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/ck/ - Food & Cooking


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[ERROR] No.16515641 [Reply] [Original]

In a wooden barrel with some sea water sprinkled on it. Apparently sailors loved it. Then I'll roast it fresh after a few months, then again after a year.

Join me.

>> No.16515644

I'm on a sea water diet. I see water and I eat it.

>> No.16515647

>>16515644
I also always wanted to try sea water soup, I mean it's essentially a limitless supply of free broth.

>> No.16515651

>>16515647
>*sun rays breech over the salty grey horizon*
>Soups on!

>> No.16515677

wow wow wow. I havenever heard of this. Explain what u mean pirates loved this

>> No.16515680

i will join u only explain frist.

>> No.16515697

>>16515677
>>16515680
It was just some random shit I read on the internet (Quora), someone who dabbled in a bit of history mentioned sailors favorite coffee was some dank coffee stored in a dark place for a few months aged and sprinkled with sea water. Damn, actually should have saved it, I think there might have been some slightly more specific instructions.

Make sure to drive out to a remote place with some clean sea water, make sure it hasn't rained in a week or two (otherwise the sea water will leech pollutants from farms/cities).

>> No.16515751

>>16515697
>sailors favorite coffee was some dank coffee stored in a dark place for a few months aged and sprinkled with sea water
That sounds more like the only thing they had available. Do you think you can get fresh roasted coffee when you're out at sea for four months? Of course not, the process fat coffee underwent is what happens to literally everything on a ship back then.

>> No.16515773
File: 13 KB, 259x194, ceasar salad.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
[ERROR]

>>16515751
newfies still eat hard tack and lemons

>> No.16515775

>>16515751
No, I remember reading that the sailors specifically hated 'fresh' coffee and loved their stale, dank, sea water coffee. Yes they also roasted the aged green coffee fresh on a cast iron skillet, with likely some type of stove/burner/candle.

>> No.16515781

>>16515751
Also, how do you think coffee arrived in europe? airplane? it arrived on a ship, some barrels of green coffee probably accidentally fell overboard during shipping, they hoisted it back up, it aged and fermented over the months long voyage, the sailors cracked open a barrel and roasted it on the ship or on shore, they fell in love with it and hated fresh coffee.

>> No.16515784

>>16515781
Well that's salty seamen for ya.

>> No.16515792

>>16515641
ok, I shall monitor this thread for a few months.

>> No.16516196

>>16515641
i dont trust these little faggots, they so cheap and tacky.

>>16515781
it werent no new barrel either. OP i would prepare to be horrified.