"Do you see those two weevils, doctor?" "I do, why?" "Which one would you choose?" "Neither, they are the exact same species of curculio." "If you HAD to choose ..." "If you are going to push me *puts on glasses* ... I would choose the righthand weevil, for it has significant advantage in both length and width" *aubrey smacks table* "THERE, I HAVE YOU! YOU'RE COMPLETELY DISHED ... do you not know that in the service ... one must always choose the LESSER of two weevils?"
Oh I could kiss you for this comment. This and Max's _clack clack_ live in my brain rent-free and come rushing to the forefront every time someone mentions hardtack 😀
The camaderie between this channel and Max Miller will always delight me. I was half expecting them to cut away to Max with the clack clack, but now we have cuts of both of them clacking hardtack. Great work as always
@@justicedemocrat9357 To get an answer to your question? Why does anyone look up anything? If you understood context clues youdve been like "Huh, thats probably another youtuber who does historical food." (Hint, thats what he is)
I was a submariner and out cooks baked fresh loafs every day. The boat smelled so nice… until they blew the sanitary tanks and that was a whole different smell
you call these things "chips"? Instead of crispity crunchy munchie crackerjack snacker nibbler snap crack n pop westpoolchestershireshire queen's lovely jubily delights? That’s rather bit cringe, innit bruv
The only reason I use SponsorBlock is because of comments like this. This plug-in allows you to block built in ads. DON'T DO THAT! Use it so you don't post double comments, it highlights other comments so you don't make their mistakes.
Hardtacks are the real MVP of field cooking. To this day Polish Army issues special variant of hardtacks in MRE's. Soldiers call them 'Panzer waffles" and joke that in a pinch they can be used as extra ballistic plates in body armor. Couple of years ago there was a movement to replace hardtacks with lightweight rice crackers, but it was unpopular and hardtacks returned to MRE's.
It's also used in Japan as mandatory emergency rations, and in Alaska as emergency rations for bush pilots. It's wild how this incredibly old school ration is still going strong.
@@wanderingcalamity360 Sailor Boy pilot bread is nothing like hardtack. It's harder than your average saltine, but still pretty easy to chew without having to soak it in coffee for an hour. And it's definitely not stopping any bullets.
In the Hornblower TV series you see the cook using one of those stoves. It was a wooden replica prop, and when the series ended they gave the prop stove to HMS Unicorn which is a museum ship in Dundee, you can see it there
That's one of those nerd-out moments I have every time I watch that series. I love that they put so much effort into doing things accurately, down to the galleys and even the food they serve to the sailors.
@@Raskolnikov70 Yes there were a few good shows like that back in the 80s and 90s as well. I don't remember most of them but I did watch them as a kid. You could start to watch other shows and go "the buttons are wrong" etc. haha. The Sharp series is kind of good too.
When I was a sailor aboard merchants ships in the 80s we had three meals a day prepared by cooks from a broad range of foods, but the quality of the stores and cooking talents varied widely. A ship was often referred to as a "good feeder" if the standards were high. But regulations that had long been superseded by modern contracts were still posted showing a pound of hardtack per sailor among the requirements. If we had a bad feeder, we might grumble of giving us the hardtack instead.
@@Timeward76 I'm sorry if my story suggested we were truly serious. Merely griping. I've had some lousy cooks, but it wasn't worth making a case out of.
Sailors also drank almost nothing but beer, cider, or ale (which was used to soak the hardtack biscuits to soften them); all these beverages have nutritional value and in a pinch could keep people from starving even without the biscuits. Beer or ale the way it was originally made in Europe was a thick, soupy survival food, with less alcohol content than typical beer today, and people of all ages consumed it.
This is partly why the Romans considered beer "barbaric" in its thick, primal form. Also an old Townsends video discussed how small beer was recommended to children to help them grow from the nutrients
Related too, is wine as mentioned in the Bible or old Greek and Roman stories. It was mostly water, wine added to water, for flavor and to kill the bugs. People who drank straight wine were considered alcoholics.
The first thing I thought when I saw the title of this video was "Replace hardtack?! No one tell Max!" And Jon's clack-clack and all the clack-clacks in the comment delight me. 🙂 I cannot WAIT until at some point, we get a collab video with Townsends and Max. It's got to happen eventually. I always thought that the point of hardtack was just to make flour easier to transport, just turning it into bricks like was done with tea.
It is one of the reasons to make hardtack, but also it is a matter of preservation. Flour goes bad very fast if it is left moist, so baking it dry prevented the spoiladge. Also, the hardtack were made on a standart size, so every so many biscuits would be worth 1 pound of flour, so, were that many for each man per day.
They were never meant to be tasty. They were a way to preserve calories (carbs!) in edible form for months and years - usually in difficult conditions.
You're not wrong. I make mine with a little bit of baking powder and salt and roll them out to about tortilla thickness and cut it out to about the size of a Ritz cracker. Bake it low and slow until about a golden brown, and then run it through my food dehydrator The result is like a more rugged cracker. Not historical accurate by any stretch, but it's at least edible and doesn't break your teeth. Every time I've tried the historically accurate variety, I've been worried about chipping teeth on it.
@10:20- He raises a very good point re: sailors in the Age of Sail (say, 1550-1850)- they ate far, far better than most people at the time- especially in the navy (the British Royal Navy in particular)... Their diet would come out to over 5000-6000+ calories per day! They would have, in addition to the ubiquitous daily pound of hardtack, a whole pound of meat (salt pork or beef) five days each week- as well as butter, peas, cheese, veggies if available, and even puddings, etc, as well as a gallon of small (like 2% alcohol or less) beer, and on long voyages, the far more popular grog (1/2 pint of rum @ 120+ proof mixed 4-1 with water and lemon or lime juice to prevent scurvy- it's actually pretty tasty, too) every single day, along with an optional tobacco ration, as well as whatever they could buy or catch. The sailor's rations were probably far more nutritious (if not very tasty) than what 95% of what most people ate in that era. (People who could expect meat MAYBE once per week, if they were successful tradesmen, farmers, etc.)
You mean "aren't" don't you. The olds Scots song "Forfar Sodger" makes a reference to that. One of the verses goes: "My faither was a weaver poor As ever filled a spool, Sir; And never was meat cam tae wir door But jist a pun' at Yule, Sir."
@townsends John I've always been a huge fan, like from day one. But this video shows how far you've come as an absolute professional. Your research and delivery is top tier. I would say one of the best historian video makers of all time. God bless and keep up the good work.
