Can this be placed in the food section, I can't post in it for some reason.
How to Make
Hardtack
An Excellent Survival Food
Hardtack is legendary for its resilience to rough handling and extreme conditions. It can be stored for years without ill effect as long as it is kept dry and is easy and inexpensive to make. Durable, nutritious, and light in weight,
hardtack sounds like a nearly perfect survival food!
Hardtack is Good Survival Food
Make Your Own
Hardtack Recipe
There are a number of good
hardtack recipes that you can try at home that will be the subject of another Survival Topic. To begin with, perhaps the most basic and historically accurate is this army
hardtack recipe:
•
Hardtack ingredients:
â—¦4 cups flour, preferably whole wheat
â—¦4 teaspoons salt
â—¦Water - about 2 cups
Preheat your oven to 375 degrees F. Mix your flour and salt in a bowl, adding just enough water to form dough that does not stick to your hands or the bowl as you kneed it. Then roll the dough out into a rough rectangle about half an inch thick. Cut into three inch squares.
Now using a nail or other object press a patter of four rows of four holes each in each square. Do not go through the entire thickness of the dough. Then turn the
hardtack dough over and do the same on the other side.
Next put the squares on an ungreased pan and bake in the oven for half an hour. Then turn the
hardtack squares over and bake for another half hour so that the
hardtack is just a bit brown on both sides.
When you take the
hardtack out of the oven it will be somewhat brittle, but as it cools it will become very hard – hopefully as “hard as a brickâ€Â!
How to Eat
Hardtack
Now that you know how to make
hardtack you will need to learn how to eat it! Because it tends to be much too hard to chew when dry (hence the nicknames related to broken jaw parts),
hardtack is typically pre-soaked in coffee, crumbled into soups and stews, or fried with bacon and eggs or whatever else was on the menu.
Here is a bucket load I made, they don't need air tight storing in fact you can leave them anywhere, but I store them in food grade buckets, this was the food of long ship voyages and the American civil war and so on.
Last lot I made.