Somehow, after reading this article from History.com, the MREs and other Prepper foods I have stashed are looking better and better all the time. Let's face it...battlefield food, at best, has always been a challenge for cooks and troops alike. The challenges faced during the Civil War were certainly no exception!
Desecrated Vegetables: The Hardships of Civil War Eating
By Stephanie Butler
When you think of military food, the word “delicious” doesn’t often come to mind. That’s especially true of camp and battlefield rations, where MREs stocked with orange juice powder and peanut butter rule the day. But even today’s not-so-savory meals have come a long way since the Civil War, when battlefield food was just a pound of salt pork and a few ounces of sugar! In honor of the 150th anniversary of the War Between the States, we’re taking a look back at the food that fed hungry troops, both the blue and the grey.
One of the most striking differences in the way Civil War soldiers ate was simply who prepared the food. Instead of a centralized kitchen with dedicated cooks, each individual soldier was handed his rations of uncooked meat, flour and the rest. It was the soldier’s responsibility to prepare his own food as he saw fit. Naturally, in an era when women did the vast majority of the cooking at home, not every man in camp was equipped with the skills to make something edible out of a handful of corn meal and a slab of salt pork. Soldiers would group together to eat, and the most gifted cooks would step up to the challenge of preparing a full meal for their comrades.
The contents of this meal would vary according to the season and place where it was consumed. While in camp, away from the battlefield, rations meat (in the form of bacon, salt pork, or beef), a flour or bread product, sugar and coffee, as well as dried beans, vinegar, molasses, potatoes and pepper. Dried fruits were regarded as great treats, and vegetables were eaten only as available. This wasn’t often, and malnutrition and scurvy became new enemies for both sides.
On the battlefield, things were even bleaker. Rations were meant to last up to three days, and soldiers on the move were reduced to 16-20 ounces of salted meat, approximately 20 ounces of bread, plus sugar and coffee rations. And the “bread” wasn’t bread at all, but hardtack: an unleavened cracker made of flour and water, baked and dried for an almost indefinite shelf life (if weevils or mold didn’t get to it first). Hardtack was edible in its cracker state, but soldiers were resourceful and preferred to eat it crumbled into soups as a thickener, or fried in pork fat to create a rudimentary crouton known as “skillygalee.” The meat soldiers received was often preserved beef, a product salted so heavily that it required overnight soaking in a running stream for it to be palatable.
Perhaps the most reviled rations were the small cubes of dried carrots, onions, and celery distributed to both armies. Known as desiccated vegetables, these cubes were supposed to provide a reliable and portable source of fiber and vitamins. But the soldiers regarded as little more than bird food, and soon the cubes were called by a new name: “desecrated vegetables.”
Thank goodness that our troops today are fed better than back in the early days. This shows that learning to cook is and was a good thing, as a man that can cook stands a better chance of dining on something other than Protein bars and powdered Koolaid! Think of it as a survival skill!
Coffee out on the patio this morning. Don't worry...no hardtack here!
The horses probably had more food than they did!
ReplyDeleteTough time when the solders came by your place I'll bet.
ReplyDeleteAfter hardtack & salted beef I'll bet a fresh chicken or carrots in the garden were not passed up!
Those must have been some of the most inedible meals ever eaten. I am so grateful our troops today eat better than that. No wonder they plundered farmer's fields. Coffee outside sounds great. It is a beautiful morning here also. Have a great weekend.
ReplyDeletePretty horrible. Cooking skills must have made all the difference and guys should learn.
ReplyDeleteI know a guy who after his divorce lived on nothing but whoopie pies and pepsi. Makes the salt beef look good.
My family has some good cooks and they are men! Yes men need to learn to cook in today's world not every woman has time.
ReplyDeleteCoffee on the patio it is. WE have CLOUDS!
I bet they looked at the horses in a different way (grin). Any wild creature running through the camp would sure be in danger.
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