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Mike_2817

Number of posts: 73 Localisation: North Yorkshire Cap Badge: RAOC Registration date: 2009-08-27
 | Subject: Compo Favourites Thu Sep 10, 2009 8:53 pm | |
| OK then all you Cold War Warriers. Whats your favourite Compo item? What things you can get today is even close to what we used to enjoy. Corned Beef has never changed for example! Watch and Shoot. |
|  | | Claymore
Number of posts: 38 Registration date: 2008-05-16
 | Subject: Re: Compo Favourites Thu Sep 10, 2009 9:01 pm | |
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|  | | alan8376
Number of posts: 83 Age: 61 Localisation: Norfolk, UK Cap Badge: REME Places Served: Carlisle AAS, Aden, Hildesheim, Bordon, Fallingbostel, Dover, Osnabruck, Herford, Muenster, UN Nicosia, Dhekellia Cyprus, Waterbeach, Civi Street Registration date: 2009-07-28
 | Subject: Re: Compo Favourites Thu Sep 10, 2009 9:08 pm | |
| Sausage and beans always went down well, especially as it was palatable either hot or cold. It was a meal that could be heated up on a vehicle exhaust system quite easily. In the early Compo packs there was the Tiffen Choco Bar and still love the Oatmeal blocks. One meal I hated was in the early boxes, it was the bacon rashers, each rashers wrapped in a sort of plastic strip of cellophane. The toilet paper didn't go far did it! |
|  | | 298HALL
Number of posts: 22 Age: 49 Localisation: Sherwood Forest Cap Badge: Royal Corps of Signals Places Served: Paderborn / Werl Registration date: 2008-04-17
 | Subject: Re: Compo Favourites Thu Sep 10, 2009 9:25 pm | |
| | Mike_2817 wrote: | OK then all you Cold War Warriers.
Whats your favourite Compo item?
What things you can get today is even close to what we used to enjoy.
Corned Beef has never changed for example!
Watch and Shoot. |
Has to be the sausages, but also loved the "baby's heeds" (steak and kidney pudding) !.
Corned beef was another good one - bacon grill also - but I absolutely hated the dog biscuits, pilchards / sardines - would have rather starved than eat that rubbish !
Would love to know where to get compo sausages, the steak and kid you can get very close to anyway and corned beef is - well, corned beef !
The white chocolate (so old it turned white in the tin !) was strangely still edible !! |
|  | | Hardrations

Number of posts: 168 Localisation: Winnipeg Manitoba Canada Cap Badge: RC Sigs (RTG Op) / CF Logistics (Cook) Places Served: Germany, Egypt, Cyprus, CFS Alert and lots of other strange places Registration date: 2007-12-16
 | Subject: Re: Compo Favourites Fri Sep 11, 2009 1:43 am | |
| The boiled sweets were always a hit with the local kiddies. My fav was the apricot roll. Heated up a really good taste pleaser. The oat meal blocks, I remember those, also a good item. Lots of tea, but that wasn't a big hit with the Canadians. I well remember when on a Northern Defence of NATO exercise in Norway in 71. We were on Canadian, British, American hard rations. We were told to leave all our left over rations in a neat pile beside the local shooting house in this small village at the end of the exercise. They were to be piled according to nationality and left for the locals to pick through. The Canadian hardrations were first to go, then the UK and not much of the USA were taken. Mind in those days Canadian hardrations were tinned brand name products. Incidentally the Norwegian hard rations came in a super waxed box that looked like a 509 battery. Apparently they were from the 50's. I remember Norwegians who got captured demanding to be fed Canadian or UK hard rations. The Norwegion bacon tasted of fish meal and the bread (not RAOC) wasn't bad when fresh, tiny individual loaves. |
|  | | nobby clark

Number of posts: 96 Age: 62 Localisation: manchester Cap Badge: 1R.Hamps / RAOC Places Served: baor-Hong Kong-Malaya-Borneo-Belize-F.I.-Cyprus-N.I.-UK. Registration date: 2008-04-07
 | Subject: Re: Compo Favourites Fri Sep 11, 2009 9:31 am | |
| I did find tins of Mixed Fruit Pudding in the CO-OP in Hyde. They were definitly Compo, even though the lable said Goblin Fruit Pudding,the gold coloured tin and black lettering around one end was a dead give away. Yes I did purchase several tins and enjoyed them. |
|  | | Chemist

