Food ration bar

A food ration bar (also known as emergency food bar or compressed food bar)[1] is a type of biscuit generally included in emergency rations and compact field rations. A cross between a hardtack and an energy bar, these shelf-stable products provide a high caloric density and are generally made of grain flour, sugar, and vegetable oil.

Chinese civilian market "type 900" compressed food, derived from the military "type 90".

Food ration bars may be consumed directly or broken up and mixed with water for a porridge. The composition depends on usage: humanitarian versions place a focus on protein content and nutrition fortification,[2] while naval products place the emphasis on it being non-thirst-provoking.[3]

Some example ration bars are:

  • A-28 (rice) and A-29 (wheat), two USDA humanitarian standard products[4]
  • BP-5 Compact Food, fortified[2]
  • Datrex, for lifeboat use[3]
  • Type 90, Chinese military ration

Food bar standards are issued by maritime agencies such as the U.S. Coast Guard[3] and humanitarian agencies such as the World Food Program,[1] each for their respective use cases.

Food ration bars under the name of 压缩干粮 "compact dry food" are a core part of the military food of the Chinese People's Liberation Army for field and emergency use.[5]

See also

References

  1. "Specialized nutritious foods". World Food Programme. Archived from the original on 2017-04-25. Retrieved 2017-04-22.
  2. Final Report on Development of an Emergency Food Product: Product and Packaging Specifications, Shelf Life Study and Drop Test Synopsis (PDF). United States Agency for International Development (Report). March 2007.
  3. "Best emergency rations (lifeboat food bars)". The Prepared.
  4. https://www.ams.usda.gov/sites/default/files/media/efp2.pdf
  5. 军报梳理人民军队单兵口粮发展史:从压缩饼干到自热食品 [Military newspaper goes through the PLA's individual ration development: from ration bars to self-heating food]. 澎湃新闻.
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