There is a type of traditional bread made here in Sweden that shares a few properties of ships biscuit. It's called "Knäckebröd" (Crisp bread) and is still enjoyed today at swedish breakfast and dinner tables. It's a pretty thin slice of bread that's also very dry so it can be stored for months without going bad so long as it's kept away from moisture. In modern grocery stores they are normally shipped being cut into rectangular pieces, but hundreds of years ago they were shaped into big circular discs with a hole in the center. This shape had a purpose where you could thread several discs of bread onto a wooden dowel, and the dowel would be mounted high up in a kitchen to prevent rats or mice near the fireplace so the vermin couldn't reach it and the heat from the hearth would ensure that the bread was kept dry and good to eat for a very long time.
@@crosisofborg5524 If you would like to try it out, then you should be able to find Knäckebröd in IKEA stores outside of Sweden. So if you happen to be going to shop for furniture, pick up a package and try it out with some butter on top. My personal favourite topping is slices of fresh cucumber, but it goes well with cheese, various vegetables, paté or whatever you can think of. Also, while not the most common thing in Sweden, you can also eat it as a slightly healther variant of a chocolate bar by spreading nutella and peanut butter on it. 🙂
I'd love to see a collab with Drachinfel on the subject of food in the Navy in the time period. He had a great discussion of the weekly ration of the Spanish Armada vs the English Fleet.
When you mentioned that the old dough can be generations old, and how sour it could get, it suddenly reminded my of a memory my late father shared with me. They used old dough when he was a child in pre-WWII Poland. He remembered one of his neighbours had an old dough they used that was actually black, and really, really sour. He said it tasted terrible - but they kept using it!
Each episode is such a treasure trove of insight and information! Cheers to the unsinkable ship's biscuit, and thank you for sharing this sturdy piece of history.
what's really cool is the whole method of using old bread to bake new bread is almost the exact same way you make sourdough today. You even have to keep feeding the "starter", or what they would consider the old dough. I almost have to wonder when bread broke off from being what would be considered sourdough today to a more modern bread that isn't sour. Really cool stuff, I love learning weirder and niche history things. Thanks for the high quality video!
A two hundred man crew would get two hundred pounds of bread per day, a three month voyage would have nine tons of bread Pork, beef, oats, raisins for a once a week duff, oats cheese, butter, .. ships were food stores with cannons
Yeah, Max's channel took off when the great TH-cam algorithm recommended him after a Townsend video a couple years ago. It was great, Max went to bed and woke up in the morning with thousands of subscribers all saying "we came here from Townsends".
As a professional baker it's amazing to see just how many of these techniques we still use. We make a kind of combo bread that uses both old dough (for flavor) and fresh yeast (to decrease rise time).
In Romania we have a method to obtain natural yeast, named ,,MAIA` by fermenting a few days flour and water. It is also named PLĂMĂDEALĂ, the root of the word PLUMP, meaning round fluffy bread.
Thanks to all the Navy Chefs. The cooks in 18th century must have had an almost impossible task. Our cooks on the USS Canberra CAG-2 worked very hard and did the best they could. The ship, a heavy cruiser, could have up to 1200 sailors on board. (some WW2 ships of near the same size were called Pocket Battleships) With modern shipboard rations the task is not as hard as 18th century, yet I respect their ability to keep us fed. The task was much harder when we were on the line during General Quarters when the food had to be passed to us at our battle stations. There were times they could only give us US Navy "C" rations which were not as bad as some say.
Pretty sure Max referenced Townsends original hardtack video when he made his hardtack video. But Max's CLACK CLACK is now so iconic I was actually expecting Jon to splice in Max for 2 seconds.
During the Klondike gold rush, and before and beyond, 'Sourdough boys' would keep a small piece of the risen dough as a starter for the next batch of bread, often kept near the stove to help it propagate... There were stories (maybe apocryphal, maybe not) about sourdough starters which came from an original batch many, many batches ago, each time a small amount would be held back and used to starter for the next batch, repeated again and again, until, sometimes, it was supposedly decades old! (Like a pigtail on a 18th century man-a-war's sailor, the age of one's sourdough was a mark of authenticity and credibility for the explorers in Alaska and the Yukon). I'm not sure how much of that is true, but it is definitely a good story!
I believe that there is a bakery in Germany, or Austria, that has been using the same starter yeast from the 1600's (alegedlly)... And some families of immigrants, here in southern Brazil, had the same starters since they came from Germany and Italy, from 1800's up until the early 90's. Some of them were said to be made from theyr last bread from home...
My grandmother kept a sourdough going for 31 years, until a kitchen fire destroyed the batch. I think she mourned its loss more than the loss of her fancy guest-china.
@@adreabrooks11 that's amazing. It reminds me of one of my grandmothers- she didn't keep a starter (as far as i know) but, instead of using store bought yeast, she'd let the bread rise outside, in her rice and barley fields, grapes, and hops, etc, and other areas on her land... I just realized that was because there was probably natural yeast/ other bacteria out there, in the air amid the gardens. She made both ales and wine- blackberry in particular. Food for thought 🤔 for me. (Her still was 100% science, though- blackberry vodka!
@@bholdr----0 Very cool! Yeah, wild yeasts are the reason that many wines and breads (which are often named for the region they're from) have their individual characters. Champagne yeast, for example, comes from the Champenois in France. These specific yeast strains gave particular flavours, mouth-feels and so on, and became specifically sought after over those from other areas. Sounds like Granny was a smart lady! ^_^
A bread leavening video! Holy moly, this takes me back to 10 years ago when I first started watching this channel, when it seemed like that was the main topic, haha! Don't get me wrong, I love every direction this channel has gone in since then. One of very few channels I keep coming back to for so many years ❤
I've had both burgoo and just ships biscuit soaked in grog and burgoo is nice and fills you up. Having to chew on rum soaked ships biscuit isn't pleasant. Thanks Jon
When I lived in France, there was a bakery that made something they called "pain au levain" - bread with leaven. I'm not sure if it was a sourdough or using something like this old dough technique, but it was so good and had so much more flavor than a traditional baguette. I used to go there every day to buy bread and have coffee, and sometimes got there while it was still warm. I miss that.
I would also encourage anyone to make their own bread. With a dutch oven, you can easily make the crusty bread that costs $4-$5 per loaf at the store. Pan bread is even easier. It's better quality than store bought and can save you money. It's also really not difficult to do.
This old dough technique reminds me of traditional methods of making yoghurt. In much the same way they'd keep an amount of old yoghurt to use for the next batch, which meant that for every dairy farm the bacteria culture involved would be unique and also had an impact on how the yoghurt would taste.
