Mozzarella. Heh. When I was in high school in the '80s, half the time the 'pizza' was made with these familiar yellow squares of cheese, laid out as economically as possible. It wasn't until I was a senior in '83-84 that we consistently got even a white cheese, let alone actual mozzarella. This was because of a state-wide referendum in defiance of Ronald Reagan's "Ketchup is a vegetable" nonsense. You got lucky, my friend.Yeah, that's my impression -- that we had ground beef (?) and cheese "pizzas" when I was in grade school in the '70s, but then they upgraded them to sausage, tomato sauce, and mozzarella in the '80s, which is what's in that link there.
You obviously are unaware of how TOS innovatingly introduced pizza to the world.
Yeah, but it was fake pizza made from synthetic meatloaf.You obviously are unaware of how TOS innovatingly introduced pizza to the world.
Still served at far too many Star Trek conventions, even to this day.![]()
To be honest, thinking back, I'm not sure how we survived that cafeteria food - nothing ever had a taste and was very unappealing (but we ate it along with our little carton of milk)![]()
Yeah, but it was fake pizza made from synthetic meatloaf.You obviously are unaware of how TOS innovatingly introduced pizza to the world.
I don't know what synthetic meat loaf on the Enterprise was made of, but I hope it was not soybean. Did the James Blish novel of this episode go into any detail about it?
Blish's adaptation (entitled "Charlie's Law") trimmed out a lot of material from the episode, including the turkey/Thanksgiving references. That was actually the first story in the first volume of Blish's adaptations, and those early ones were heavily trimmed and modified.
The 'modifications' were the direct result of Blish working from early drafts of the screenplays. The trimming seemed to me to be because of how many stories were included in each volume.
Those cartons tasted more cardboardy than the pizza crusts.To be honest, thinking back, I'm not sure how we survived that cafeteria food - nothing ever had a taste and was very unappealing (but we ate it along with our little carton of milk)![]()
I never ate the carton....
This paragraph is OT, I realize, but it's by way of being a thank-you note. HIjol, the Carl Sagan quotation in your signature is quite wonderful, and I just wanted to thank you for sharing it."For small creatures such as we the vastness is bearable only through love."
Carl Sagan; US astronomer
and popularizer of astronomy (1934-1996)
We use to have boy scouts that were semi addicted to eating powdered Tang.
I knew a guy in college who tried snorting Tang.
Apparently stung like hell . . ..
I think that Sunny-D might be close in taste to Tang, though not as gritty.
I also loved Space Food Sticks.
I remember getting the space food sticks a couple of times in my elementary school cafeteria. That would have been back in the early 70s.
To be honest, thinking back, I'm not sure how we survived that cafeteria food - nothing ever had a taste and was very unappealing (but we ate it along with our little carton of milk)![]()
I never ate the carton....
We use to have boy scouts that were semi addicted to eating powdered Tang.
Heh. I was on a backpacking trip last weekend and took a couple shots of powdered Tang. It was the first time in years, though.
Please tell me you drank it rather than ate it, Silvercrest. If the latter, I'm sure your tongue was well and duly Tang-led.
Am I the only person who actually likes Tang?
I couldn't be sure, but you may well be the only one willing to admit it.![]()
Google is your friend.I guess I missed out on Space Food Sticks. What were they?
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