#1
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Rations For All
For those communities that have D level of technology or better might have created rations for use by their military. The larger (D level) and/or more advanced communities are more likely to use this.
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#2
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Randy,
is this 4th edition tech levels or 3rd? Can you break down what a given tech level is capable of in regards to rations? Thanks. |
#3
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This is Fourth edition tech levels. For Third Edition the tech level would be C or better.
Below is a general breakdown of food preservation: Ancient Pickling Drying Curing (salt) Sugaring Smoking Jellying Jugging Freezing (1) 1820 Canned 1880 Refrigeration Pasteurization 1920 Freezing (2) Vacuum forming 1950 Preservatives 1960 Irradiation 1980 Modified atmosphere 2000 Electroporation Pascalization (1) In latitudes that allowed for winter freezing of food. (2) Industrial freezing |
#4
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Dehydrated rations first appeared with the North in the American Civil War. In WW2, the U.S. use dehydrated and compressed rations to conserve space and weight shipping food overseas. Such things as hashbrowns, chopped vegetables, and dehydrated soups. Not individual rations themselves but, as part of a overall menu reconstituted by a mess unit.
Some things from the American Civil War can still be found on supermarket shelves. Canned coffee, canned milk, canned cheese, crackers in wax paper, canned ham, bullion cubes, etc. |
#5
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Quote:
Check out the 1892 Sears Roebuck Catalog reprint in the grocery section for shelf-stable shippable foods available before the turn of the century. And Corned Beef in cans (boiled beef--in French, Boeuf Bouilli, hence the derivation of "bully-beef") was a forgone conclusion as an Allied article of mess throughout WW1. (American) Colonial Era cookbooks have recipes for "pocket soup" or "Veal Glue", which is meat joints boiled down until the cartilage dissolves enough, the meat and bones removed, and the water component boiled off until the liquid reduces down to the consistency of a block of unmelted/undissolved glue--think unmelted Hot Glue or a blob of hard-dried Elmer's Glue. It was dry enough to literally carry in a pocket without sticking. This could be tossed into a pot of hot water and reconstituted as a broth. Also from that era, there was jerkey, and its Native American cousin, pemmican: dried meat and berries compounded in a meat-fat matrix--carried in pouches, it provided ready sustaining nourishment in a ready-to-eat form.
__________________
"Let's roll." Todd Beamer, aboard United Flight 93 over western Pennsylvania, September 11, 2001. |
#6
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Quote:
http://www.26nc.org/Articles/cooking...20campaign.pdf Last edited by ArmySGT.; 08-20-2014 at 05:55 PM. |
#7
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I would expect that rations for most any survivor group are going to be fresh or dried.
Salted, if a group has access to salt such as near the sea, the Great Salt Lake, or a salt mine such as Kansas has deep, deep down. Pickled, presents another problem. Vinegar. Where do you get it? I don't know of another way to make vinegar except from grapes. In the early 90's this meant California. Now with global warming, that can mean Oregon too. Sugar cure, sugar does the same thing as salt. Drives water out of cells and creates an environment hostile to bacteria. Sugar could come from the Gulf states or from sugar beets. Lastly, if in a village, that can mean a cold cellar. This worked well for our ancestors that packed away roots like potatoes, carrots, turnips, etc, and fruits like apples, pears. |
#8
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There are plenty of salt deposits in the US. I have attached a png map. There are also mineral licks that animals have used.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mineral_lick Vinegar can be produced from a variety of sources. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinegar There are two grape species native to North America, both can be used to make wine. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitis_labrusca http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitis_riparia Sugar cane is a warm temperate to tropical climate plant. It requires at least 24 inches of rainfall per year minimum falling over several months. It does not tolerate severe frosts so all sugarcane grows between 33 degrees north (about the AR and LA border) and 33 degrees south latitudes. Sugar beets grow in a cool temperate climate within a narrow soil type. Beets are grown in CA, CO, UT, MI, MT, ID and other northern states. Last edited by RandyT0001; 08-24-2014 at 11:39 PM. |
#9
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for another source of Sugar you have Maple. which is plentiful in the North East particularly in Pennsylvania it take a while to boil the sap down to sugar but it is common enough that it is a reasonable source for rations. also it can be used to make a form of wine the same as a great many fruits and flowers. and as apple wine is most commonly used to produce vinegar pickleing would very likely become a common for of preservation even after better methods become available simply because of availability.
__________________
the best course of action when all is against you is to slow down and think critically about the situation. this way you are not blindly rushing into an ambush and your mind is doing something useful rather than getting you killed. |
#10
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Many Sorghum grasses are used as fodder and one, sorghum bicolor, is cultivated as a grain and is used to make sweet sorghum (molasses).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sorghum http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweet_sorghum Maple trees grow across most of the US. Different species produce differing amounts and qualities of syrup. From Wikipedia Maple trees have many uses, from Wikipedia: "Commercial usesI went through the listing for trees in Tennessee to find what trees typically grow in West Tennessee and the Jackson Purchase area of Kentucky on Wikepedia. Two examples: Oxydendrum arboreum - sourwood, sorrel tree - The leaves are a laxative. The shoots make excellent arrow shafts. Pinus taeda - loblolly pine, bull pine, rosemary pine - This pine tree can reach a height of 30–35 m (98–115 ft) with a diameter of 0.4–1.5 m (1.3–4.9 ft). Exceptional specimens may reach 50 m (160 ft) tall. They are used for lumber, pulp and utility poles. I have downloaded maps from the USGS that lists minerals processing and mines like the attached pdf. Unfortunately there is not a diversity of mineral deposits in West Tennessee. (If you trace north from the red bucket on the GA and SC border to a green bottle next to a gold and silver cross one finds a gold and silver mine in the eastern US.) Last edited by RandyT0001; 08-25-2014 at 04:23 PM. Reason: Not sayin' :P |
#11
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WWII era Klim is still around in the Hispanic food section as "Nido". WAAY better than Carnation in my opinion.
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#12
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What sort of packaging do you expect to see from each tech level?
Below D, I expect kiln fired pottery and greased parfleche leather pouches, as well as natural casing for sausages and pemmican. |
#13
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From 1840, the early steam age, until today waxed paper, tin cans and glass bottles are used.
From 1880, the late steam age, until today add early plastics like celluloid and rubber. Cereals in cardboard boxes. Corrugated boxes used for shipping. From 1920, the early electric age, until today add thermoplastics used in vacuum formed packages. By 1960, the late electric age, there are additional plastics in use. Today we still use all methods of packaging food. Last edited by RandyT0001; 07-19-2015 at 07:23 PM. |
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