Posted on 11/12/2008 6:01:02 PM PST by AZamericonnie
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Well, I’ll be!
I found my very first Canteen thread!
It was The Canteen Cook Off!
Great recipes in here!
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1579429/posts
Tonk was still with us then..
*sniff*
He and Star were behind the scenes holding my hand!
I miss him so much!
You might want to bookmark that thread
It has almost 1200 posts with great recipes..
Enjoy!
Awwwwwwww.....memory time! It will be bookmarked! *sniff*
*sniff*
It’s a great keepsake, huh Sis?
I remember dat!
Actually left work early for some shopping & a special dinner.
Good times but the roads were crazy!
Did someone send a memo that I would be driving today? LOL
Hope your roads to Wally World are clear of driver zombies!:)
Tabasco does not openly advertise its history with the U.S. Armed Forces. During the Spanish-American War, John Avery McIlhenny, son of Tabasco's inventor and the second president of McIlhenny Company, served in the 1st U.S. Volunteer Cavalry Regiment, better known as Theodore Roosevelt's Rough Riders. His son, Brigadier General Walter Stauffer McIlhenny, USMCR, a World War II veteran and recipient of the Navy Cross, presided over McIlhenny Company from 1949 until his death in 1985. During the Vietnam War, BGen. McIlhenny issued the The Charlie Ration Cookbook. (Charlie ration was slang for the field meal given to troops.) This cookbook came wrapped around a two-ounce bottle of Tabasco sauce in a camouflaged, water-resistant container. It included instructions on how to mix C-rations to make such tasty concoctions as "Combat Canapés" or "Breast of Chicken under Bullets."
It is included in MREs ("Meals Ready to Eat").[5] During the 1980s, the U.S. military began to include miniature bottles of Tabasco sauce in its MREs. Eventually, miniature bottles of Tabasco sauce were included in two-thirds of all MRE menus. During the same period, McIlhenny Company issued a new military-oriented cookbook using characters from the comic strip Beetle Bailey, titled The Unofficial MRE Cookbook, which it offered free of charge to U.S. Troops. In response to these gestures, service personnel wrote many letters of thanks to McIlhenny Company.
Most recently, U.S. troops in Afghanistan during Operation Enduring Freedom used miniature Tabasco bottles to decorate their Christmas trees. Some soldiers used the bottles to make chess sets. Many U.S. troops have returned miniature bottles to McIlhenny Company filled with soil from local camps and bases in Iraq and elsewhere.
McIlhenny Company's relationship with the military extends beyond combat situations. The U.S. Navy and U.S. Marine Corps list over 400 mess halls that offer Tabasco sauce on their tables. In fact, Tabasco sauce is found on the table of every Officer's Mess in the Marine Corps.
Walter Stauffer McIlhenny was a benefactor of the Marine Military Academy. As a result, a bottle of Tabasco sauce can be found on every table in the school's mess hall. McIlhenny was a member of the Academy's General H. M. Smith Foundation, and the school named one of its buildings after him.
*smooch*
I know!
I have missed you!
Evening Meg.. Hug.
Two (2) bags of Kingsford charcoal
Two (2) #10 cans of Van Camp's Beans
One (1) 12 oz. bottle of Jim Beam BBQ Sauce
One (1) 1 quart canteen of water
1 tsp. cinnamon
2 tblsp. black pepper
2 tblsp. tabasco sauce (option)
Start fire.
Pour canteen of water into stock pot.
When water begins to boil, pour in beans, BBQ sauce.
Heat for 10 mins.
Add cinnamon, pepper, and tabasco.
Continue heating, stirring frequently and tasting every few minutes until done to taste.
Serves twenty.
Evening Sandy.
Evening Kathy, Hugs.
Just put in my old post file..Thanks!
Thank YOU for helping out dear! *Hugs*
How many days in a row did you have to eat them?
It sure is. I got very nostalgic just reading the first 3
pages!
....and very hungry! LOL!
Hugs, Taz..How are you this evening?
Very yummy...very inventive!(((((Sarge)))))
It’s rainy and cold.
WooHoo! You found it!
The cinnamon is an interesting twist Sarge!
Wasn’t that fun, My?
I had a blast with that thread!
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