I can't hear the word "hardtack" without it immediately being followed by a "clack clack" sound anymore. Feels like something is missing without the knocking. Hahaha
Finally have a chance to watch this episode (Townsends is one of my top 3 channels for watching while I wash dishes) and had to stop long enough to thank you for the Max Miller nod. I laughed so loud my dogs were worried :D
I got some doubts about the notion that the reason why the old dough technique was more common over in europe had to do whether people drank beer or wine. Even in places with a very dedicated wine culture, be that italy, france, the german rhineland, austria or else, you still had a lot of beer drinking. I think what may have mattered more was the style of beer. When making ale, you use a top-fermenting yeast which does nicely as baking yeast, producing a sweet-ish and flavourful dough. However, many regions on the continent started using bottom-fermenting yeast which ferments at a lower temperature (mostly for Lager-style beer), making it less likely to be ruined by unwanted bacteria or fungi, but it ferments more slowly and generally just doesn't produce as nice of a taste in baking. Of course, there's also another simple reason: If you do the old dough technique, you only need to get barm from the brewer once and then can just keep on using your bread starter over and over again. The bread you'd get is closer to sour dough than white bread, but especially for people in rural areas who'd bake their own bread at home, it was simply a means to make yourself more self-sufficient. You wouldn't be buying a staple food such as bread from a baker if you could help it, money was spent on things that you couldn't really make yourself because you were either lacking the skillset or the required resources to do it at home.
I was a cook/officer on a 192 foot boat in the Alaska Bering Sea and I can tell it wasn't easy to cook out especially when you forget to latch your pots down 😂😂😂 great video thank you
I think you are correct at the very end of this video, that the reason this never because 'standard fare' is because the number and size of the ovens that would be required to bake enough bread for all of the men aboard the ship.
My father left school at 14 to be a boy on trawlers in the North Sea. His principal task was cooking and everything, bar fried fish after a catch, was boiled in a single big cauldron. The reason was that food being boiled could be left in the hot water for as long as you wanted if a shoal of fish was found and all hands went to work the nets etc. and worked at that until the fish ran out or the hold was full. There is not much you cannot cook inside a suet pudding in a pudding cloth. Sweet or savoury.
Rickety? Old? I'll have you know she is an aged man of war sir, no one would call her old. She has a bluff bow, lovely lines. She's a fine seabird: weatherly, stiff and fast... very fast, if she's well handled. No, she's not old; she's in her prime.
By the way Kurdish have a bread that can be store for several months, and when u wanna eat u just put some water on it and cover it for 5-10 mins, then u have a very soft fresh bread, and it called "نانی تیری"
fascinating video as always, I appreciate the background research, stories and pictures you put together. So interesting to think about the history of bread.
Fresh bread is a uniquely pleasurable experience. There is no such thing as a perfect bread loaf at the grocery store. It has to be fresh, and that means people need to make their own.
Lol... When he said that some sailor's would complain about soft bread, and would rather have hardtack, it reminded me of a book wherein a sailor, being held captive in France, complained about the fresh French bread- he was worried that if he ate bread with holes in it, he would naturally 'blow out (his) gaff' (fart)... 'it stands to reason, sir!'
i'd love to see a video discussing the struggles and methods of storing water aboard a sea vessel, i understand they largely drank beer as an easy way to get calories to the men and water would go bad at sea but they needed water for their oatmeal+puddings and other hot meals that required water as a cooking ingredient/method
Even the Pirate ships would have a specialist cook to feed the crew. Although I wonder of correct nutrition and care of health was an issue, as it would have been in the Navy. I was a guest on board the new rebuild of Capt Cook’s Endeavour here in Western Australia several years ago, and took immediate interest in the kitchen/oven/fire installation and it was a wonder to actually witness what was available and see how such food was prepared. I use molasses in many of my own dishes that I make and find it is excellent. Hard tack ships biscuit I make from your direction and is mainly for my rendezvous but also as a novelty at home. Again a great promotion. Thank you.
I love this rough section about how to make sourdough, concluded by these warm "words of wisdom" at 7:10 I got into bread making a bit ago, still learning and experimenting a lot. Just this week I made a loaf after putting it off for a while. Sure, maybe my bread isn't as good as this highly optimized stuff from the bakery down the street. But the mere fact that I made it myself makes it taste much better and makes me weirdly excited every time I slice off a piece for breakfast. Though one thing I have to disagree on: For all I care, bread in fact *is* magic. I took a bunch of water and this boring white powder that usually just sits around in your kitchen and basically grew a living thing out of it. Now I'm feeding it every day like a pet. Occassionally, when this strange creature gets big enough, I take off a bit to make dinner out of it or ultimately turn it into a (hopefully) fluffy loaf of goodness. Yes, this is something, just about everybody can do at home. But if you let this process sink in, you might as well feel like a wizard when handling your strange bacteria-pet.
Townsends, I know you know better than this. 0:26 As soon as a cannon hits deck, it's a gun. Now please excuse me, as I go finish my current Hornblower book.
As you said, hardtack is not meant to be eaten as it is. You can not bite through them. I actually had to use pliers to break one in half, and it was not easy. What I do is bake smaller ones, break them in half and nibble/lightly chew on them for hours. Better than candy. In meat soup they taste heavenly.
I made hardtack a few years back to try it out. I baked it twice to make sure it was hard and dry like many real biscuites were. It was way to hard to bite into, but smashing it it a bag yielded little chunks that could be chewed and that looked a little like granola. The texture and flavor was sort of like what I'd expect wood to taste like (minus a wood grain of course) and it was very dry. At first it was sort of unpleasent to eat, but after a bit it sort of grew on me as food to snack on a bit. However it wrecked my digestive system, I'd guess that sailors stomachs probably got used to it which could be why some thought that soft bread was worse for them if their gut wasn't ready for the change (just a guess though not sure how accurate that would be).
This is why they say an Army marches on its stomach. At sea, resupply is almost impossible at this time. Aside from the fire hazard, think of the fuel requirements to bake for the ship? Just stowing it would be a problem.
And how are you going to keep the yeast alive in Arctic/Antarctic cold and tropical heat? Like anyone interested in navies of this time I've read about the Bounty, and one thing that's always impressed me was the sheer variety of climates they traveled through. There aren't many things that can survive that sort of variety. Yet ships had to be prepared to feed their men through all of it, in the Roaring 40s and hurricanes to boot! It's not a wonder that they didn't have fresh bread; it's a wonder they found any foods at all that were capable of doing the job!
@@jamesverhoff1899 If the sourdough starter is packed in salt, like they show at 4:33, the yeast dehidrates and goes dormant, surviving for, possibly, centuries. In the heat it proliferates, as long as it is not exposed to direct sunligth; feed it and it will be available very easy. It is safe to use, as long as it is constantly renewed, take a piece and add to new flour every day, discard the rest to prevent bacterial grouth. In the cold it can survive, unless it freezes. It will not work well, it needs warmth, and it can allow the botulism bacteria to grow, so better keep it packed in salt. But it is true, they could not ever had any "fancy" foods at the time, it all had to be dry or salted.
