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British Rationing in the Second World War

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  • Опубліковано 5 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 125

  • @andypandy9013
    @andypandy9013 Рік тому +26

    My Mum was nine when the war started. She told me that the British people were never as healthy as they were back then, either before or since. Everyone had enough but nobody had too little or too much.
    You didn't see fat or obese people back during the war she said. Unlike now with our fat and sugar ladened diets and way too many calories in general. 🥺

    • @user-oe6wq7pu8d
      @user-oe6wq7pu8d 6 місяців тому +3

      Not to mention the lack of exercise now. Back then EVERYONE exercise . Like walking to work and school instead of driving a mile. Everyone grew a garden. 90%had a milk cow. Made their own clothes. And used and reused everything. NOTHING WAS WASTED.

    • @user-oe6wq7pu8d
      @user-oe6wq7pu8d 2 місяці тому

      You left out STARCH. And starch turn into SUGAR in the body. Not known back then.
      Since then government has been funding pushing starch in the form of bread, pasta, and sugary treats like deserts and candy. Much has push the American diet into obesity and poor health. If we went back on the WWII rations for a generation it might reverse itself.

  • @kathryncooper4001
    @kathryncooper4001 Рік тому +13

    Mother used lard for pie crust and American biscuits, margarine for baking cakes and cookies, and bacon fat for frying just about anything and for seasoning green beans and cabbage. Butter was used exclusively for toast, cheese was used exclusively for sandwiches, and honey was a substitute for jam. Potatoes, onions, and carrots were grown in the back yard in virtually any kind of container you could imagine. She always had sugar left over at the end of the month, as she used it exclusively for baked treats. Instead of tea, she drank coffee, which was also rationed. No sugar, just cream. I'm assuming eggs weren't rationed in the US. As in the UK, shoes, clothing, tires, and gasoline were rationed; she quickly learned how to maintain and repair her own shoes! She said she got by just fine, but she had to learn to strategize for every element of daily life. Til the end, she loved liver and onions fried in bacon fat, also corned beef and cabbage made with homegrown potatoes & carrots, and tinned corned beef. Most of the dietary habits I grew up with were the result of her wartime practices, and I was in my 40s before I made my first macaroni & cheese casserole!

  • @HaurakiVet
    @HaurakiVet Рік тому +20

    As a very young child in the immediate post war period in New Zealand I remember my grandparents packing food parcels to send to the UK. As I recall they contained a fair quantity of tinned and preserved foods and I seem to recall bacon, but I could be mistaken on that one. Tinned meat definately was in the mix.

    • @user-oe6wq7pu8d
      @user-oe6wq7pu8d 6 місяців тому +1

      Tinned bacon was a real thing untill about 10 years before c19. People used it to go camping in the 80s and 90s.
      It was discontinued because the bacon was packed RAW and their was problems with people eating it spoiled. Causing food poisoning. It was in pound size tins.

  • @stevep5408
    @stevep5408 9 місяців тому +8

    Lord Wolton really came through for the British public with the ration! He improved the nutrition of the average Englishmen at the same time as controlling the rationing of foods.

    • @stevep5408
      @stevep5408 7 місяців тому

      A rich guy who put his money where his mouth was . Didn't say one thing and do another when he thought no one was watching. Lived what he preached, a basic, level playing field for everyone. Good, healthy, basic nutrition for all. When things were in abundant supply when a whole ship load of basic food stuffs landed they reduced the number of ration points to purchase the abundant supply of the item. Got people to expand their pallets mostly to healthy items being imported!

  • @user-wb4cl7wm7n
    @user-wb4cl7wm7n 11 місяців тому +6

    1952-53 still had ration books and went to the clinic to be weighed and measured and sent home with a bottle of cod liver oil and one of concentrated orange juice. I still have my ration book egg was fried and spread very thin in the pan and then carefully cut in half and shared with my sister. Dripping was spread on a slice of bread for extra calories.

