Title: TASTE TEST & UNVEILING!: 1942 US Army Field Ration C B Unit MRE Cracked Open! Source:
You Tube URL Source:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hm8f5Kj_CrY Published:Mar 27, 2017 Author:Steve1989MREInfo Post Date:2019-04-27 13:01:12 by Liberator Keywords:WW2, Food, Preservation Views:1138 Comments:7
This incredibly well preserved World War 2 U.S. Army Field Ration Type C B-Unit was one of the main MRE components for the war effort. Mass produced at over 1 Billion, 300 Million B-units in 1942 alone, it was an iconic part of the U.S. Soldier's diet of WW2.
Poster Comment:
Awesome. Fascinating. Good stuff.
1942 MRE Army ration was cracked open. Very thoughtful and creatively how these MREs were packed and preserved.
Would you eat any component of a 20 year old MRE? 30? 50? This was 75 years old.
Dude lights up a 75 year old cigarette and actually samples some contents.
Lucky Strike,Pall Mall,or Chesterfield?
IIRC,for some odd reason most of the Lucky Strikes seemed to go to the USMC,but the Army made out because they got the Pall Malls,Camels,and the Chesterfields. The Camels were as short as the Luckies,but the Pall Mall and Chesterfields were at least twice as long,giving you a longer-lasting smoke out of the 5-pack.
In one MRE was an off-brand, but in another were Chesterfields. (Yes, Army.)
The Camels were as short as the Luckies,but the Pall Mall and Chesterfields were at least twice as long,giving you a longer-lasting smoke out of the 5-pack.
5-packs? This guy found a 9-pack of smokes in his 1945 MRE. In perfect shape. Camels were half the size of a Chesterfield?...That's weird. Well, I guess you had to smoke 'em fast. But...there was the guy, puffing the smoke, sipping the coffee (which he claimed was as good as diner coffee as he explained the history and suppliers of the MREs.)
FWIW, according to this guy, the Charms candy factory in my hometown of Bloomfield, NJ was one of three WW2 MRE suppliers. I believe General Mills was another.
5-packs? This guy found a 9-pack of smokes in his 1945 MRE.
I remember full packs of cigarettes in WW-2 and PROBABLY Korean War era C-rats,but the stuff we got in the army in the 60's had mini-packs with (I THINK) 5 cigarettes in each pack.
Not as bad as you think when you consider you got 3 meals a day,which equaled 15 cigarettes.
Believe it or not,but Lucky Strike cigarettes went from a white package with a big red ball in the middle,to a olive drab green package with the big red ball. They used this in their advertisements saying "Lucky Strike goes to war!"
I suspect that was more wasteful than it was saving for the war effort because you can naturally bleach paper white as a part of the process,but you have to use dye to make it olive drab green.