Number of posts: 125 Age: 76 Localisation: Ireland Cap Badge: Civilian and National Service RAF Places Served: Pet Lab No4 Petroleum Depot Warendorf,Ord 2d Andover Registration date: 2009-07-15
 | Subject: Re: Compo Favourites Fri Sep 11, 2009 10:22 am | |
| Ive just put "Compo Rations" into Google. Try it 
Last edited by Chemist on Fri Sep 11, 2009 6:02 pm; edited 1 time in total |
|  | | Mike_2817

Number of posts: 73 Localisation: North Yorkshire Cap Badge: RAOC Registration date: 2009-08-27
 | Subject: Re: Compo Favourites Fri Sep 11, 2009 1:39 pm | |
|  I was in my local Jack Fulton a few weeks back and came across tins of Westlers 'Sausages in Lard' @ 50p a can [Well 2 for a £1, and yes I did buy 2 to try] Westlers is based in North Yorkshire at Malton, and produces a few tinned items for the MoD and for sale under its own name or 'Tyne Brand' but I have never come accross Sausages in Lard in the shops before. They also produce the modern 'Boil in the Bag' for the British and Irish Army and Camping Shops. http://www.westlerfoods.com/Contact-us.htmlMany of you battle hardened Cold War Warriors will remember Tinned Compo Sausages in the Gold tins with printed lids, well this is the later contract packing version for the commercial packed 10 Man Ration Pack of the late 90's (and still is I believe?) Not an inspiring name but describes it well! Not the square sausages we remember, but round, but very close in taste! These tins were it seems a contract overrun and close to thier 'Use by date' [not that worried the army back in the old days] and it can be ordered direct in packs of 12 tins. |
|  | | dandc

Number of posts: 144 Age: 59 Localisation: gateshead Cap Badge: 15/19H.AAC Places Served: tidworth, fallingbostle, detmold, hongkong, minden Registration date: 2009-05-22
 | Subject: Re: Compo Favourites Fri Sep 11, 2009 5:17 pm | |
| i used to like the chicken supreme,apple pudding,and tinned sausages,i also liked the individual 24hr ration packs[the ones with the irish stew in],dave. |
|  | | Mike_2817

Number of posts: 73 Localisation: North Yorkshire Cap Badge: RAOC Registration date: 2009-08-27
 | Subject: Re: Compo Favourites Fri Sep 11, 2009 5:49 pm | |
| | 298HALL wrote: | | Mike_2817 wrote: | OK then all you Cold War Warriers.
Whats your favourite Compo item?
What things you can get today is even close to what we used to enjoy.
Corned Beef has never changed for example!
Watch and Shoot. |
Has to be the sausages, but also loved the "baby's heeds" (steak and kidney pudding) !.
Corned beef was another good one - bacon grill also - but I absolutely hated the dog biscuits, pilchards / sardines - would have rather starved than eat that rubbish !
Would love to know where to get compo sausages, the steak and kid you can get very close to anyway and corned beef is - well, corned beef !
The white chocolate (so old it turned white in the tin !) was strangely still edible !! |
Do not remember Pilchards or Sardines in compo packs from 1970 at least!
Biscuits Brown were Hard Tack I agree, but compo should wherever possible be supplemented with Bread, a fact so often ignored.
Never came across chocolate turned white with age [Its only the Cocoa Butter leaching out] and when it did happen it was hoarded tins or badly stored that caused it. |
|  | | ciphers

Number of posts: 165 Age: 76 Localisation: Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada Cap Badge: Royal Signals Places Served: Catterick - BAOR (Herford - Bunde - Munster) - Japan (Kure) - Korea (Pusan - Seoul) - Cyprus (Nicosia) - Suez Op (1st Guards Brigade) - UK (63 Sigs Regt TA, Southampton) Registration date: 2008-06-30
 | Subject: Re: Compo Favourites Fri Sep 11, 2009 7:42 pm | |
| I recall once on a scheme in '52 sitting up all night as Duty Super operating the switchboard, just to let the whacked out crew get some sack time as they had been going at it strong for several days .. we were running two schemes back to back and had a days layover ... well glory be, a NAAFI wagon showed up, and being a bit of a glutton for Cadbury's Fruit and Nut chocolate I grabbed half a dozen bars just to tide me over the night hours. Next morning at Stand To the Duty Officer came into the Sig Cen helped himself to some of my chocolate and the spat it out saying Jesus Corporal, this stuffs full of maggots .. sure enough, and I had been scoffing it all night. The Duty Officer said let me sort it out for you, off he went to the NAAFI wagon and returned with a huge grin on his face .. best thing I could do was to get you a couple of free bars in compensation he said ... do you want them. I said I would take them but see the RSM about sorting out the NAAFI manager on return to barracks ... so I wrote a note to the RSM and left it in his tent with the two chocolate bars .. an hour later all hell broke loose as Tara wanted to know who had left him the chocolate .. yes the greedy bugger had scoffed one before reading my note .. the NAAFI wagon was gone in less than 10 minutes. Cadbury's Fruit and Nut has never been the same since. Len (Ciphers) |
|  | | mjm34