  • @DingBatSplat
    @DingBatSplat Рік тому +8

    I was born in 1947 and lived at the Elephant and Castle. I have a good memory and well remember post war rationing that went on until 1954 when bacon came off rationing. As it was central London and a flat where I lived there was no 'extras' from any gardens etc, rations were it. It must be realised that the money to buy was also required along with the ration coupons. If like me you were from a lower working class family money was tight. I only had jam once when my mother took me in 1951 to see my great grandmother, in her 90's, who lived in an East London terraced house with a garden. She had made her own blackcurrant jam.
    The one over riding memory I have is of being hungry nearly all the time

  • @VanquishMediaDE
    @VanquishMediaDE Рік тому +11

    People forget just how good we have it now.

  • @Lady-Jane1
    @Lady-Jane1 11 місяців тому +6

    Late to the party but to help avoid mouldy jam use a clean teaspoon to scoop your portion out. Mould is usually caused by bread/toast and butter/marge crumbs from your knife. This is why some people use a condement bowl and lid with dedicated spoon on their breakfast table.

    • @happydays1336
      @happydays1336 8 місяців тому +1

      In addition to your tips if you keep your jams and jellies in the fridge they don't mold.

  • @sueclark5763
    @sueclark5763 2 роки тому +19

    What about the National Loaf?

  • @Andrea-64
    @Andrea-64 Рік тому +9

    We had marg back then wow bad stuff. My mum remembers one tin of condensed milk she thought it was gold.

  • @Su-ri5ob
    @Su-ri5ob Місяць тому +1

    Rations varied during the war, it was not a static thing. One year, sadly I can't remember which one, adults only got 28 in the whole YEAR.
    For me, the tea ration would have been the most difficult, I couldn't even have a decent cup of tea every day with the weekly ration.

  • @drytoast1
    @drytoast1 4 місяці тому +2

    watching this in 2024 in New Zealand look at that amount of butter, lard, cheese and marge and think that's just unaffordable now. $5 of meat guess that's about two chicken drumsticks here.

  • @rosrychaplet
    @rosrychaplet Рік тому +7

    there were one egg cake recipes at the time. also, plain gelatin can take the place of an egg in baking. thank you. just found you today. shared you with my nephew who LOVES WWI,II history.

    • @happydays1336
      @happydays1336 8 місяців тому +1

      Here is a WWII recipe for an eggless chocolate cake. It's the only chocolate cake I make because it's so good:
      CHOCOLATE WACKY CAKE
      Sift together in an ungreased 8" x 8" pan:
      1/4 cup baking cocoa
      1 cup sugar
      1 1/2 cups flour
      1/2 teaspoon salt
      1/2 teaspoon soda
      Hand stir into dry mixture until moistened: (Don't overbeat)
      1/3 cup oil (I now use melted butter because cheap oils, like Canola, are no longer considered healthy)
      1 tablespoon vinegar and 1 teaspoon vanilla mixed into 1 cup cold water
      Bake at 350 degrees for 30 -35 minutes. Don't overbake otherwise the cake will be dry.
      I imagine it was a rare treat because of the amount of sugar that had to be saved up in order to make the cake.

  • @wildthing6668813
    @wildthing6668813 9 місяців тому +3

    Any fat that came off any cooked meat was saved to make the fat ration go further.

  • @gonzo_the_great1675
    @gonzo_the_great1675 Рік тому +6

    I did a ration experiment for a few months, a while ago. I went by pure cash value on meat. Also I went for mid war ration, which was more stingy. I recall I had half a tin of spam for a week.
    Think I may have been short changing myself.

  • @nrstooge
    @nrstooge 11 місяців тому +2

    I would have loved to see more of these and how it progressed.

  • @evpalfy-mt7lb
    @evpalfy-mt7lb Рік тому +2

    Thank you for being so thorough. I made carrot marmalade and just love it and my ancestors are English. Did you know they used to use up the potatoes to make beer as there was a lot of potatoes and they would store the potatoes and caves

  • @positivepessimist6853
    @positivepessimist6853 3 місяці тому +1

    Here in Bermuda, being as we're on an island in the middle of the Atlantic and ships could only come by rarely, food was strictly rationed by the government. My grandmother told us a story of a man who broke into a government warehouse and stole a huge sack of sugar. It was about the size of an adult male and too heavy to carry so the man dragged it behind him. However, he immediately accidentally tore a hole in it and the sugar leaked out, leaving a trail all the way to the man's house. All the constables had to do was follow the trail and it led them straight to him. We said "But Nan, didn't he notice that the sack was getting lighter?" and she said "No, criminals weren't too clever back then." We all had a good laugh 😂

  • @jonduggan7433
    @jonduggan7433 3 місяці тому +1

    Would be a very interesting " Tiktok Challenge "
    Wartime diet, weight loss program.

