I've been looking for hardtack recipe's The most common one is 4 cups flour ( preferably whole wheat ) 4 teaspoons salt Water about 2 cups Cook for half hour each side Has any one got a diffrant one and is it a good pack food to carry.
bushcraftuk.com
Post 7 seams familiar....
Of course back in the day the RN biscuit factories the dough was cut off the big lump ( I doubt they were individually weighed, experiance would ensure they were about the same) rolled into balls and then flattened to the right thickness and then pricked with a biscuit pricker/docker so no cookie cutter was required, them being perfectly round didnt enter the equation. The main thing was that the weight once completely dried of each biscuit allowed a issue of 1 lb using whole biscuits. The only important dimensions were the thickness and the distance between the holes as that related to the baking time and temperature.
By the mid 19th C machinery had taken over and the biscuits were hexagonal as that wasted least dough which had been rolled out in big sheets. No doubt the off cuts were recycled but less is no doubt better. I assume they were avoiding squares and oblongs as they were still being sent to ships in sacks and the corners of a hexagon are less easily broken off. Other countries used square or oblong biscuits before the UK but at some point we started to make them, no doubt improved ways of backaging them meant it was easier to pack squares into cartons and chests and there was less chance of them being damaged than when loose in sacks.
Jeeze i need to get a life...
ATB
Tom
Hi All its been a while so I thought Id do some catching up. My apologies if this spills over into what I have been acquiring and cooking but they are all interconnected and the majority are craft related I thought this was the best place. I'll add more stuff as I come across photos of what...
bushcraftuk.com
Post 3 for the two piece cutter and docker
Codes stamped on navy issue biscuits along with the broad arrow
‘W’ is for Royal William Yard, Plymouth
‘V’ is for Royal Victoria Yard, Deptford
‘C’ is for Royal Clarence Yard, Portsmouth
‘M’ for HM Victualling Yard, Malta.