106 lines
5.7 KiB
Plaintext
106 lines
5.7 KiB
Plaintext
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Taken from American Survival Guide 2/1990
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Subscription address is:
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American Survival Guide
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Subscription Dept.
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McMullen Publishing
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P.O. Box 70015
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Anaheim, CA 92825-0015
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714-635-9040
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Can be downloaded as PINESOUP.ZIP
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In 1535, the french explorer Jacques Cartier and his men were in desperate
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condition after a particularly severe winter in Newfoundland. Already 25 lay
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dead and not one of the remaining survivors was not suffering from the ravages
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of Scurvy. Fortunately for history a group of local indians took pity on
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them, and told Cartier that their medicine man had the perfect cure. Shoving
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their prejudices aside, they went to the medicine man.
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The miracle brew of this wise man was so simple that Cartier and his men
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nearly rejected it at first. Without any hocus pocus, the medicine man simply
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plucked a hand full of pine needles from a nearby tree and boiled them in a
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pot for a few minutes. Then he gave each one a cup of "soup". Although
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skeptical, they did as they were told and the soup transformed their health in
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a matter of 6 days. This is recorded because they lived to tell the tale.
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Pine needles contain 5 times the vitamin C found in lemons.
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Think of it as a herbal tea. A handful of pine needles, or 1/4 cup fresh
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chopped needles steeped in boiling water for 10 to 15 minutes provide 100% of
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the U.S.R.D.A. of vitamin C. Pine soup (or tea) tastes like the pine forest
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smells, or add a squeeze of lemon and a little honey to liven it up a bit.
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In the southwestern deserts of the U.S. grows the Pinion Pine. (California,
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Nevada, Arizona, Utah, and New Mexico.) Every few years when comes an
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abundant rainfall, the trees produce a bumper crop of cones bearing the
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delicately flavored seeds. They can best be foraged by raiding the messy
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looking nests of wood rats, who hoard many of the seeds.
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Certain Indian tribes used to peel young shoots of pine and use them as a
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green vegetable. The colonists used to make a candy out of these same shoots
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by boiling them in a heavy sugar syrup until they were nearly transparent and
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thoroughly crystalized. Ojibway indians made use of the young staminate
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catkins (little pine cone like growths, covered in soft brown scales and
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growing at the terminal end of the needle clusters) by cooking them with a
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chunk of meat. Don't throw on the steak yet. Some varieties of pine have a
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heavy turpentine flavor. Try some by just boiling before you ruin a piece of
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meat. When you find a tasty variety, then throw the steak in with them for a
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really good experience.
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PINE BARK
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Don't make the mistake of trying to eat the dead outer layer of the pine tree
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bark. It is the moist white living inner bark (cambrium layer) we are after.
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The cambrium is located just underneath the dead outer layer and it is here
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where the tree`s girth growth occurs. The best way to get a supply is to peel
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off some large chunks of bark, being careful not to girdle the tree lest you
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destroy it, the carefully fillet the moist layer of cambrium clinging to the
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inside of that. You can prepare it immediately or dry it for later use. If
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dried, be sure to soak a couple of hours before cooking.
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Late spring is the best time, when the tree is richest in sugars. Use the
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largest trees possible. Width is more important than height, the wider the
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tree, the thicker the cambrium layer. The best way is to find a logging
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operation and obtain permission to peel the stumps. This is where the
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cambrium is thickest and best, and you can get the most food with the least
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work.
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Boil for a half hour, or until the water turns red from resins. Change water
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and boil a second time for a half hour. Change water and boil a third time
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for a half hour. On the last boiling, the bark will be fairly tender and the
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water will only be light pink. The "bark" will have a color like fresh ham,
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with a texture exactly like cooked turkey breast. The bark has no particular
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flavor at all, which makes it an excellent meat substitute with the proper
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seasonings.
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After the last cooking and draining, add four cups of chicken stock ( made
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by dissolving four chicken bullion cubes in four cups of water) and
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simmer for one hour. To half of the pine chicken add some chinese noodles,
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some green onions, a dash of soy sauce, and a beaten egg to make a superb
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"Pine Ramen" soup.
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From the other half, remove the pine bark and set aside. Melt 1/4 cup of
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butter in a skillet and add 4 tablespoons of white flour to make a thick
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past. Into this add 2 cups of pine chicken broth, adding slowly and
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stirring in to a nice lumpless gravy. Take an uncooked pie shell and heap
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it full of the leftover pine bark. Add cooked potatoes and carrots, a
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coarsely chopped onion, and a handful of peas. Cover it all with the
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gravy, put a pie shell lid on top, and cook in the oven at 400 for about 40
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minutes, or until nicely browned.
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When I gave a slice to some relatives one of them remarked that the chicken
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was very good, but where was the pine bark. Nutritional analysis reveals
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that this bark is high in carbohydrates and is an excellent source of
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fiber.
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The medicinal value of the pine goes beyond the vitamin C in it's needles.
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The White Pine (Pinus Strobus) is officially recognized in the U.S.
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Pharmacopia. The cambrium layer of the bark is an effective cough remedy,
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and still finds it's way into cough syrups. To make your own, put a
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tablespoons of crushed pieces into a jar with 2/3 cup of boiling water.
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Cover with a loose plastic lid (not metal) and let steep for 2 hours. Add
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a half cup of brandy and seal. Let the infusion sit overnight. In the
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morning strain out the bark and add 1 cup of honey to the liquid. Seal and
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use 2 tablespoons at a time, as needed.
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