#1
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Spam Feast
"SPAM" wasn't always used in reference to cyber stalking and harrassment or just a weird-tasting fast-food meal at home .... !
http://www.nt.net/~toby/remember.html |
#2
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Your dating yourself
Your giving away your age to a certain extent if you remember spam as a food. Even though it is still sold it seem that fewer and fewer people admit to having eaten it in. Some place I have an army cookbook that has a long list of ways to prepare it.
I can remember as a kid having fried spam with pinapple, spam salad, spam sandwiches, etc. Then there is of course the famous spam lamb as prepared on the TV show MASH.
__________________
Phil Waterman `41 C60L Pattern 12 `42 C60S Radio Pattern 13 `45 HUP http://canadianmilitarypattern.com/ New e-mail Philip@canadianmilitarypattern.com |
#3
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Re: Your dating yourself
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Yep ... in the 50's we had SPAM ... I'm sure ... but I mostly remember eating KLIK (spelling???) ...SPAM/KLIK ... same thing only different? To this day I have scars on my foot from having stepped (was running actually) on a KLIK can, sharp sides up ... impressive amount of blood can come out of a 4/5 year olds foot. SPAM ... hmmm ... it would be fun to see the army recipes ... Side note regards BOLOGNA .... fried up it's call "WINNIPEG STEAK" sumthin to go with the CHEEZ WHIZ??? I ate lots of WINNIPEG STEAK as a kid! YUK ... but funny how every once in a while I CRAVE THE CRAP ... BTW .... WHAT EXACTLY was included in the typical WW2 rations? Sounds like SPAM for one, and CORNED BEEF for the Bully Stew for sure ... but what else? |
#4
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Bully beef
When I was a teenager & you mentioned the above to my dad,you'd make sure you were a half a block away from him when you's say the words.Same went for corned beef.Oh another horror for him was brussels sprouts.He despised them after having lived off them for three years in England during the war.
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#5
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Re: Bully beef
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I hear interesting tidbits of WW2 (etc) about soldiers sort of scooping someones chickens for din-dins etc... raiding gardens and such too I presume? Still ... when on "the front lines" etc, hunger must have been a constant issue. Eating itself ... hmmmm ... where and when do you have the time and safety to do that sometimes? I'll bet many dream of home cooked meals! |
#6
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Spam on the engine block
Dad was a combat engineer from North Africa to the Brenner Pass. He said that on long motor moves his outfit used to put the very large cans (your super market deli counter may still get them: they are about 5x5x20 inches) on the engine blocks of their deuce-and-a-halves to heat them up. These plus the number ten cans of fruit cocktail fed a lot of guys. Boredom with this menu probably led one of the guys in his outfit shoot a cow in the Bey of Algiers' prize herd. Yes, it did hit the fan.
Thanks for making me rememebr this story. Bob |
#7
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Re: Spam on the engine block
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That beef dinner must have been heaven to the guys Worth a little poop in the fan! Cool! Karmen |
#8
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I too remember SPAM from my childhood days up at the cottage... along with fresh bass caught that morning, bacon, fried tomatoes and bread slices fried in the leftover bacon grease (yes, in a cast-iron frying pan and cooked over an open fire of driftwood)! Truly, a meal fit for a king (or, in this case, a future SUNRAY)!
The most delightfully disgusting description of WW2 army food has to be (and will never be surpassed) by George Blackburn in THE GUNS OF NORMANDY, when discussing COMPO rations. Tomorrow I'll make Karmen 'read it and weep'...
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SUNRAY SENDS AND ENDS :remember :support |
#9
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Seriously, you guys should have seen the line-up in Normandy when Geoff was cooking this wartime dish. All the ingredients were canned, but the end result tasted very, very good. H. |
#10
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Next comes a "liberated" chicken stewed in "liberated" wine with a mixture of "liberated" fresh vegetables, served in mess tins, with a tin cup of rum to wash it all down...
__________________
SUNRAY SENDS AND ENDS :remember :support |
#11
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MA PIXIE WITCH |
#12
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GET THYSELF INTO THE KITCHEN AND LIBERATE OUR DIRTY DISHES!!!!
__________________
SUNRAY SENDS AND ENDS :remember :support |
#13
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... however I really and truly DO look forward to that liberated feast ... a totally appropriate feast for a liberated woman ... Will this feast come before or after Robbie Burns Day Haggis Feast? |
#14
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#15
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Good one Tony!!
I'm sitting here alone in the basement den on the computer.Then I saw your response!!My women upstairs are still wondering what I was laughing at.
