there is no change.
Ration D Bars and Tropical Chocolate Bars .
i don't really know all of them but they did ration meat, cheese, candy and chocolate. that's probably the only things i know that they rationed, oh and i think they also rationed clothes, I also think that they rationed eggs.
Nothing
yes
information on chocolate Arthur ganong
The value of a War Ration Book 3 is usually somewhere between $1 and $10 depending on condition. Specialized private collectors may pay a little more for unused books in mint condition.
Assuming that you mean ratio, and not ration, it is a measure of the efficiency. It has a value between 0 and 1 and a percentage is a convenient way to represent such values.
I believe the Aztecs were some of the earliest people to value chocolate.
I HAVE THREE USA WAR RATION BOOK ONE: TWO WAR RATION BOOK TWO; TWO WAR RATION BOOK NO. THREE AND THREE WAR RATION BOOK FOUR. SOME ONLY HAVE A FEW STAMPS AND SOME FULL AND NEARLY FULL SHEETS OF STAMPS. WHO MIGHT BE INTERESTED AND WHAT PRICE RANGE? MY E-MAIL ADDRESS IS jmsterling56@hotmail.com
During WW1, the US Army issued the "Emergency Ration," aka the "Armour" or "Tobacco Tin" ration. It consisted of a sealed oval tin can with 3 cakes of mixed powdered beef-ground wheat, and three hard cakes of chocolate mixed with powdered sugar. The British (and German) armies issued the "Iron Ration" (Eiserne Portion). This consisted of preserved meat (such as canned corned beef) and hard crackers, plus some salt and perhaps some tea or coffee. The Emergency Ration/Iron Ration/Eiserne Portion could only be consumed by the order of the officer in charge, otherwise the soldier could be charged and punished. During WW2, the US Army utilized the D-Ration, a hard chocolate bar fortified with oat flour and vitamins; three 4-oz bars constituted one days emergency ration, providing 1800 calories. The WW2 British Army issued the Emergency Ration Mk I, a flat tin about the size and shape of an Altoids tin, sealed with waterproof tape and containing: a 1.25 oz chocolate-nut cake (sort of like a dense brownie), sugar cubes, and enough powdered tea for a 12-oz mug. The Canadian Army had an Emergency Ration tin about the size and shape of a SPAM can, containing 12 milk chocolate tablets, 12 hard crackers, and 2 small bars of chocolate. The Germans used the same Eiserne Portion as during WW1. As in WW2, the British & Canadian Emergency Rations and the German Eiserne Portion could only be eaten on the order of an officer.
Yes, George Cadbury risked large amounts of cocoa butter to make the original chocolate into a solid. There was a little bit of confusion in the early 1900's when Milton Hershey mass marketed solid chocolate "desert" (not dessert) bars for the U.S. Army ration packs.