



Apple Brown Betty 
2 cups soft bread crumbs 
1/4 cup margarine 
3 cups apples, sliced (they need not be peeled) 
1/2 cup sugar 
1 tsp. cinnamon 
3/4 cup water 
In an oven-proof skillet, saute bread crumbs in margarine. Add apples, 
sugar, cinnamon and water. Cover and bake at 375 degrees for 30 to 40 
minutes, until apples are translucent and tender. If mixture becomes too 
dry during baking, add 1/4 cup water (apples vary as to moisture 
content). 


Apple Custard Pie 
filling ingredients: 
3 apples, sliced and peeled 
1-1/4 cup sugar 
1 tsp. cinnamon 
1 egg 
1 cup evaporated milk (or 1 cup double-strength powdered milk) 
crust ingredients: 
1-1/2 cups flour 
1/2 tsp. salt 
1 stick butter 
For crust, mix flour, salt and butter with a fork until mixture 
resembles coarse meal. Press firmly on the bottom and sides of a 
buttered pie plate. Place sliced apples on crust. Sprinkle with 2/3 cup 
sugar and cinnamon. Bake at 375 degrees for 20 minutes. Beat together 
egg, remaining sugar and evaporated milk. Pour over apples and return to 
oven to bake 30 minutes longer. 


Timeless Gingerbread 
2/3 cup molasses 
1-1/4 cup sour milk or buttermilk 
2 tbsp. vegetable oil 
2 cups whole wheat flour 
1 tsp. baking soda 
1/4 tsp. salt 
1 tbsp. ginger 
Mix the liquids. In another container, mix the dry ingredients. Beat 
together the two groups of ingredients and pour into a greased 9-inch 
square pan. Bake at 350 degrees for 25 to 30 minutes or until a 
toothpick inserted in the center comes out un-sticky. 


Scotch Shortbread 
2 sticks butter 
1 cup sugar 
2-1/2 cups flour 
1/2 cup chopped nuts (optional) 
Cream butter with sugar until soft. Add flour and mix well with hands. 
Add nuts if desired. Chill dough 1 hour, then roll thin. Cut into shapes 
or short strips. Place on ungreased cookie sheet. Bake at 300 degrees 
for 20 minutes. Makes about 3 dozen pieces. 


Grandma's Molasses Cookies 
1 cup molasses 
1 stick butter 
3 cups flour 
1 tsp. baking powder 
2 tsp. baking soda 
1 tsp. salt 
1-1/2 tsp. ginger 
Heat molasses and butter. Remove from heat. Mix remaining ingredients 
together and add to molasses mixture. Mix well and chill 3 hours. Roll 
thin and cut with cookie cutter. Place on greased cookie sheet and bake 
at 350 degrees about 12 minutes. Cool. 


Molasses Crisps 
1-1/4 cups flour 
3/4 tsp. baking soda 
1/2 tsp. ginger 
1/2 cup molasses 
1/4 cup shortening 
Sift the dry ingredients. In a saucepan, bring the molasses and 
shortening to a boil. Cool slightly. Add flour mixture. Mix real good. 
Chill thoroughly. Cut into desired shapes and arrange on greased cookie 
sheet. Bake at 375 degrees until done, about 8 or 10 minutes. Makes 
about 2 dozen. 


Domestic Animals and Vermin. Most Americans have an aversion to eating 
dogs, cats or horse meat while they don't give a second thought to 
eating a piece of chicken, beef or pork. It's also a culinary taboo to 
eat vermin like rats and groundhogs, but many people eat other rodents 
like rabbits and squirrels. Cultural culinary taboos have nothing to do 
with nutrition and if you can "unlearn" them a wide variety of new 
potential protein sources is available to you. If you have trapped a 
nice juicy rat or if Fido and Tabby aren't performing a vital task like 
protecting your food larder, garden or hen house you may find the 
recipes in this section of interest. 

Fried Cat 
1 cat, 2 to 3 pounds 
1/2 GI canteen cup flour 
2 GI mess kit spoons paprika 
1-1/2 GI mess kit spoons salt 
1/4 GI mess kit spoon pepper 
1 GI canteen cup shortening 
Cut cat in serving pieces. Blend flour, paprika, salt and pepper in a 
clean container. Shake 2 or 3 pieces of the cat at a time until well 
coated with flour. Save any left over flour for gravy. Heat shortening 
in a heavy pan. Place cat pieces in pan and brown slowly on all sides. 
Cover and cook slowly until cat is tender. Uncover about 15 minutes to 
crisp cat. 


Clay Cat 
1 small cat 
salt & pepper 
aromatic spices such as bay leaves, juniper berries or lemon grass (use 
what is available) 
5 garlic cloves 
2 oranges, peeled and halved 
Dress and clean the cat, leaving the fur on. In the stomach cavity 
(which should be patted with salt and pepper) place the peeled oranges, 
peeled garlic cloves and aromatics. Tie the cavity closed or pin closed 
with little wooden skewers, threaded in and out of the soft belly skin. 
Coat the whole animal with clay. Do several coats so you have a good 
shell formed. Put in a hole with hot coals at the bottom and pile hot 
coals on top of the clay cat. Throw a blanket of banana leaves (or other 
green vegetation) over the hole. Let bake for 2 or 3 hours while you are 
tending to other things. The fur will come off when you strip the clay 
away. 


