MoD Manual of Catering Services
Curry at sea and an erotic image that I can't get out of my head.
Recently I have been
thinking of a quick blog around numbers and food. I know the thought
that any thought goes into these little postings may be a bit of a
shock but I do sometimes put some thought into them, and even, on occasions, do research
complete with note taking. Most of my initial thoughts come to me
while my little grey cells are stimulated with a drop or two of red
wine so I try to make notes contemporaneously using a A4 pad and a 2B
pencil but as I'm sure you can imagine sometimes deciphering these
the next day can be somewhat problematic.
One of the numbers that
came to mind while I had the numbers and food blog idea in my head
was 404. 404 is the Joint Services Publication number of the Ministry
of Defence Manual of Catering Services (not the snappiest title but quite descriptive). I've known of the
existence of this manual for some years but I hadn't really looked into
it in any depth before.
Before now that is...
JSP 404 comes in five
parts plus an introduction, contents list and index all of which are
downloadable from the MoD website in PDF format (or should that be PD
format, after all you wouldn't say Portable Document Format format
would you). I downloaded all six documents and got completely
engrossed in them. They are brill, and although they don't have the
literary panache of Elizabeth David they do have the content to equal
Delia's How to Cook.
Speaking of Delia's How
to Cook, I've been watching reruns on the Good Food channel of late.
I used to have a bit of a thing for Delia, although this cooled a
little when she became deeply involved with Norwich City Football
Club. This 'thing' was probably fuelled by an image I had in my head
(and still do at times) of the bib and neckband of her apron
provocatively hooking round one of her breasts. I have watched reruns
of most of her appearances going back to the very earliest and in
none of them was she even wearing an apron never mind wearing one
provocatively. Was this the product of the deepest, darkest, most
erotic corner of my mind?
Putting Delia's chest
to one side (for the moment), there is no doubt her classic How to
Cook series and accompanying books inspired and educated many in the
culinary techniques, both basic and advanced, required to become a
confident cook. Equally JSP 404 has every bit of knowledge that an
aspiring cook could ever need and as a source of reference it must be
up there with Felicity Cloake's brilliant Guardian column 'How to
Make the Perfect'.
The introduction to JSP
404 states 'The aim of this manual is to provide standard recipes and
methods for use in unit catering departments and in training'. This
it does in absolute detail and with absolute precision.
Part 1 covers Culinary
terms (British and French); Metric equivalents; Nutrition; Herbs and
spices; Cheeses; Cooking methods (including Microwave cookery); Raw
meat preparation (OK you may not butcher a carcass of meat everyday
but look at it as a transferable skill, you never know when it may come in handy); Home freezing and
creating packed meals.
Part 2 is called
'Kitchen' and covers Stocks and glazes; Basic preparations, this
includes Bread items, Butters (hot and cold), Savoury jellies
(Aspic); a mysterious collection listed under Unclassified (including
a thing called Socle, apparently a potato and gelatin mix used as plinth for cold dishes); Thickening agents (Roux and Liaisons); Sauces;
Hors d’oeuvres; Soups; Fish; Meat of every type and description;
Stuffing’s; Pasta; Rice; Pizza; Eggs; Savouries and cocktails;
Vegetables and Salads.
Part 3 deals with
Pastry, Bases and preparations; Sweet sauces and butters; Biscuits;
Pastries and small cakes; Gateaux and torten; Cakes; Bread and yeast
products; Hot, cold and iced sweets, and of course Petits fours.
Part 4 is a bit special
and is named Gurkha Cookery. It goes into Basic preparations; Rice
dishes; Dal dishes; Meat and Poultry dishes; Fish dishes; Egg dishes;
Potato and vegetable dishes; Chutneys; Breads; Snacks and Sweet
dishes. We once had a detachment of Gurkhas on board for a few days,
they were great guys. Big smiles, big knifes and even bigger
appetites. I will never forget the chef trying to explain to them
that there was actually a choice of three different meals on offer as they
cruised down the counter taking a spoonful of everything. I'm sure
they understood but they just smiled, nodded and told him 'it very
nice, thank you' and carried on scooping. Brill! He would probably have lashed out with his ladled like Bumble the Beadle in Oliver Twist if it had been one of us. He (the chef not Oliver Twist or Mr Bumble) was quite wisely a little
bit more restrained with these guys. Still in the true naval tradition of
hospitality we had a bit of a party for our Gurkha quests the night before we
dropped them off in the jungle to do their Gurkha-ing or what ever
they were up to. In return they cooked up a curry for us. I don't
know if it was a recipe from JSP 404 or its predecessor but I remember it was chunks
of super tender chicken just dropping off the bone and it tasted
delicious. There are worst ways to spend an evening than sitting on
the flight-deck of a warship steaming through the South China Sea,
drinking Tiger Beer from a can and with a paper plate piled high with authentic
Gurkha Curry made by authentic Gurkhas.
Part 5 is the final
section and covers Special Skills, Cold buffets; Royal icing;
Marzipan; Chocolate; Speciality cakes including Wedding, Christening
and Birthday Cakes (a bit of a secondary revenue stream for the
service chefs here I think); Gum paste; Sugar work; Potato work; Spit
roasting; WI type stuff like Bottling, Chutneys and pickles, Jam and
Marmalade making and every roughie toughie's favourite, Jelly!
Why don't you follow
the link (JSP 404) and have a look. I'm sure you will be really impressed at
what these combat chefs are serving up.
Me, I'm off to watch a
little tele, a very young looking Delia is on, and unless I'm very
much mistaken she is only a whisk or two away from achieving stiff peaks...
Thanks for posting I'm an avid prepper and soon join the army as a chef so this gives me a heads up on what I'm using
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