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Interesting tidbit from Titanic Cookbook

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Jmcquown
  
Entitled "The Last Dinner on the Titanic - Menus and Recipes from the Great
Liner" by Rich Archbold and Dana McCauley, I read this bit of information
which I find fascinating. I've snipped some portions but the quotes from
the book are accurate:

"When all the lifeboats had departed, more than half of
Titanic's passengers and crew remained on the ship. One of
those was the chief baker, Charles Joughin, who had passed a
most eventful night. When first awakened by the impact, he
had immediately organized a party of bakers to provision the
lifeboats with any bread they could find. Then he helped
load the boats and even bullied reluctant passengers into
leaving the sinking ship."

"When all the boats were away, Joughin began throwing wooden
chairs overboard for use as life rafts. Whenever he needed a
break, he nipped back to his cabin on E-deck for a snort of
whisky. By the time the ship was about to sink, he seemed
hardly to have minded."

"Calmly, almost nonchalantly, he stepped over the starboard
rail and began climbing the side of the ship until he stood
on the upended stern." [NOTE: this remind anyone of what
those folks in the film did? Could the guy wearing white
suit sipping from the flask next to Leo DiCaprio and Kate
Winslett have been intended to portray Joughin?] He cinched
in his lifebelt as the ship began its plunge, stepped calmly
into the water and swam gently away."

"Thanks, presumeably, to the alcohol in his blood acting as
an anti-freeze, Joughin survived several hours in the icy
water and emerged none the worse for the experience."

OB Food:

Vegetable Soup (from the Third Class, scaled in the book
to serve 6)

2 Tbps. butter 1 finely chopped onion 1 cup each finely
chopped celery and carrot 1 potato, peeled and cubed 5
cloves garlic, minced 1 tsp. each dried oregano and thyme 1
bay leaf 6 cups chicken or vegetable stock 2 cups white
kidney beans, drained 1 cup corn kernels 1 cup asparagus
tips 2 cups shredded Swiss chard or spinach salt & pepper

In a large pot, melt butter over medium heat. Stir in onion,
celery, carrots, potato, garlic, oregano, thyme and bay
leaf. Cover and cook, stirring often, for 10 minutes or
until onion is translucent.

Stir in stock and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to medium
and simmer for 15-20 minutes or until vegetables are
almost tender.

Meanwhile, drain and rinse beans. Stir beans, corn and
asparagus into vegetable mixture. Cook, for 5 minutes until
asparagus is bright green and tender. Stir in Swiss chard
and season to taste with salt & pepper. Makes 6 servings.

Jill

Julia Altshuler
  
jmcquown wrote:

> "Thanks, presumeably, to the alcohol in his blood acting
> as an anti-freeze, Joughin survived several hours in the
> icy water and emerged none the worse for the experience."

That's such a great story, it is almost a shame to
question it, but wouldn't the alcohol only help him lose
body heat faster?

--Lia

Jmcquown
  
Julia Altshuler wrote:
> jmcquown wrote:
>
>> "Thanks, presumeably, to the alcohol in his blood acting
>> as an anti-freeze, Joughin survived several hours in the
>> icy water and emerged none the worse for the experience."
>
>
> That's such a great story, it is almost a shame to
> question it, but wouldn't the alcohol only help him lose
> body heat faster?
>
> --Lia

I dunno, just quoted what the book said. My focus was pretty
much on this guy knowing the ship was going down and
worrying about putting bread and such in the lifeboats. My
first thought would *not* be "Right! The ship is sinking,
better bake some more buns for the boats!" If it's true, I
applaude the gentleman who apparently didn't stick any bread
in his own (soon to be waterlogged) pockets ;)

Jill

Jmcquown
  
Julia Altshuler wrote:
> jmcquown wrote:
>
>> "Thanks, presumeably, to the alcohol in his blood acting
>> as an anti-freeze, Joughin survived several hours in the
>> icy water and emerged none the worse for the experience."
>
>
> That's such a great story, it is almost a shame to
> question it, but wouldn't the alcohol only help him lose
> body heat faster?
>
> --Lia

Lia, you might find the link to testimony as taken after
the sinking involving the chief baker interesting. I
certainly do :)

http://www.titanicinquiry.org/BOTInq/BOTInq06Joughin01.html

Jill

Scott
  
In article <BuDFc.1168$285.791@bignews6.bellsouth.net>,
"jmcquown" <jmcquown@bellsouth.net> wrote:

> "Thanks, presumeably, to the alcohol in his blood acting
> as an anti-freeze, Joughin survived several hours in the
> icy water and emerged none the worse for the experience."

hmmm. Interesting story, but this part rings false. The
problem in very cold water isn't in literally freezing (the
liquid in your body doesn't solidify), it's in reduced body
temperature, which an anti-freeze doesn't prevent. This is
opposed to frostbite, which requires ambient temperatures
BELOW freezing (and won't happen in water that's above the
freezing point). More to the point, alcohol dilates blood
vessels, which would cause you to lose body heat faster.

--
to respond, change "spamless.invalid" with "optonline.net"
please mail OT responses only

Wayne
  
Scott <heimdall@spamless.invalid> wrote in
news:heimdall-A4FB22.22051503072004@news4-ge1.srv.hcvlny.cv.net:

> In article <BuDFc.1168$285.791@bignews6.bellsouth.net>,
> "jmcquown" <jmcquown@bellsouth.net> wrote:
>
>> "Thanks, presumeably, to the alcohol in his blood acting
>> as an anti-freeze, Joughin survived several hours in the
>> icy water and emerged none the worse for the experience."
>
> hmmm. Interesting story, but this part rings false. The
> problem in very cold water isn't in literally freezing
> (the liquid in your body doesn't solidify), it's in
> reduced body temperature, which an anti-freeze doesn't
> prevent. This is opposed to frostbite, which requires
> ambient temperatures BELOW freezing (and won't happen in
> water that's above the freezing point).

Remember that brine or salt water can be chilled below the
freezing point of 32°F. and still remain a liquid.

> More to the point, alcohol dilates blood vessels, which
> would cause you to lose body heat faster.
>

--
Wayne in Phoenix

If there's a nit to pick, some nitwit will pick it.

Julia Altshuler
  
jmcquown wrote:

> Lia, you might find the link to testimony as taken after
> the sinking involving the chief baker interesting. I
> certainly do :)
>
> http://www.titanicinquiry.org/BOTInq/BOTInq06Joughi-
> n01.html

Thanks for the link. The things I learn!

--Lia

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