  • @ericlakota1847
    @ericlakota1847 Рік тому +4

    The amount of milk is silly powder milk is really good I drank it as a kid and loved it

  • @lydiabond7224
    @lydiabond7224 Рік тому +6

    Corned beef is not tinned it is canned. Biscuits are tinned. All love❤

  • @chrysalis4126
    @chrysalis4126 3 місяці тому +1

    You would use powdered egg for baking.

  • @samanthahardy9903
    @samanthahardy9903 Рік тому +4

    I don't think Celariac was available in the UK during WW2 as it mainly grows in the Mediterranean and would have had to be imported.

    • @susanohnhaus611
      @susanohnhaus611 Рік тому +2

      Celery would have been available and I think that is what he means. Celeriac is actually a root vegetable. Very trendy lately!

  • @1madscientist312
    @1madscientist312 8 місяців тому +2

    What I don't see there is the "National Loaf".

  • @ilovemyservicedog8862
    @ilovemyservicedog8862 Рік тому +1

    My favorite thing is corn beef hash it over here in the US. One thing I found is that it’s diced up incredibly small edit cooks bit that way. Where is Christie? I’ve actually let my Akahana for upwards of 3040 minutes to get it. Absolutely amazing that way.

  • @lisakuduk4754
    @lisakuduk4754 Рік тому +8

    Moldy jam? Do you mean crystalized? I’ve never had jam mold in the 50+yrs I’ve been on the planet 🤷‍♀️ . Sugar is a preservative, I’m confused.

    • @robyntinsley1548
      @robyntinsley1548 Рік тому

      With refrigeration jam will mold. Leave it out on your counter in the summer and see what happens.

    • @urmum3773
      @urmum3773 Рік тому +4

      @@robyntinsley1548 I've kept jam in the fridge for months and have never noticed that it has gone off. I'm not sure where the idea of jam going off faster if stored in the fridge comes from...

    • @kathrynhobbs8874
      @kathrynhobbs8874 9 місяців тому

      Jam used to be made with 50% fruit and 50%sugar. If the fruit were a type that was low in pectin ie strawberries, you would peel and dice a cooking apple, apples being high in pectin, and count that as part of the fruit. It is the combination of of pectin and sugar that sets the jam, when it has reached the boiling point. But remember ,most homes in the UK did not have refrigerators until the 1960/70s, or indeed central heating until about the same time….and we still don’t have air conditioning.
      It is the modern jams, with reduced sugar, that will keep longer in a fridge

    • @user-oe6wq7pu8d
      @user-oe6wq7pu8d 9 місяців тому

      Heat will make jelly mold. Skim it off the top and throw out eat within a month.

    • @happydays1336
      @happydays1336 8 місяців тому

      The only jams that molded were the ones I sealed with paraffin. It's why it's no longer recommended. Instead, you use a two piece lid and ring and process the jam for 5 minutes. I've never had moldy jam since then.

  • @Oldman525
    @Oldman525 Рік тому +4

    That is a lot of sugar and fat, meat and eggs. If you know how to cook that is more than enough for two people considering during the war bread and veg was not rationed.

  • @InFltSvc
    @InFltSvc Місяць тому

    Greetings across the pond! Actually, the powdered eggs came from us the Americans in order to transport them. We learned how to turn them into powder. We also introduced spam, which we absolutely hate in this country. It’s disgusting but at the time it was considered good at least over there in your neck of the woods. My Grandfather was a combat engineer. He made it back alive. He would tell us stories that when he would go through the streets over there that he would give his chocolate rations and hard candy from his army meal kits to the children and his cigarettes to the men and women as he did not smoke. Rations weren’t as strict here in United States as they were over there for you guys. I still have my grandparents ration books from the 1940s. I really don’t believe the generation today would survive on rations because they were brought up with having whatever they want and as much as they want plus I believe they would be rioting and killing over food. I am 60 now and even though I was born and raised in America, I came from a time when we did not have as much as the6 do today and appreciated the simple things in life. We also had our own gardens. The kids today have no idea what it is to go through what our grandparents did both here and over there during the war. This was a very interesting video and very educational and would be a great thing for the kids to watch in school…. God Bless ..

