The oldest existing ship’s biscuit dates from 1852. True fact.
What do you put this on?
Smashed taters, natch!
And is probably still good to eat. When I toured the Cutty Sark in the mid-90s, the guide was a WWII vet who had served in the Navy. He told us when he first enlisted in '39, their rations included biscuits left over from the Great War.
Imagine eating a baked good older than you are.
Hardtack is traditionally baked, then baked again at a lower temperature (200-250F or so) to get all the moisture out. The stuff that went on ships was baked four times, then aged a minimum of six months before going out on the ship.
For when the inevitable glut of courgettes/marrows comes we will be making this
It’s very much like lemon curd except the base is marrow rather than eggs, which gives it a lighter texture and stores well even outside the fridge.
I once found a carton of sea ration Marlboro’s. Wax Carton. Had to have been 25 years old. I was around 25. Not food, but close! They were still actually kinda tasty. HARSH AS SALT though.
Wax can make an excellent seal. (to keep this on topic)
“Sea ration”? Like, for the ocean or sumpin’?
I’ve found…well, manymanymany recipes from the newspaper in the house and garage since my mom’s death and before. More so since I’ve been cleaning up. I have shelves of cookbooks that were never used, to my knowledge. Here’s a fun sample of something from Pillsbury, which perhaps came inside a box of cake mix or something, judging by the folds:
US Navy issue. They were sealed in wax, at least 3 dips. It was a standard thing for storage in ships, where the holds weren’t always so perfectly dry. 10 packs. Wish I hadn’t opened it, but I was a kid (23?), and it was cool, and now someone else’s are more valuable.
Ah, I grew up hearing about “C-rats”, my dad having served in WWII. One of those weird homonyms.
Here’s the other side of the above leaflet; the top recipe looks delish, the other…ewucghgghhg!!!
(But that’s just me.)
I’ve got collections, too, of Pillsbury Bake-Off Winning Recipes, if anyone’s interested.
As for baking, the last thing I made was ? were? whole-wheat milk-chocolate chip cookies. My baking is well-loved, and I like that. I like the whole thing about baking. It’s chemistry, it’s fattening, it smells great!
I’ve been stuck on breads for so long now.
I did learn a great bread trick. A little bit of cornstarch. It holds on to some water for you. It’s nice, I accidentally made mcdonalds hamburger buns the other day. I will write it down next time!
I tried to make a hamburger with hot sauce cooked into it. It didn’t work the way I wanted it to, but the meat absorbed all the spicy vinegar flavor so it tasted like Chinese stir fry. Not bad, but not what I wanted. If I had to try it again, I would mix some gelatin and hot sauce together, refrigerate until firm, then put them inside stuffed burgers.
That’s…kinda cute.
But that won’t work; the gelatin will melt. And burn. And stink like burnt horses’ hooves, unless you use flavored gelatin, in which case it will smell like burnt-fruit-and-horses’ hooves.
Did you mix it in with the meat prior to cooking? Like, knead it in?
Anyone have a good vegan mac n cheese recipe?
My nutrition doctor suggested it and I found a chickpea pasta that works pretty well for the nongrain diet I’m on.
He suggested nutritional yeast, so I made a version with sweet potatoes blended with nutritional yeast, some almond milk, part of an onion, and some spices. It was not like, wow, that’s going to give Kraft a run for the money, but it was promising.
I’ve been google-fuing up some stuff; the ones that sound the best, of course, have a lot of fat in them. Also verbotem. The one that seemed most promising was made with cashews and some truffle oil. I feel like maybe in moderation these could work.
I’m also open to the idea of a “sauce” that is not really cheesy per se.
I can always do a veggie + pasta thing but I think the sauce satisfies the urge for something remotely resembling comfort food, which is one of the main downfalls I have on this diet with low salt, no grains, no dairy - pretty much every single comfort food is off the list.
Kenji at Serious Eats is my go-to for all things vegan and delicious. i’m vegetarian, not vegan, but i’ve made many of his vegan recipes and they are all just killer.
i’ve been on a bread-baking kick for years now, and i think i’m getting decent at it. if i could chuck everything and just make bread all day, i’d do it.
Yeah, but now you have a cool story whereas they just have an expensive pack of cigarettes.
I mixed the hot sauce in with butter, refrigerated the butter, then cubed it and mixed it into the beef.
I thought of gelatin as an alternative to the butter because of American cheese. It’s doable, but I have to be careful to not burn the gelatin.
I could simply freeze the sauce, but that would be worse than the butter.
Maybe the butter was the correct approach, and I just did it wrong.