Different navies found different solutions. The Dutch, I heard long ago, took barrels of fermented cabbage on their ships. Nowadays, we call it sauerkraut. It was readily available at their home ports, kept reasonably well, and they found that on ships that carried it the sailors didn't get scurvy as quickly. Nowadays we know that sauerkraut is rich in Vitamin C, among other useful things.
I would be very interested to know more about whether sailors on ships at the time took any time to fish during their voyages to supplement their diets. Were there times when the ship was moving slow enough to allow for a handline or other manual fishing techniques? Did Navy or Privateer ships even have time to consider something like that?
There were some weird superstitions about fish and fishing among sailors in various times throughout history. Maybe that had something to do with it? I tend to think it's more related to what you said though, people on board didn't have a whole lot of spare time to sit around fishing.
Still today space is a big restriction on ships. I would think any bread is a treat onboard a ship. I understand the bigger the ship the more personnel it requires to run it.
It’s said that whaling ships would sometimes stay at sea, never touching land, for years at a time. Their sailors must have been very happy to get something to eat other than ship’s biscuits (hard tack) and the occasional bit of dried meat or dried fish.
Ha-ha He is not kidding you can break your teeth with hard tack biscuits. He also has a video how to make hard tack biscuits! All-purpose hard tack use to hammer nails in too matev lol
Practical concern: flour is denser than hardtack (dunno if it's easier or harder to keep safe), but then you also have to carry the fuel to cook it. (Also water to make the dough, but then you need liquid to soak the hardtack, so that might be a wash.) Seems to me that unleavened pancakes would be a lot easier to make. Not big and fluffy but fresh-ish and soft. Still a lot of work though; no waiting for rising or long baking, but having to quick-cook pancake after pancake.
My understanding is that modern navies (particularly the submarines, where space is at a REAL premium) do leave port with the ingredients for bread and bake while on patrol. But obviously, crew sizes on most ships (that aren't supercarriers) have shrunk considerably.
He smacked two biscuits together twice! Max must be happy.
[clack clack] 😁
I lol'd, I knew I wouldn't be the only one to catch that.
Everytime someone mentions hardtac in my discord some play the clack clack. XD
@@odinfromcentr2 I would have heard it anyway.
Spoilers! XD
“HE DID THE THING!” - me watching Jon click the biscuits together
"Do you see those two weevils, doctor?"
"I do, why?"
"Which one would you choose?"
"Neither, they are the exact same species of curculio."
"If you HAD to choose ..."
"If you are going to push me *puts on glasses* ... I would choose the righthand weevil, for it has significant advantage in both length and width"
*aubrey smacks table* "THERE, I HAVE YOU! YOU'RE COMPLETELY DISHED ... do you not know that in the service ... one must always choose the LESSER of two weevils?"
The movie we needed sequels from but never got. 😢
What movie is it from?
@@cloudyblueskye Master and Commander: the Far Side of the World
Master and Commander!! One of my favorite movies!!!
Oh I could kiss you for this comment. This and Max's _clack clack_ live in my brain rent-free and come rushing to the forefront every time someone mentions hardtack 😀
Jon's smile when he did the clack-clack - he knows exactly what he did! :D
Though it's nothing compared to the face Max made.
The camaderie between this channel and Max Miller will always delight me. I was half expecting them to cut away to Max with the clack clack, but now we have cuts of both of them clacking hardtack. Great work as always
Max being mid video, stopping abruptly, "did you hear that?"
Who the hell is mix miller?
@@justicedemocrat9357 Nearly all the knowledge in the world and you cant look him up yourself?
@@hannahbrown2728 Why in the hell would I look up a random name?
@@justicedemocrat9357 To get an answer to your question? Why does anyone look up anything? If you understood context clues youdve been like "Huh, thats probably another youtuber who does historical food." (Hint, thats what he is)
Legend has it that whenever you bang two pieces of ships biscuits together, Max Miller's ears ring
I was a submariner and out cooks baked fresh loafs every day. The boat smelled so nice… until they blew the sanitary tanks and that was a whole different smell
Or some half asleep sailor doesn't see the blowing sanitary warning signs, and opens the flush valve......
😮😢😂😂😂
"The last words of a submarine captain? Open the window, it smells!"
@@aramisortsbottcher8201 🤣😂🤕
I'm so glad I never experienced that on my last boat.
11:17 is music to my ears.
Excellent time stamp. Best part of the video.
you call these things "chips"? Instead of crispity crunchy munchie crackerjack snacker nibbler snap crack n pop westpoolchestershireshire queen's lovely jubily delights?
That’s rather bit cringe, innit bruv
two rocks colliding?
11:14 nice tribute to Max Miller.
"Hard tack:" clack clack
😉
The meme has reached full penetration.
The only reason I use SponsorBlock is because of comments like this. This plug-in allows you to block built in ads. DON'T DO THAT! Use it so you don't post double comments, it highlights other comments so you don't make their mistakes.
Gentleman and Ladies.
It is my honor to bless this video with a
*_CLACK CLACK_*
Max Miller has entered the room!!!😂😂😂
11:18 i assumed this was a shout out to Max.
I was going to post this, but I was watching a Simon Whistler video when this dropped.
@@CAP198462
Which one of his billion channels did you pop in from? I bet it was Casual Criminalist.
@@arifhossain9751 it was decoding the unknown.
Hardtacks are the real MVP of field cooking. To this day Polish Army issues special variant of hardtacks in MRE's. Soldiers call them 'Panzer waffles" and joke that in a pinch they can be used as extra ballistic plates in body armor. Couple of years ago there was a movement to replace hardtacks with lightweight rice crackers, but it was unpopular and hardtacks returned to MRE's.
It's also used in Japan as mandatory emergency rations, and in Alaska as emergency rations for bush pilots.
It's wild how this incredibly old school ration is still going strong.
In Germany they can be called "Panzerplatten" (armour plates) in the army.
Divided by borders, united by hardtack.
If you prepare them correctly, they function as ceramic armor.
@@wanderingcalamity360 Sailor Boy pilot bread is nothing like hardtack. It's harder than your average saltine, but still pretty easy to chew without having to soak it in coffee for an hour. And it's definitely not stopping any bullets.
I was in the Canadian Army; my regiment had its own theme song called "Pork, Beans, and Hard Tack." 🥓🫘🍘
In the Hornblower TV series you see the cook using one of those stoves. It was a wooden replica prop, and when the series ended they gave the prop stove to HMS Unicorn which is a museum ship in Dundee, you can see it there
That's one of those nerd-out moments I have every time I watch that series. I love that they put so much effort into doing things accurately, down to the galleys and even the food they serve to the sailors.