  • @FordTransitvan
    @FordTransitvan Рік тому +1

    Excellent

  • @dawnelder9046
    @dawnelder9046 11 місяців тому

    The powder eggs came from Canada. The packages held 12. You could chose it over the one egg, which is what I would do if I could not have chickens.

  • @bizarreisthenewblack
    @bizarreisthenewblack Рік тому

    just watched a 'week on ww2 rations' video where the guy ate onion almost every meal haha, love the amount of research you've done - i'd deffo be entering one of those raffles haha

  • @Anthonyinkz
    @Anthonyinkz Рік тому +35

    Food allergies were not heard of , you ate what you got.

    • @user-wb4cl7wm7n
      @user-wb4cl7wm7n 11 місяців тому +3

      We were all underweight and hungry my Mum smoked to take the edge off being hungry so we had a bit extra food.

    • @elisehilton7742
      @elisehilton7742 11 місяців тому +9

      People still had food allergies; allergies were not taken into account for rationing purposes. I’m allergic to strawberries. My mom wouldn’t force feed me jam; I just wouldn’t get any jam on my toast.

    • @dawnelder9046
      @dawnelder9046 11 місяців тому +5

      Frankenfoods , other than seed oils had not been invented then. Wheat had 16 chromosomes, not 58. Milk was not homogenized, changing the protein.
      The average woman gained a dress size during the war dispite the lack of calories and hard work. Too many carbs.

    • @lisareed5669
      @lisareed5669 10 місяців тому +1

      Even if it killed you.

    • @macrosense
      @macrosense 9 місяців тому

      There is no real rationality to how women’s clothing sizes are assigned

  • @user-gm1kl6xy4m
    @user-gm1kl6xy4m 6 місяців тому +2

    Healthier

  • @askhowiknow5527
    @askhowiknow5527 4 дні тому

    If you used only butter this forced you to use lard and margarine
    You didn’t really have to change your life, just use more than the one fat

  • @TheSanctuarySpace
    @TheSanctuarySpace Рік тому +2

    Wow. 1 egg per person per week? What happened to the chickens in the UK during the war? Or is this for urban dwellers? So interesting, thank you.

    • @DingBatSplat
      @DingBatSplat Рік тому +2

      One egg was for everyone except the wealthy who bought on the black market. Chickens hadn't been 'battery farmed' back then. Chicken was a luxury that was some times eaten for Christmas dinner, no turkeys for the general public.

  • @Tripperchris
    @Tripperchris 6 місяців тому +1

    What about fish - for "fish and chips"`?

    • @nealgrimes4382
      @nealgrimes4382 3 місяці тому +1

      Fish and Chips where not rationed.

  • @elainedoremus2688
    @elainedoremus2688 2 роки тому +6

    What about people who have a lot of food issues? I have been a vegetarian for 20 years due to my beliefs (ethics and environment), and I have acid reflux which has a lot of restrictions (including no tomato products, no citrus, no chocolate, no fried foods, no carbonated drinks, no pepper the vegetable, no pepper the spice, etc)? Thank you.

    • @tlsb8367
      @tlsb8367 2 роки тому +16

      I believe they did have an allowance for those who were vegetarian. Otherwise, I believe, any other food restrictions/allergies were yours to sort out - buying those things you could eat, etc. and avoiding those you couldn't.

    • @Andrea-64
      @Andrea-64 Рік тому

      Then you starve

    • @Anthonyinkz
      @Anthonyinkz Рік тому +14

      Food issues never existed, you ate what you got.

    • @athletemum
      @athletemum Рік тому +7

      Vegetarians were catered for...extra cheese and legumes.

