IKE
Well-known Member
- Location
- Oklahoma....U.S.A.
Fried..Oh! MyAhhhh, a family delicacy for nearly 100 years. Just don't ask what's in it.
Ahhhh, a family delicacy for nearly 100 years. Just don't ask what's in it.
I was thinking of the classic Spam with almost 800 grams of sodium. However, they now have Spam Lite which has 50% less fat and 25% less sodium. They even have a maple flavored one, which would make a pretty good sandwich if you're hiking.Not far off from what's in a ham you buy at the market. Admittedly, doesn't taste the same, but they both marry nicely with honey, brown sugar, and/or pineapple.
- Pork with Ham
- Salt
- Water
- Potato Starch
- Sugar
- Sodium Nitrate
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Back in the day before everyone had a refrigerator, meat was salted for storage. My great-grandmother didn't get a fridge until the mid-1960s. I remember she had several crocks in her back yard and a few in her basement, and I remember watching her lay cuts of pork in one of them - a layer of salt, a slab of meat, again and again until she was out of meat or the crock was full. She did the same with eggs. She had about 100 hens. She didn't store their meat, though. You kill those when you're gonna eat them. And fish was smoked. Put in a smoker, I mean.I was thinking of the classic Spam with almost 800 grams of sodium.
You're right. There are so many factors that contribute to health outcomes. There is heredity, lifestyle, stress (Or not), exposure to the environment, diet, drinking, smoking, social participation, and general level of happiness. Two people can have the same diet, but if one is active and has low stress, the diet doesn't matter as much.Back in the day before everyone had a refrigerator, meat was salted for storage. My great-grandmother didn't get a fridge until the mid-1960s. I remember she had several crocks in her back yard and a few in her basement, and I remember watching her lay cuts of pork in one of them - a layer of salt, a slab of meat, again and again until she was out of meat or the crock was full. She did the same with eggs. She had about 100 hens. She didn't store their meat, though. You kill those when you're gonna eat them. And fish was smoked. Put in a smoker, I mean.
Anyway, her family ate salted pork for years, and no one had a heart attack because of it. But I suppose there's a difference between actual salt and sodium and sodium nitrate. Industrial salt.
I just remembered that the eggs went into a crock with layers of slaked lime, not salt. Gramma used to buy these massive bags of salt and slaked lime from the local butcher. And they were pretty cheap. She'd buy tubs of pure lard, too.You're right. There are so many factors that contribute to health outcomes. There is heredity, lifestyle, stress (Or not), exposure to the environment, diet, drinking, smoking, social participation, and general level of happiness. Two people can have the same diet, but if one is active and has low stress, the diet doesn't matter as much.
I keep a few cans at all times.I'll take Vienna sausages instead.
Sounds like a wonderful family and great memories. I know progress is always pushing us forward into a tech generation, but it's great for those of us who had the stellar opportunity to witness what it was like in a simpler time and very wholesome down-to-earth living. Good times indeed.I just remembered that the eggs went into a crock with layers of slaked lime, not salt. Gramma used to buy these massive bags of salt and slaked lime from the local butcher. And they were pretty cheap. She'd buy tubs of pure lard, too.
But, yeah, her family were all farmers. They worked hard all day, and played hard til bedtime. They were all sturdy and solid ...short, but solid. Plus, they ate natural food their whole lives, you know? What was grown and raised on their farm and their neighbor's farms, and what they fished from the river, and fresh meat from the local butcher. Ours was a dairy farm, so we'd take milk and cream over to great-gramma's every Saturday, and my great-uncles would be there to get theirs and give us fish in exchange. Then gramps would bust out his accordion and we'd all party hard.
Good times, man.
Can't quite put my finger on it but for some reason when looking at the thread topics this morning I've suddenly developed a craving for.....
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