@@Raskolnikov70 Yes there were a few good shows like that back in the 80s and 90s as well. I don't remember most of them but I did watch them as a kid. You could start to watch other shows and go "the buttons are wrong" etc. haha. The Sharp series is kind of good too.
That was a great series!
Excuse me sir, what do you mean by helping yourself to my vittles 0_0
@@charlesgeorge9701 Render unto Caesar. I'll leave it to you to figure which of us is Caesar.
When I was a sailor aboard merchants ships in the 80s we had three meals a day prepared by cooks from a broad range of foods, but the quality of the stores and cooking talents varied widely. A ship was often referred to as a "good feeder" if the standards were high.
But regulations that had long been superseded by modern contracts were still posted showing a pound of hardtack per sailor among the requirements. If we had a bad feeder, we might grumble of giving us the hardtack instead.
I cannot imagine getting food so bad Id prefer hardtack, Im so so sorry for what you and those sailors mustve had to endure in the bad feeders...
@@Timeward76 I'm sorry if my story suggested we were truly serious. Merely griping. I've had some lousy cooks, but it wasn't worth making a case out of.
@@janerkenbrack3373 I wasnt being fully serious in my own response, but I still dont wanna imagine what qualifies as a "bad feeder" for a sailor, lol.
Sailors also drank almost nothing but beer, cider, or ale (which was used to soak the hardtack biscuits to soften them); all these beverages have nutritional value and in a pinch could keep people from starving even without the biscuits. Beer or ale the way it was originally made in Europe was a thick, soupy survival food, with less alcohol content than typical beer today, and people of all ages consumed it.
This is partly why the Romans considered beer "barbaric" in its thick, primal form. Also an old Townsends video discussed how small beer was recommended to children to help them grow from the nutrients
Related too, is wine as mentioned in the Bible or old Greek and Roman stories. It was mostly water, wine added to water, for flavor and to kill the bugs. People who drank straight wine were considered alcoholics.
@@markhatfield5621 Uh oh…I usually have a glass of “straight wine” a day!😁
Beer, part of a balanced diet!
I can imagine the biscuits tasting better soaked in ale or beer.
The first thing I thought when I saw the title of this video was "Replace hardtack?! No one tell Max!" And Jon's clack-clack and all the clack-clacks in the comment delight me. 🙂 I cannot WAIT until at some point, we get a collab video with Townsends and Max. It's got to happen eventually.
I always thought that the point of hardtack was just to make flour easier to transport, just turning it into bricks like was done with tea.
You mean a collab like the one they did three years ago? th-cam.com/users/livezGNfsHqmYKw?si=yAAW6Tyw6BlzBwG7
It is one of the reasons to make hardtack, but also it is a matter of preservation. Flour goes bad very fast if it is left moist, so baking it dry prevented the spoiladge.
Also, the hardtack were made on a standart size, so every so many biscuits would be worth 1 pound of flour, so, were that many for each man per day.
Ships biscuits are like flavourless jawbreakers
They were never meant to be tasty. They were a way to preserve calories (carbs!) in edible form for months and years - usually in difficult conditions.
That's the funniest description of them I've ever heard.
@@FrikInCasualMode
Keyword being "edible". To put that into perspective, technically, paper is edible.
You're not wrong.
I make mine with a little bit of baking powder and salt and roll them out to about tortilla thickness and cut it out to about the size of a Ritz cracker.
Bake it low and slow until about a golden brown, and then run it through my food dehydrator
The result is like a more rugged cracker.
Not historical accurate by any stretch, but it's at least edible and doesn't break your teeth.
Every time I've tried the historically accurate variety, I've been worried about chipping teeth on it.
it tastes like old
The Hardtack clap is the harmony that binds us together.
If loving the clack clack is wrong, I don't wanna be right!
@10:20- He raises a very good point re: sailors in the Age of Sail (say, 1550-1850)- they ate far, far better than most people at the time- especially in the navy (the British Royal Navy in particular)...
Their diet would come out to over 5000-6000+ calories per day! They would have, in addition to the ubiquitous daily pound of hardtack, a whole pound of meat (salt pork or beef) five days each week- as well as butter, peas, cheese, veggies if available, and even puddings, etc, as well as a gallon of small (like 2% alcohol or less) beer, and on long voyages, the far more popular grog (1/2 pint of rum @ 120+ proof mixed 4-1 with water and lemon or lime juice to prevent scurvy- it's actually pretty tasty, too) every single day, along with an optional tobacco ration, as well as whatever they could buy or catch.
The sailor's rations were probably far more nutritious (if not very tasty) than what 95% of what most people ate in that era. (People who could expect meat MAYBE once per week, if they were successful tradesmen, farmers, etc.)
Your men can't fight if they are well cared for.
You mean "aren't" don't you.
The olds Scots song "Forfar Sodger" makes a reference to that. One of the verses goes:
"My faither was a weaver poor
As ever filled a spool, Sir;
And never was meat cam tae wir
door
But jist a pun' at Yule, Sir."
@townsends John I've always been a huge fan, like from day one. But this video shows how far you've come as an absolute professional. Your research and delivery is top tier. I would say one of the best historian video makers of all time. God bless and keep up the good work.
There is a type of traditional bread made here in Sweden that shares a few properties of ships biscuit. It's called "Knäckebröd" (Crisp bread) and is still enjoyed today at swedish breakfast and dinner tables.
It's a pretty thin slice of bread that's also very dry so it can be stored for months without going bad so long as it's kept away from moisture.
In modern grocery stores they are normally shipped being cut into rectangular pieces, but hundreds of years ago they were shaped into big circular discs with a hole in the center.
This shape had a purpose where you could thread several discs of bread onto a wooden dowel, and the dowel would be mounted high up in a kitchen to prevent rats or mice near the fireplace so the vermin couldn't reach it and the heat from the hearth would ensure that the bread was kept dry and good to eat for a very long time.
I’ve never had that but Skolebrød is my favorite pastry.
@@crosisofborg5524 If you would like to try it out, then you should be able to find Knäckebröd in IKEA stores outside of Sweden.
So if you happen to be going to shop for furniture, pick up a package and try it out with some butter on top.
My personal favourite topping is slices of fresh cucumber, but it goes well with cheese, various vegetables, paté or whatever you can think of.
Also, while not the most common thing in Sweden, you can also eat it as a slightly healther variant of a chocolate bar by spreading nutella and peanut butter on it. 🙂
Thanks, I did not know that.
Do you know the recepie
Please forgive me but I can't hear about hardtack without my minds eye seeing Max Miller clack clacking 🙈😂
Hard tack with nutmeg: the perfect historic youtube food.