    • @kathrynhobbs8874
      @kathrynhobbs8874 Рік тому +1

      As a post war, yet during rationing child, I was registered as a vegetarian, thus providing more cheese for everyone in the family…and I got a tiny bit of their meat

  • @cerberus6654
    @cerberus6654 8 місяців тому

    I'm an adult Canadian male and I honestly would not now eat half of what's on that table. It just shows how tastes have changed. Nobody I know eats organ meats anymore. We worry about antibiotics and hormones. I don't eat much bread, no dairy other than cheese and maybe one or two eggs a week. What I do eat a lot of that wouldn't have been common for Brits back then are citrus fruits and bananas and pasta. Also loads of fish and chicken. I would have traded all that lard and butter and sugar for coffee. And I would have suffered a lingering death without olive oil by the gallon!

    • @nealgrimes4382
      @nealgrimes4382 3 місяці тому

      As a Brit, i would eat all these things and had Liver and Bacon yesterday, also Coffee was hard to get hold of but not rationed.

  • @bernadinenewland5100
    @bernadinenewland5100 9 місяців тому +2

    Don't you put the jam in the fridge? Takes months to mold...

    • @analogueman123456787
      @analogueman123456787 9 місяців тому +2

      And how many people had a fridge during the war?

    • @catherinecrew1739
      @catherinecrew1739 3 місяці тому +1

      We and many,many others didn’t have a fridge!

    • @catherinecrew1739
      @catherinecrew1739 3 місяці тому +1

      No fridges in any house that I knew.Are you from the USA? I’m from Scotland originally. I grew up with ration books.

  • @nigelgregory7308
    @nigelgregory7308 Рік тому +2

    A shilling is equivalent of five pence.

  • @HollyW-su7qg
    @HollyW-su7qg 8 місяців тому

    Was flour on points? I haven't seen anything about that in the literature of the time. I would certainly like to know the point value if it was. Thank you so much for making this video. I have watched many about rationing, but I still enjoyed seeing yours, and have subscribed to check out other videos you make.

    • @Su-ri5ob
      @Su-ri5ob Місяць тому

      Flour was not rationed or pointed.

  • @kathrynhobbs8874
    @kathrynhobbs8874 Рік тому +1

    Didn’t have onions?? My uncle grew whoppers in his gardens

  • @kathrynhobbs8874
    @kathrynhobbs8874 Рік тому

    Interesting programme, shame about the almost, but irritatingly not inaudible background music bits

  • @kerryjames6312
    @kerryjames6312 Рік тому +2

    People made preserves from there victory garden

    • @DingBatSplat
      @DingBatSplat Рік тому

      No gardens for us living in flats in central London!

  • @lynnegeddes7532
    @lynnegeddes7532 20 днів тому

    🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿❤️🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @elizabethbutler3766
    @elizabethbutler3766 11 місяців тому +2

    If you save your bacon fat then you could have a little more lard

    • @dawnelder9046
      @dawnelder9046 11 місяців тому

      My mother never threw out bacon fat.

  • @dianewhittemore5350
    @dianewhittemore5350 6 місяців тому

    What are telling me?. You said food allergies were not not u heard of. Your point?

  • @kerryjames6312
    @kerryjames6312 Рік тому +2

    You would have your chickens for eggs and meat rabbit were cooked victory garden legumes brown bread home baking

  • @dianewhittemore5350
    @dianewhittemore5350 6 місяців тому

    allergies were not unheard of. So what is your point???

  • @snidelywhiplash8923
    @snidelywhiplash8923 3 місяці тому

    Jam doesn't spoil if kept in the fridge.

  • @MsBlue68
    @MsBlue68 11 місяців тому

    What about bread, salt, pepper, herbs and spices?

    • @dawnelder9046
      @dawnelder9046 11 місяців тому

      They had the national loaf. Salt would have been available. But any spice that needed to be shipped in like pepper, ginger, and nutmeg would be different to get. However you could grow oregano, parsley, etc.

    • @joanfry5440
      @joanfry5440 23 дні тому

      born during blitz i never heard of spices until i was a teenager

  • @miscelany2
    @miscelany2 Рік тому +1

    Why does your jam mold? Don't you store it in the fridge?

    • @DingBatSplat
      @DingBatSplat Рік тому

      Fridge? No fridges only a galvanised metal bucket with cold water to keep your milk bottle in. You made me laugh with that comment. By the way I was born 1947 and lived through post war rationing till it ended in 1954. It wasn't just food either, furniture and other items were hard to get or of 'utility' design and construction.