Baked Dog DiRocco 
1 small dog 
10 bay leaves or any aromatic spice 
1 onion 
1 pod hot red pepper 
1 GI mess kit spoon salt 
black pepper 
3 slices bacon 
Mike DiRocco, who served three tours in Vietnam, offers a good tip on 
selecting the best dog for cooking. He says the Vietnamese judge how 
tender the dog will be by color; a white dog is best, brown second best 
and lastly a black dog. Skin and clean dog. Remove the glands from under 
the legs (they have a strong taste, though they are not harmful if 
eaten). Cut into sections. Put pieces in a pot. Add bay leaves or 
aromatics, then onion, red pepper and salt. Cover with cold water. Cover 
pot and boil gently for 30 minutes. Drain meat and discard water and 
seasonings. Cover again with cold water and boil for 1 hour. Again pour 
out the water and drain. Cover dog with cold water for a third time and 
cover pot. Boil gently until tender, about 1 hour. Drain. Put dog in
 pan. Season with plenty of black pepper and salt if needed. Cover with 
slices of bacon or fat pork. Put in a clay oven or a covered pan placed 
in hot coals and covered with coals. Bake for 1-1/2 hours. Make gravy 
with pan juices. 


Barbecued Dog 
Dress dog, removing any glands from under the legs. Take off all fat, if 
any. Cut into serving pieces and parboil in salt water for several hours 
until tender. Place on spit or grill and pour your favorite sauce recipe 
over the pieces. Grill, turning as needed to brown evenly. Baste with 
sauce throughout cooking. (improvised sauce: mix a GI canteen cup of 
tomato sauce or juice with a GI mess kit spoon of garlic powder, two GI 
mess kit spoons of worcestershire sauce and a dash of pepper) 


Bunker Beef Curry 
2 cups boned bunker beef (any meat on the hoof that you find down in 
your bunker; usually rats) 
1/4 cup flour 
3 large onions, sliced 
4 tbsp. butter or oil 
1 cup boiling water 
1/4 tsp. ground coriander 
1/2 tsp. ground cumin 
1/2 tsp. turmeric 
1/4 tsp. cayenne pepper 
1 cup tomato juice 
Sprinkle the "beef" with seasoned flour. Cook "beef" and onions in 
butter or oil until brown. Add water and spices and bring to a boil. 
Cover pan. Simmer for a couple of hours until "beef" is tender. Stir in 
tomato juice. Serve with rice. Any condiments such as coconut, raisins, 
nuts or chutney which are available can be sprinkled on top of Bunker 
Beef Curry on rice. 


Barbecued Bunker Beef 
4 cups cooked bunker beef, boned 
1/4 cup vinegar or wine 
1/4 cup sugar 
1/2 cup butter or oil 
1/2 tsp. black pepper 
1/2 tsp. cayenne pepper 
2 onions, peeled and sliced 
1-1/2 cups water 
4 tbsp. mustard 
1 tsp. salt 
2 slices lemon 
1 cup catsup 
3 tsp. worcestershire sauce 
Steam enough "beef" to make four cups, pulled from the bone. Set aside 
to cool. Combine vinegar or wine with sugar, butter or oil, peppers, 
onions, water, mustard, salt and lemon slices in a pan. Bring to a 
rolling boil. Add catsup, worcestershire sauce and "beef". Simmer for 15 
minutes. Serve over bread or rice.


Rat Roulade 
2 medium rats, dressed (cut off heads, paws and tails) 
4 slices bacon, diced 
1 onion, chopped 
1-1/2 cups toasted bread cubes 
2 tbsp. minced parsley 
1/2 tsp. celery seeds 
1/4 tsp. sage 
1/2 tsp. salt 
1/2 tsp. pepper 
1 cup bouillon (1 cup water, 1 bouillon cube) 
1 8-ounce can tomato sauce 
Saute bacon with onion until onion is tender. Mix in bread cubes, 
parsley, celery seeds and sage. Season rats with salt and pepper. Stuff 
each rat with stuffing. Tie rats closed with strings by wrapping around 
bodies. Place in pan and pour bouillon over roulades. Cover pan and 
simmer 45 minutes to 1 hour or until rats are tender. Add tomato sauce 
and cover pan again. Cook for 30 minutes more.


Jane Fondue or Meat with Red Sauce 
3 pounds meat (beef, pork, horse, monkey, water buffalo, dog, cat ... 
any red meat) 
3 cups cooking oil (any kind) 
Red Sauce (see next recipe) 
Cut the meat into 1-inch cubes and set at room temperature for about 30 
minutes. Fill a pot 1/2 full with cooking oil and heat to 375 degrees 
(meat will brown quickly when oil is heated properly). Place cubes of 
meat on sticks and cook in oil for 10 to 30 seconds until browned. Dip 
into Red Sauce. (Note: If fowl is substituted for red meat in Jane 
Fondue recipe, be sure to use only the left wings of the chicks). 


Red Sauce 
1 8-ounce can tomato sauce 
2 tbsp. brown sugar 
1/2 cup steak sauce (or your favorite bottled steak condiment) 
2 tbsp. cooking oil 
Combine all ingredients in a saucepan and heat thoroughly. 


Hopefully the recipes in this "Militia Cookbook" will give you some 
ideas on how to prepare meals from your stockpiled staple foods during 
an emergency so you won't have to choke down plain uncooked flour and 
break your teeth on dry beans.

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