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202 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1942
Hayboxes are very simple...bring whatever food you want to a sturdy boil, put it tightly covered on a layer of hay in the inside box, pack hay all around it, and cover the box securely. Then you count twice as long as your stew or porridge or vegetables would have taken to cook normally, open the haybox, and the food is done. It is primitive, and it is a good thing to know if fuel is a problem for you.
...in a souffle, add one cup of puffed cereal to the three separated eggs, and you will have food for four people.
The best way to have fish for supper, in most places, will be to go out along the river or in your dinghy at the tide's change, if you can get past sentries and avoid the mines, and catch some mudcats or a few bass on your own hook.
The first thing to do, if you have absolutely no money, is to borrow some. Fifty cents will be enough, and should last you from three days to a week...If you must pay for the stove, it will probably cost about ten cents for the current or gas. That cuts you down to forty cents...buy about fifteen cents worth of ground beef from a reputable butcher...about ten cents worth of ground whole-grain cereal...Spend the rest of your money on vegetables...slightly wilted or withered things a day old maybe. Otherwise buy the big coarse ugly ones...It does not matter if they be slightly battered: you will grind them into an odorous but unrecognizable sludge.