Same here… 😂
He's conditioned us 😂
It's a rule on TH-cam now. If you're including hardtack in your video, you are required to do the double-clack at least once.
@@waffleson45 Max "Pavlov's Hardtack" Miller
I'd love to see a collab with Drachinfel on the subject of food in the Navy in the time period. He had a great discussion of the weekly ration of the Spanish Armada vs the English Fleet.
amazing how we know the good content dudes isn't it?
When you mentioned that the old dough can be generations old, and how sour it could get, it suddenly reminded my of a memory my late father shared with me. They used old dough when he was a child in pre-WWII Poland. He remembered one of his neighbours had an old dough they used that was actually black, and really, really sour. He said it tasted terrible - but they kept using it!
0:04 I thought that thing holding the rope was the biscuit he was talking about
Lmao it probably could hold that rope just as well.
OMG SAME
When i see those biscuits idk but a vision and the sound of *clack clack* playing in my head
Each episode is such a treasure trove of insight and information! Cheers to the unsinkable ship's biscuit, and thank you for sharing this sturdy piece of history.
what's really cool is the whole method of using old bread to bake new bread is almost the exact same way you make sourdough today. You even have to keep feeding the "starter", or what they would consider the old dough. I almost have to wonder when bread broke off from being what would be considered sourdough today to a more modern bread that isn't sour. Really cool stuff, I love learning weirder and niche history things. Thanks for the high quality video!
A two hundred man crew would get two hundred pounds of bread per day, a three month voyage would have nine tons of bread
Pork, beef, oats, raisins for a once a week duff, oats cheese, butter, .. ships were food stores with cannons
A 3 month voyage would include ports of call, where they could restock the galley.
@@alpinealpine2793 sometimes, but not always. 3 months is a short trip for a sailing vessel, and wouldn't necessarily include any port stops.
11:17 Tasting History, anyone?
Yeah, Max's channel took off when the great TH-cam algorithm recommended him after a Townsend video a couple years ago. It was great, Max went to bed and woke up in the morning with thousands of subscribers all saying "we came here from Townsends".
Get yourself a man who thinks about you as often and as fondly as this channel contemplates ship's biscuit.
I’m a ship’s cook, and let me tell you: thank the gods for modern refrigeration
As a professional baker it's amazing to see just how many of these techniques we still use.
We make a kind of combo bread that uses both old dough (for flavor) and fresh yeast (to decrease rise time).
In Romania we have a method to obtain natural yeast, named ,,MAIA` by fermenting a few days flour and water. It is also named PLĂMĂDEALĂ, the root of the word PLUMP, meaning round fluffy bread.
Wouldn't work at sea though. Natural yeast comes from the air and the soil. Miles out into the ocean isn't somewhere that yeast thrives
Thanks to all the Navy Chefs. The cooks in 18th century must have had an almost impossible task. Our cooks on the USS Canberra CAG-2 worked very hard and did the best they could. The ship, a heavy cruiser, could have up to 1200 sailors on board. (some WW2 ships of near the same size were called Pocket Battleships) With modern shipboard rations the task is not as hard as 18th century, yet I respect their ability to keep us fed. The task was much harder when we were on the line during General Quarters when the food had to be passed to us at our battle stations. There were times they could only give us US Navy "C" rations which were not as bad as some say.
Ship's biscuits...CLACK! CLACK!...For a second, I thought I was watching Tasting History! 😆
Pretty sure Max referenced Townsends original hardtack video when he made his hardtack video. But Max's CLACK CLACK is now so iconic I was actually expecting Jon to splice in Max for 2 seconds.
Incredibly interesting. Also love the Hard Tack Tap!! Tasting History indeed
Baking fresh bread would also take a massive quantity of fresh water every day that would be a massive cargo issue!
Not to mention the giant quantity of wood or coal to heat the ovens.
During the Klondike gold rush, and before and beyond, 'Sourdough boys' would keep a small piece of the risen dough as a starter for the next batch of bread, often kept near the stove to help it propagate... There were stories (maybe apocryphal, maybe not) about sourdough starters which came from an original batch many, many batches ago, each time a small amount would be held back and used to starter for the next batch, repeated again and again, until, sometimes, it was supposedly decades old!
(Like a pigtail on a 18th century man-a-war's sailor, the age of one's sourdough was a mark of authenticity and credibility for the explorers in Alaska and the Yukon).
I'm not sure how much of that is true, but it is definitely a good story!
I believe that there is a bakery in Germany, or Austria, that has been using the same starter yeast from the 1600's (alegedlly)...
And some families of immigrants, here in southern Brazil, had the same starters since they came from Germany and Italy, from 1800's up until the early 90's. Some of them were said to be made from theyr last bread from home...
@@carloshenriquezimmer7543
Wow... Interesting 🤔!
My grandmother kept a sourdough going for 31 years, until a kitchen fire destroyed the batch. I think she mourned its loss more than the loss of her fancy guest-china.
@@adreabrooks11 that's amazing. It reminds me of one of my grandmothers- she didn't keep a starter (as far as i know) but, instead of using store bought yeast, she'd let the bread rise outside, in her rice and barley fields, grapes, and hops, etc, and other areas on her land... I just realized that was because there was probably natural yeast/ other bacteria out there, in the air amid the gardens.
She made both ales and wine- blackberry in particular. Food for thought 🤔 for me.
(Her still was 100% science, though- blackberry vodka!
@@bholdr----0 Very cool!
Yeah, wild yeasts are the reason that many wines and breads (which are often named for the region they're from) have their individual characters. Champagne yeast, for example, comes from the Champenois in France. These specific yeast strains gave particular flavours, mouth-feels and so on, and became specifically sought after over those from other areas.
Sounds like Granny was a smart lady! ^_^
This channel has such wholesome vibe to it. Keep up the good work!
A bread leavening video! Holy moly, this takes me back to 10 years ago when I first started watching this channel, when it seemed like that was the main topic, haha!
Don't get me wrong, I love every direction this channel has gone in since then.
One of very few channels I keep coming back to for so many years ❤
I've had both burgoo and just ships biscuit soaked in grog and burgoo is nice and fills you up. Having to chew on rum soaked ships biscuit isn't pleasant. Thanks Jon
When I lived in France, there was a bakery that made something they called "pain au levain" - bread with leaven. I'm not sure if it was a sourdough or using something like this old dough technique, but it was so good and had so much more flavor than a traditional baguette. I used to go there every day to buy bread and have coffee, and sometimes got there while it was still warm. I miss that.
11:19 Did he? Yeah he did! Thats Awesome! CLAK CLAK!
