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US Army's hi-tech, two-year-old sandwich served fresh.

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US Army's hi-tech, two-year-old sandwich served fresh​

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The military’s M.R.E.--the Meal Ready to Eat, or those air-sealed packages full of gummy pastes and freeze-dried dreck that soldiers carry into the field--is getting a much-needed upgrade. But it’s not in the form of better tasting dehydrated foods or better freeze-drying technology. Rather, the U.S. Army has developed the world’s most cutting edge sandwich, the BBC reports, one that can be served fresh after sitting on the shelf for a full two years.
When food breaks down--when it rots--it does so as a result of various chemical and biological processes. Some of these are inherent in the ingredients themselves, others are caused by bacteria. But almost universally, these processes require water and/or oxygen to transpire. So the Army didn’t need to reinvent the sandwich or its ingredients to create its long-duration lunch items. But they did need to figure out how to make a sandwich that eliminates water and oxygen from the equation.

To do this, food scientists started with ingredients like sugar (in jams or jellies for instance), salt, or honey that contain moisture but also retain it, keeping it out of contact with other ingredients. Think about a fresh tomato; on a sandwich, it will quickly cause the bread to become soggy as water from the tomato soaks into the bread. But jelly or honey on toast, though moist, doesn’t impart its moisture to the bread. Using ingredients that lock their moisture inside was key to the process.
Perhaps more difficult is keeping oxygen away from the sandwich. To do so, each one is packed in an air-sealed package with an oxygen scavenger--a small packet of iron filings that pulls oxygen from the ambient air and locks it up in a layer of rust. This keeps oxygen away from things like bread, where it could feed a reaction resulting in mold and decay.
Devoid of oxygen and water, a sandwich can last a long time--two years in this case.

SOURCE :BBC News - US Army's hi-tech, two-year-old sandwich served fresh
 
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I've had U.S. MRE's many times. I know soldiers are sick of them, but IMO they are pretty darned good, and if you were really hungry, they'd be excellent.

MUCH better than the old-fashioned C and K rations. K rations especially, were nothing more than a 1960's version of a power bar. They sucked.
 
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When you are on a mission and carrying out missions - i bet you are just grateful to have a bite. They must need loads of calories in small bags......
 
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Its a bit sad to see Indian Army M.R.E's are vegan....how unfortunate...for the soldier i mean..:cry:
 
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one of the members in my MBA program did a tour in Iraq and is currently in the US national guard.......he told me about MREs --tried to get me a sample but couldnt

he says the news ones arent SOOOOO bad. I think you can get mashed potatoes even.


quite frankly when you're on the battle lines any form of sustenance is satisfactory....when times are really rough, even a grass-hopper or certain plants or shrubs would have at least a modicum of nutritional value....


Gen. Musharraf once joked to his American counterpart that while our soldiers are bread soldiers, American soldiers are chocolate soldiers
 
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yukkkkkkkk BS i cant eat 2 years old sandwich i breakfast daily with fresh sandwich with fresh juice . thank god i am not in US army :D
 
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Man it is going to be one hell of a joke int he US Army for sure. They give the new guy a sandwich and then when he is middle way through they are all gonna say
'Yo dude, guess what, your sandwich is 2 years old B*** Hahahahaha"

A question to all of you. What would you do in this situation??
 
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