Posted on 02/12/2009 4:24:55 PM PST by dennisw
Spam, a gelatinous 12-ounce rectangle of spiced ham and pork, may be among the worlds most maligned foods, dismissed as inedible by food elites and skewered by comedians who have offered smart-alecky theories on its name
But these days, consumers are rediscovering relatively cheap foods, Spam among them. A 12-ounce can of Spam, marketed as Crazy Tasty, costs about $2.40. People are realizing its not that bad a product, said Dan Johnson, 55, who operates a 70-foot-high Spam oven.
Hormel declined to cooperate with this article, but several of its workers were interviewed here recently with the help of their union, the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union Local 9. Slumped in chairs at the union hall after making 149,950 cans of Spam on the day shift, several workers said they been through boom times before but nothing like this.
Spam seems to do well when hard times hit, said Dan Bartel, business agent for the union local. Well probably see Spam lines instead of soup lines.
Even as consumers are cutting back on all sorts of goods, Spam is among a select group of thrifty grocery items that are selling steadily.
Pancake mixes and instant potatoes are booming. So are vitamins, fruit and vegetable preservatives and beer, according to data from October compiled by Information Resources, a market research firm.
Weve seen a double-digit increase in the sale of rice and beans, said Teena Massingill, spokeswoman for the Safeway grocery chain, in an e-mail message. Theyre real belly fillers.
Kraft Foods said recently that some of its value-oriented products like macaroni and cheese, Jell-O and Kool-Aid were experiencing robust growth. And sales are still growing, if not booming, for Velveeta, a Kraft product that bears the same passing resemblance to cheese as Spam bears to ham.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
White Castle...better than the colon cleansers they sell on those infomericals
Yeah... you are right
There ya go1
SPAM has the perfect amount of salt and fat to cook nicely with pinto beans. It has a strudy, storeable container and also keeps forever without refrigeration. Even if one doesn’t consider it gourmet fare, it’s a very good thing to have in ones emergency provisions (along with pinto beans).
Is their CEO the same Hormel who is a flaming Soros-type liberal faggie whom B.J. Klintoon named as our ambassador to Belgium or wherever? I mean, he lisped his snippy defiance at Senate Republicans during confirmation hearings.
Reason enough to stick to the WalMart version or the Food Lion version.
(fireproof suit donned)
Yeah, it's everywhere on the Islands. In fact, I tried a Spam dish at one of those L&L Hawaiian Barbeque fast-food joints. Overall, the food there is okay - but I'd skip the Spam Musubi. Basically a chunk of grilled Spam and a wad of sticky white rice, wrapped up in a hunk of seaweed. It may just be my individual palate, but the taste of Spam just doesn't go with seaweed - or vice versa.
Otherwise, I like the stuff - especially dunked in an egg wash, rolled in bread crumbs and pan fried. It's an angioplasty on a plate, but damn, it's tasty.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Hormel
The gay Hormel you mention doesn’t run Hormel foods but is a grandson of the founder
>>>Austin, Minn., (where Hormel makes Spam) has 13 restaurants with Spam on the menu, including Johnnys.<<<
Now that I get to go to Austin weekly, I’m going to stop at Johnny’s....
That combo has lots of protein and good quality carbohydrates in the pinto beans
I'm sure it could sustain life for a few months if you had vitamin C pills
LOL
THe iofficl shelf life of SPAM is
(wait for it)
infinity.
AS long as the package is intct, it has no exp date. All Hormel products are that way.
In Alaska’ SPAM and Sailor Boy pilot bread of the “Stuff Of Life”. You can leave them in your cabin forever and they are as good as the day you brought them out.
MMm-mmm-good-ness
Just googled Mastercook. That looks pretty cool. Years ago, I bought a program called “Dinner at 8” (same idea — recipes, searchable, it even combined a shopping list for you). Unfortunately, the software was outdated within a year or two and wouldn’t run on any of the newer operating systems. So, I resorted to good old word files, organized in folders. It’s searchable and does the trick.
In about 1998, I actually wanted to set up a website for recipes and do something similar. I wish I had done it then. I still haven’t seen anything as good as the framework I laid out that could easily have sustained itself with quality advertising.
One good thing about MC is the newer versions have a tool that allows you to collect recipes from the web by highlighting portions of the reciped, click on the title of the portion (title, ingredients, directions, etc) and then just load them into the program.
a lil bit o heaven
LOL Tater Salad...
Hmmm... that would certainly be handy for converting all of the recipes that I have in my personal cookbook (word files). I only have a few hundred recipes, so it wouldn't be too tough. I may have to puchase MC one of these days.
As to PC's, I'm keeping my old Windows 2000 laptop as a permanent emergency machine for old software and programs.
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