I would also encourage anyone to make their own bread. With a dutch oven, you can easily make the crusty bread that costs $4-$5 per loaf at the store. Pan bread is even easier.
It's better quality than store bought and can save you money. It's also really not difficult to do.
As a retired sailor, I'd like to state that soft bread is definitely undesired in a heavy sea state.
Give me Saltines or give me death.
This old dough technique reminds me of traditional methods of making yoghurt.
In much the same way they'd keep an amount of old yoghurt to use for the next batch, which meant that for every dairy farm the bacteria culture involved would be unique and also had an impact on how the yoghurt would taste.
I can't hear the word "hardtack" without it immediately being followed by a "clack clack" sound anymore. Feels like something is missing without the knocking. Hahaha
Finally have a chance to watch this episode (Townsends is one of my top 3 channels for watching while I wash dishes) and had to stop long enough to thank you for the Max Miller nod. I laughed so loud my dogs were worried :D
I got some doubts about the notion that the reason why the old dough technique was more common over in europe had to do whether people drank beer or wine. Even in places with a very dedicated wine culture, be that italy, france, the german rhineland, austria or else, you still had a lot of beer drinking.
I think what may have mattered more was the style of beer. When making ale, you use a top-fermenting yeast which does nicely as baking yeast, producing a sweet-ish and flavourful dough.
However, many regions on the continent started using bottom-fermenting yeast which ferments at a lower temperature (mostly for Lager-style beer), making it less likely to be ruined by unwanted bacteria or fungi, but it ferments more slowly and generally just doesn't produce as nice of a taste in baking.
Of course, there's also another simple reason: If you do the old dough technique, you only need to get barm from the brewer once and then can just keep on using your bread starter over and over again. The bread you'd get is closer to sour dough than white bread, but especially for people in rural areas who'd bake their own bread at home, it was simply a means to make yourself more self-sufficient. You wouldn't be buying a staple food such as bread from a baker if you could help it, money was spent on things that you couldn't really make yourself because you were either lacking the skillset or the required resources to do it at home.
I was a cook/officer on a 192 foot boat in the Alaska Bering Sea and I can tell it wasn't easy to cook out especially when you forget to latch your pots down 😂😂😂 great video thank you
I suspect the cook didn't forget to latch down the pots too often. Ha ha ha
@@tracysmith7935 I did 1 time after spilling over 6 dozen eggs all over the galley I learned my lesson 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I think ships biscuits must have been the inspiration for Terry Pratchett when he came up with 'dwarf bread' in his Discworld novels 😂
Undoubtedly. 😂❤😂
The Scone of Stone! 😆
@@C.L.Hinton Battle crumpets!
My wife does a fair tactical scone.
Definitely, although the concept was also a dig at elven "lembas" from Lord of the Rings.
I think you are correct at the very end of this video, that the reason this never because 'standard fare' is because the number and size of the ovens that would be required to bake enough bread for all of the men aboard the ship.
My father left school at 14 to be a boy on trawlers in the North Sea. His principal task was cooking and everything, bar fried fish after a catch, was boiled in a single big cauldron. The reason was that food being boiled could be left in the hot water for as long as you wanted if a shoal of fish was found and all hands went to work the nets etc. and worked at that until the fish ran out or the hold was full. There is not much you cannot cook inside a suet pudding in a pudding cloth. Sweet or savoury.
Rickety? Old? I'll have you know she is an aged man of war sir, no one would call her old. She has a bluff bow, lovely lines. She's a fine seabird: weatherly, stiff and fast... very fast, if she's well handled. No, she's not old; she's in her prime.
By the way Kurdish have a bread that can be store for several months, and when u wanna eat u just put some water on it and cover it for 5-10 mins, then u have a very soft fresh bread, and it called "نانی تیری"
Excellent video! A sailor's life aboard the wooden ships was difficult in the extreme.
Most sailors ate better at sea than on land.
fascinating video as always, I appreciate the background research, stories and pictures you put together. So interesting to think about the history of bread.
It's so versatile. You can eat it, use it as a pry bar, doorstop. Emergency window breaker, self defence weapon etc etc!
I wonder what 18fh century sailors would say if they learned the modern equivilents of the ship's biscuit-MRE Wheat Snack Bread-is universally loved.
"A little leaven leaveneth the whole lump."
I was hoping someone would say that. They knew bread back then for sure! Even if it was more often flatter than we're used to, bread's bread.
"You are salt and light..." ☦️
@@seronymus Thanks!
Fresh bread is a uniquely pleasurable experience. There is no such thing as a perfect bread loaf at the grocery store. It has to be fresh, and that means people need to make their own.
People go there whole life without eating real bread in America
@@eggheadusa Such a sad truth. At least I turn a few people occasionally when they visit my place. Fresh bread and fresh egg noodles are my staples.
0:14 hey does anyone know where you get the info on the ship? thanks.
Lol... When he said that some sailor's would complain about soft bread, and would rather have hardtack, it reminded me of a book wherein a sailor, being held captive in France, complained about the fresh French bread- he was worried that if he ate bread with holes in it, he would naturally 'blow out (his) gaff' (fart)... 'it stands to reason, sir!'
Jon, another absolutely amazing video. Thank you, and keep up the great work.
i'd love to see a video discussing the struggles and methods of storing water aboard a sea vessel, i understand they largely drank beer as an easy way to get calories to the men and water would go bad at sea but they needed water for their oatmeal+puddings and other hot meals that required water as a cooking ingredient/method
2:5 "There is no brewer at sea" Got it, we just need to build a brewery into the ship!
How do you expect the sailors to get any work done?
@@benn454 the lash.
Oh ships had stills they just weren't used for bread grog on the other hand...
Even the Pirate ships would have a specialist cook to feed the crew.
Although I wonder of correct nutrition and care of health was an issue, as it would have been in the Navy.
I was a guest on board the new rebuild of Capt Cook’s Endeavour here in Western Australia several years ago, and took immediate interest in the kitchen/oven/fire installation and it was a wonder to actually witness what was available and see how such food was prepared.
I use molasses in many of my own dishes that I make and find it is excellent.
Hard tack ships biscuit I make from your direction and is mainly for my rendezvous but also as a novelty at home.
Again a great promotion.
Thank you.
It is amazing how far we have came, looking at modern naval ship galleys today and what they can make is amazing.
This is the video I’ve been waiting for!
More info on how to maintain constant food sources for the masses please!
Up in Newfoundland for the summer. Every grocery store has Hard Bread (Hard Tack) prominently available in the store, it’s still a staple up here
6:30 By generations, do you mean that it’s hundreds of years old or that it’s on its 3rd or 4th batch?