Aside to Karmen Lassie Off to drum with me piper Friday night at our annual STAG "Robbie Burns supper.The lassies' serve us supper then leave.When my plate of steak & kidey pie comes with the haggis,I always ask the lass if she has any Ketchup for the haggis.Boy!Do I make her day every year.Last year as she served me and before I can say anything she says in her Highland tongue,"I know,I know,you're the strange one who always wants the ketchup",as she stomps off to get it |
#16
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http://www.mailmsg.com/SPAM_python.htm http://home.triad.rr.com/spamchef/spamskit.html And here's a useful reference: http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~ddgarcia/spam.html Must try harder old boy. R. |
#17
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oi oi oi
oi oi
Oh Master R. ... surely, I KNEW I could count on you to make this thread truly educational, and totally spamfully entertaining How do to you too? Woof and arf arf to Shad ... back tomorrow ... PW/VD MA |
#18
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#19
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Re: Good one Tony!!
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nite all ... |
#20
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#21
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My life is fuller already. R. |
#22
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Repro WWII rations?
Somewhere, God help me, I learned that somebody out there is making and packaging combat rations of various World War II forces. Now I did US C-rations in the 1970's and found them passable, and have always heard that modern British Army canned rations are far better than ours, but is there truth to my rumor? My masochistic streak is kicking in.
I learned somewhere that somebody is printing World War I Frey Benitos labels for corned beef. I can still hear my Scottish step-granny going on about "bully beef." There is also a Russian version of SPAM called "tushonka." I have found a source on the 'net but I'd have to buy it in case lots. I am not THAT brave -- yet . . . . I can at least brew tea in the time-honoured British Eighth Army fashion, even if I do not use a sand-filled flimsy. Bob |
#23
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Re: Repro WWII rations?
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We'll let you off the stone and sand filled flimsy and a gallon of AVGAS saga. R. |
#24
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Geez
... it just occurred to me ... I wonder if a SPAM POULTICE would cure the rib problem for our Master Sunray? Maybe it also has anti-aging proerties as he is about to have another birthday Jan. 28th ... marking two years beyond half a century ... hmmm ... maybe it will SPAM him back in time and play it forward to the present ....
BEAM ME BACKWARDS AND FORWARDS OH WONDROUS SPAM Of course the trip might jolt him into a bout of hiccups again ... |
#25
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Spam
I meant to tell this story earlier but I got bogged down in other things.
RSM Vic Jackson MM, was a great story teller and always had at least one tale to tell us when he visited our museum. One of the stories was about Spam and the many different ways that the cooks prepared it. One way was to dip it in batter and fry it. Vic dubbed it "Horse Cock" Some time later I invited him to be our guest speaker at a dinner that I used to co-host with Harry Sershall. The main course was always roast beef but for Vic that night the girls cooked up some "Horse Cock" for him, he got a big laugh out of it but would not eat it. As an aside his son is a Lt-Col in the Canadian Army and was stationed in Indonesia when the Tsunami struck, he was able to give us a first hand account of the destruction. |
#26
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Flimsy
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Picture the scene, heated discussion about the efficiency of the flimsy cooker. Old oil can produced , top removed filled with sand, tea mugs to hand, brew can filled with obligatory match floating in the top to take away the smoke taste and tea leaves ready. All is now ready for the addition of fuel and the application of ignition. Another heated debate ensues about how much petrol to add. Well it was my can and my petrol and I thought I remembered my old Dad telling me you had to make a porridge like consistency with the sand and petrol, so that’s what I did. At this point the on lookers started to look shifty and took several paces back. Undeterred the match was struck and thrown into the can. Three things happened in micro second sequence, firstly there was a blinding flash, secondly the contents of the brew can hit me fair and square thirdly three voices from across the yard could be heard calling to me as if in a dream And lo they sayeth "Pete you F$$~~~****rd, You’re supposed to let the F~~~~ Petrol soak in you ####t" So the moral of the story is if you like to keep your eyebrows and moustache let the petrol soak in, It was a hell of a bang though!!!!! Pete |
#27
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Cool
Master Bomber-Pete,
It's ALWAYS so nice to meet my long-lost relatives. Where have you been ... without this story of yours I never would have known we are related!!! Ma |
#28
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Real Spam!!
My father related this one to me which my uncle Steve from 1RCHA Kingston,confirmed,was true.Somewhere in Italy,behind the lines,the old CMP driver met up with Steve.He told him to come to the Chev FAT as he had a surprise to show him.My uncle opened the rear door of the FAT,and what was laying across the crew seats??A real live grown pig.Supper that night was one to remember!!Real Spam.
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#29
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Re: Real Spam!!
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... ??? |
#30
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Perhaps Norm can confirm, but I've read and heard time and time again that the Canadians were the world's best scroungers...
__________________
SUNRAY SENDS AND ENDS :remember :support |
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