Re: Bullets and Booze: How WWII Changed America's Drinks

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geno wrote: Fri Nov 01, 2024 3:15 pm Kitchen fats were collected for the glycerin they contained. My Mom use to talk about saving all fat drippings although I don't remember where they took them. Glycerin was used in vital war products, most importantly explosives.
Totally off topic, but my mom always kept a can of bacon drippings in the fridge so fry stuff in, little brush in the can used for like ten or fifteen years.

Back on topic is how many housewives gave up precious pots and pans to make war material with.

CDF
Cherish worthy thoughts--keep a tight grip on your booze,
'cause thinkin' an' drinkin' are all we have today

Re: Bullets and Booze: How WWII Changed America's Drinks

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geno wrote: Fri Nov 01, 2024 3:15 pm Kitchen fats were collected for the glycerin they contained. My Mom use to talk about saving all fat drippings although I don't remember where they took them. Glycerin was used in vital war products, most importantly explosives.
My family were Midwesterners and they collected their strained fats and took them to their local butcher who paid them and sent them off for processing. Years before recycling became the in thing for environmental reasons, recycling was a big thing during WWII when the US no longer had access to overseas sources.

Interesting video about WWII and booze. We just got through a pandemic and distilleries were pressed into service creating high alcohol hand sanitizers.
"Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but not their own facts." - Daniel Patrick Moynihan

Re: Bullets and Booze: How WWII Changed America's Drinks

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My Mother had a small stovetop coffee percolator that sat next to the stove all my life. She would cook the bacon and eggs in the bacon grease then pour the leftover bacon grease into the percolator. the canister in the top of the percolator would strain out the bacon bits. Even after she had to go in a nursing home Dad continued to do the same. I carry on the tradition except miy percolator sits in the refrigerator since I don't cook bacon that often. when I need some bacon grease i take it out and heat it on the stove to get the grease I want.
Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.-Huxley
"We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few, but we can't have both." ~ Louis Brandeis,

Re: Bullets and Booze: How WWII Changed America's Drinks

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TrueTexan wrote: Sat Nov 02, 2024 10:57 am My Mother had a small stovetop coffee percolator that sat next to the stove all my life. She would cook the bacon and eggs in the bacon grease then pour the leftover bacon grease into the percolator. the canister in the top of the percolator would strain out the bacon bits. Even after she had to go in a nursing home Dad continued to do the same. I carry on the tradition except miy percolator sits in the refrigerator since I don't cook bacon that often. when I need some bacon grease i take it out and heat it on the stove to get the grease I want.
Porkolator?
I ordered a case of optimism from Amazon, but porch pirates beat me to it. Still, chin-up.

Re: Bullets and Booze: How WWII Changed America's Drinks

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papajim2jordan wrote: Sat Nov 02, 2024 11:31 am
TrueTexan wrote: Sat Nov 02, 2024 10:57 am My Mother had a small stovetop coffee percolator that sat next to the stove all my life. She would cook the bacon and eggs in the bacon grease then pour the leftover bacon grease into the percolator. the canister in the top of the percolator would strain out the bacon bits. Even after she had to go in a nursing home Dad continued to do the same. I carry on the tradition except miy percolator sits in the refrigerator since I don't cook bacon that often. when I need some bacon grease i take it out and heat it on the stove to get the grease I want.
Porkolator?
LOL
Eventually I'll figure out this signature thing and decide what I want to put here.

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