I love this rough section about how to make sourdough, concluded by these warm "words of wisdom" at 7:10
I got into bread making a bit ago, still learning and experimenting a lot. Just this week I made a loaf after putting it off for a while. Sure, maybe my bread isn't as good as this highly optimized stuff from the bakery down the street. But the mere fact that I made it myself makes it taste much better and makes me weirdly excited every time I slice off a piece for breakfast.
Though one thing I have to disagree on: For all I care, bread in fact *is* magic.
I took a bunch of water and this boring white powder that usually just sits around in your kitchen and basically grew a living thing out of it. Now I'm feeding it every day like a pet. Occassionally, when this strange creature gets big enough, I take off a bit to make dinner out of it or ultimately turn it into a (hopefully) fluffy loaf of goodness.
Yes, this is something, just about everybody can do at home. But if you let this process sink in, you might as well feel like a wizard when handling your strange bacteria-pet.
Based bread wizard
Sour dough is popular to this day in center/eastern Europe. In Poland we have bakery that makes bread from same dough for over 50 years now.
That was awesome. I always enjoy your videos! Appreciate you, sir 👊 ❤🇺🇸
The earliest recipe I have for hardtack says to "beat the dough for half an hour with wooden clubs." It is misery in the shape of a hockey puck.
I remember reading a old British story about a poor Family who found a barrel of ships biscuits on the beach. It kept them from starving that winter.
Thank you for preserving and highlighting the practices of the past. It is this reverence for the past that will save our future.
Townsends, I know you know better than this. 0:26 As soon as a cannon hits deck, it's a gun. Now please excuse me, as I go finish my current Hornblower book.
As you said, hardtack is not meant to be eaten as it is. You can not bite through them. I actually had to use pliers to break one in half, and it was not easy. What I do is bake smaller ones, break them in half and nibble/lightly chew on them for hours. Better than candy. In meat soup they taste heavenly.
Ngl I was really hoping that Townsends would reach out to Max Miller and get the [clack clack] clip to splice in there
I made hardtack a few years back to try it out. I baked it twice to make sure it was hard and dry like many real biscuites were. It was way to hard to bite into, but smashing it it a bag yielded little chunks that could be chewed and that looked a little like granola. The texture and flavor was sort of like what I'd expect wood to taste like (minus a wood grain of course) and it was very dry. At first it was sort of unpleasent to eat, but after a bit it sort of grew on me as food to snack on a bit. However it wrecked my digestive system, I'd guess that sailors stomachs probably got used to it which could be why some thought that soft bread was worse for them if their gut wasn't ready for the change (just a guess though not sure how accurate that would be).
0:03 A ships biscuit in the wild
This is why they say an Army marches on its stomach. At sea, resupply is almost impossible at this time.
Aside from the fire hazard, think of the fuel requirements to bake for the ship? Just stowing it would be a problem.
And how are you going to keep the yeast alive in Arctic/Antarctic cold and tropical heat? Like anyone interested in navies of this time I've read about the Bounty, and one thing that's always impressed me was the sheer variety of climates they traveled through. There aren't many things that can survive that sort of variety. Yet ships had to be prepared to feed their men through all of it, in the Roaring 40s and hurricanes to boot!
It's not a wonder that they didn't have fresh bread; it's a wonder they found any foods at all that were capable of doing the job!
@@jamesverhoff1899 If the sourdough starter is packed in salt, like they show at 4:33, the yeast dehidrates and goes dormant, surviving for, possibly, centuries.
In the heat it proliferates, as long as it is not exposed to direct sunligth; feed it and it will be available very easy. It is safe to use, as long as it is constantly renewed, take a piece and add to new flour every day, discard the rest to prevent bacterial grouth.
In the cold it can survive, unless it freezes. It will not work well, it needs warmth, and it can allow the botulism bacteria to grow, so better keep it packed in salt.
But it is true, they could not ever had any "fancy" foods at the time, it all had to be dry or salted.
Different navies found different solutions. The Dutch, I heard long ago, took barrels of fermented cabbage on their ships. Nowadays, we call it sauerkraut. It was readily available at their home ports, kept reasonably well, and they found that on ships that carried it the sailors didn't get scurvy as quickly. Nowadays we know that sauerkraut is rich in Vitamin C, among other useful things.
Brilliant, as always. Thank you. 👍👍👍
I would be very interested to know more about whether sailors on ships at the time took any time to fish during their voyages to supplement their diets. Were there times when the ship was moving slow enough to allow for a handline or other manual fishing techniques? Did Navy or Privateer ships even have time to consider something like that?
There were some weird superstitions about fish and fishing among sailors in various times throughout history. Maybe that had something to do with it? I tend to think it's more related to what you said though, people on board didn't have a whole lot of spare time to sit around fishing.
In the histoical pictures shown in the video it definitely looks like some of them are fishing.
Still today space is a big restriction on ships. I would think any bread is a treat onboard a ship. I understand the bigger the ship the more personnel it requires to run it.
Great info. Thx for doing this, filming it and sharing it with us.
If you have never baked your own bread you should try it. It's easy and you won't regret it.
Thank you so much for this excellent video! Your knowledge of these things continues to Amaze!
Funny that hard tack being clacked together is a core memory 🤣
I asked for this video like three years ago, not just a hard tack video but a shift biscuit video
It’s said that whaling ships would sometimes stay at sea, never touching land, for years at a time. Their sailors must have been very happy to get something to eat other than ship’s biscuits (hard tack) and the occasional bit of dried meat or dried fish.
11:14 - very slick!
Ha-ha He is not kidding you can break your teeth with hard tack biscuits. He also has a video how to make hard tack biscuits! All-purpose hard tack use to hammer nails in too matev lol
Practical concern: flour is denser than hardtack (dunno if it's easier or harder to keep safe), but then you also have to carry the fuel to cook it. (Also water to make the dough, but then you need liquid to soak the hardtack, so that might be a wash.)
Seems to me that unleavened pancakes would be a lot easier to make. Not big and fluffy but fresh-ish and soft. Still a lot of work though; no waiting for rising or long baking, but having to quick-cook pancake after pancake.
Click click!! Thanks for the taste of history. Your channel has enriched my life.
I have a tough time wrapping my head around how these guys were doing all this intense manual labor with almost no protein in their diets
i made a batch of these about a year ago when i saw your video.
they are still good as new :)
I would obediently sacrifice my perfect teeth and jaw if Jon Townsend and Max Miller asked me to bite into a hardtack.
I'd just hand it off to Steve1989 and let him deal with it.
My understanding is that modern navies (particularly the submarines, where space is at a REAL premium) do leave port with the ingredients for bread and bake while on patrol. But obviously, crew sizes on most ships (that aren't supercarriers) have shrunk considerably.