder - The New Yorker
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Originally Posted by
Merle
makes me wonder what I was remembering
Bully beef? I think canned bully beef(corned beef)made it's rounds for WW1. I sure ate enough during certain years in the army. I'd melt the grease to the closed end of the can on the manifold of an armored vehicle and open the other with it's key. I'd use a knife to eat it and leave the grease at the bottom...very quick meal.
Trench Food
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