    • @kathrynhobbs8874
      @kathrynhobbs8874 Рік тому +2

      Modern jam molds because it does not have enough sugar to preserve it. It requires 50% sugar 50% fruit……which is why not much was made….when you could you preserved in Kilner jars. Or by slow drying . Both jam and butter were consumed by the ‘ take very VERY little and then scrape it over the bread so you can see through it’ method…anymore and you were a hog!

  • @sccg2424
    @sccg2424 2 роки тому +2

    Your information on this post is incorrect, Re WW2 Rations. Please update this for 1 adult person ration and 1 child Ration.

    • @sue15cat
      @sue15cat 2 роки тому +4

      Why? ... they are two adults.

  • @dianewhittemore5350
    @dianewhittemore5350 6 місяців тому

    For people with allergies?????

  • @SusanA1056
    @SusanA1056 5 місяців тому

    An onion for a raffle prize! Just imagine.

  • @dianewhittemore5350
    @dianewhittemore5350 6 місяців тому

    The amounts are ridiculous, the only reason cilvinan lived was the started victory gardens to live. Not thoughtful England nor kind t non military pesonel. They were being starved to feed troops.

    • @nealgrimes4382
      @nealgrimes4382 3 місяці тому +1

      It was actually a very healthy diet for civilians.

    • @joanfry5440
      @joanfry5440 23 дні тому

      i had malnutrition and a milk avertion for which i was punished for awhile as a toddler

  • @dianewhittemore5350
    @dianewhittemore5350 6 місяців тому

    Do any thing to people with allergies???

    • @Shantelle6253
      @Shantelle6253 6 місяців тому

      I believe...but dont know for certain..
      Pretty much they let us Allergics fend for ourselves back then, no extra rations for allergies...just trade what you can't eat for what you can.
      I hear in some countries now you get some sort of monthly stipend or tax credit for Allergies. I'm in the USA at the moment and they don't but the prices for gluten free products have really come down in the past 5 years now that being GF is trendy. Tons of GF products available.

    • @christine899
      @christine899 Місяць тому

      People didn't have food allergies like they do today, food was grown a lot healthier beef lamb pork were feed the way animals were supposed to be feed, they grazed and pigs would eat the fruit that fell from the trees, they were also used on farms to turn the soil over when looking for bits of the crops or veg that were left, they also ate kitchen scraps ie peelings from vegetables, there was always a pig bin to put your kitchen scarp's in, also there was not the air pollution that we have today in cities (no petrol) to drive cars, the way people lived was totally different, less chemicals in everything, and you were only too grateful to have something to eat, people were not fussy eaters like today, the only take away, was the fish & chip shop, and there were very few fat people and even less fat children, perhaps it was a healthier time to live in than today.

  • @tilasole3252
    @tilasole3252 2 роки тому +1

    I'm going to imagine I am a pig farmer or in charge of raising a few pigs and having to give half the pig meat to the representative and I keep the other half. Seems only fair.

    • @yayasorensen4351
      @yayasorensen4351 2 роки тому +9

      As a pig farmer you would not have been aloud to keep any of it. Only pig clubs could keep one pig and you split half with the other members while the ministry took the other half. They were very strict about this.

    • @tilasole3252
      @tilasole3252 2 роки тому +4

      @@yayasorensen4351 Farmers got to have certain luxuries, that urban dwellers would not.

  • @dianewhittemore5350
    @dianewhittemore5350 6 місяців тому

    I don't see benefit for it.

  • @Drayton627
    @Drayton627 5 місяців тому +2

    These two are irritating with their modern attitude.

  • @dianewhittemore5350
    @dianewhittemore5350 6 місяців тому

    Did any one care?????

  • @sccg2424
    @sccg2424 2 роки тому +1

    You are absolutely giving Wrong information about the Ration system for WW2. Please do some research on the facts before you post your misinformation

    • @sue15cat
      @sue15cat 2 роки тому +7

      It seems pretty correct to me. Are you in the UK, because this is how it was here.

  • @amydecker6207
    @amydecker6207 Рік тому +1

    *laughs in plant based*

  • @dianewhittemore5350
    @dianewhittemore5350 6 місяців тому

    Dis any one care???

  • @allan330
    @allan330 Рік тому +1

    Painful presentation.