pilot bread การใช้
- One woman in Alaska mailed eight pounds of Sailor Boy Pilot Bread.
- Unlike the traditional hardtack recipe, Sailor Boy Pilot Bread contains leavening and vegetable shortening.
- Alaskans enjoy warmed pilot bread with melted butter or with soup or moose stew.
- Pilot bread with peanut butter, honey, or apple sauce is often enjoyed by children.
- Commercially available pilot bread is a significant source of food energy in a small, durable package.
- Therefore, the blue-and-white Sailor Boy Pilot Bread boxes are ubiquitous at Alaskan airstrips, in cabins, and in virtually every village.
- Those who buy commercially baked pilot bread in the continental US are often those who stock up on long-lasting foods for disaster survival rations.
- In 1801, California in 1849 . Since the journey took months, pilot bread, which could be kept a long time, was stored in the wagon trains.
- Pilot bread, sometimes referred to as pilot crackers in advertising, is often sold in conjunction with freeze-dried foods as part of package deals by some survival food companies.
- Originally imported as a food product that could endure the rigours of transportation throughout Alaska, pilot bread has become a favoured food even as other, less robust foods have become available.
- They still eat hardtack ( or pilot bread ) in Alaska, so it is probably still legal as you put it .-- talk ) 23 : 34, 5 December 2011 ( UTC)