Number of posts: 36 Age: 59 Localisation: Gtr Manchester Cap Badge: R.Signals Places Served: BAOR, UK, Mid East, Far East Registration date: 2009-02-21
 | Subject: Re: Compo Favourites Sat Sep 12, 2009 10:33 am | |
| Obviously the tins of chocolate and sweets were the first to get opened. Were there 1 or 2 tins in a 10 man pack? Originally it was Carsons chocolate which had a strange, but not unpleasant taste, but later it was either Cadburys or Rowntrees, I can't remember which. The space around the chocolate bars contained either Fruit Gums or boiled sweets. You didn't need to clean your teeth after eating the boiled sweets as they stripped the enamel off after the first couple. Tins of M&V. Ughh!!! Always tried to get the packs with irish stew. Can't remember which letter they were though. Oh, and everyone in the other thread seemed to slag off cheese "possessed". OK, it was fairly unpalatable on its own, but I actually found it edible when eaten together with the jam. |
|  | | Chemist

Number of posts: 125 Age: 76 Localisation: Ireland Cap Badge: Civilian and National Service RAF Places Served: Pet Lab No4 Petroleum Depot Warendorf,Ord 2d Andover Registration date: 2009-07-15
 | Subject: Re: Compo Favourites Sat Sep 12, 2009 10:54 am | |
| Her indoors says the cheese made a good macaroni or cauliflower dish. Where the hell would you get those on exercise? |
|  | | alan8376
Number of posts: 83 Age: 61 Localisation: Norfolk, UK Cap Badge: REME Places Served: Carlisle AAS, Aden, Hildesheim, Bordon, Fallingbostel, Dover, Osnabruck, Herford, Muenster, UN Nicosia, Dhekellia Cyprus, Waterbeach, Civi Street Registration date: 2009-07-28
 | Subject: Re: Compo Favourites Sat Sep 12, 2009 11:48 am | |
| How about discussing what else the Compo got used for? We Reme bods used the Mustard Powder for bunging in leaky radiators. Whilst we are at it. Did ANYBODY ever master the correct use of the powdered 'Pom?' I am sure it was always cast aside as non useable by the guys. However, the ACC Cooks were deft with it though, probaly becase they had a whisk. Remember the No1 Petrol Burner? Many a singed hair or worse with those. Remember digging the trench to put it in. Remember the Portable Oven which the cooks used the No1 on to create nice pies and apple crumble etc? Can't remember the name right now, but one knew it was time to get up when the duty guard lit the water boiler for washing and plate washing, again with the No1. You would hear a 'whoosh' as the petrol flames shot up the chimney! Remember 'Hay Boxes' and the Dixies inside with stew for the ranges? Seemed to keep stuff warm for ages. |
|  | | Hardrations

Number of posts: 168 Localisation: Winnipeg Manitoba Canada Cap Badge: RC Sigs (RTG Op) / CF Logistics (Cook) Places Served: Germany, Egypt, Cyprus, CFS Alert and lots of other strange places Registration date: 2007-12-16
 | Subject: Re: Compo Favourites Sat Sep 12, 2009 3:44 pm | |
| Boilers.... We called them immersion heaters. Night piquet had to light them at around 0500 hrs. The fun trick was to drip a bit extra naphtha into the bottom then light. #1 a loud boom to wake all and asundry in their hootches #2 Possibly there would be a funny whooshing sound, this was the stove pipe chimney going into orbit and praying it wouldn't land on some poor sods hootch. Then there was the time in Celle on exercise. They brought all sorts of odds and sods into watch a firing of the Honest John Rocket in 1 SSM Bty RCA. I was duty operator on the mid night shift. So I heated my shaving water on a small stove on the back step of the van. Every one else got theirs out of the immersion heaters which were in heavy duty garbage cans (only used for water not garbage). An RCAF officer WW 2 vet with the DFC came over to ask me where he could get hot water as he saw me shaving. I told him he could get his from an immersion heater as I heated mine here being on duty and couldn't leave the radio or switch board. He says," but those are garbage cans". I explained the difference but he wasn't buying it. So he ended up heating his water on my stove. Often wondered how he got by in WW 2. But then they did have nice little orderlies to bring them their morning tea, etc. |
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