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What American soldiers said about luncheon meat during World War II.

Among the US military rations used in World War II, the more legendary is the so-called "spiritual meat" - Spam luncheon meat (SPAM). This canned precooked meat product is manufactured by Hormel Fc in Austin, Minnesota. Daji was the most famous ration during the entire war. In the early 1930s, Hormel launched the first canned product-HSH formel Spiced Ham. Hormel's spiced ham suffered a disastrous defeat in the market. Company executives had no choice but to solicit new names from social luminaries. The brother of Hormel Vice President Dagnew (Kenneth Daignca Li) is a semi-famous actor. He proposed to use pork front leg meat and ham. The abbreviation SPAM (shoulder of Pork And haM) was immediately adopted as a trademark for the new product, and Kenneth Dagnew received a $100 award from Hormel. On June 5, 1937, the first canned Spam luncheon meat was born.

According to the statement on the subject list. The main ingredients of Spam lunch meat are pork shoulder, ham, salt, water, sugar and sodium nitrite. Each 56-ounce serving of Parm Luncheon Meat contains 7 grams of protein. 2 grams of carbohydrates and 15 grams of fat can provide 170 calories and 1/3 of the daily salt intake. It has more than ten flavors such as black pepper, salt, garlic, cheese, smoked, honey-pickled, spicy, etc. There are even large banquet-packed luncheon meats and Islamic special-packed luncheon meats (the raw material is turkey). In 2002 alone, Hormel's main plant in Austin, Minnesota (another large name is "Spam Town") sold 6 billion cans of Spam to the base world, more than 41 People in several countries are eating this can.

However, among the rave reviews about spaghetti luncheon meat, there are certainly many things that evoke the United States in World War II without the voices of American soldiers on the battlefield. Veterans' passions and memories bind them together, no matter where they were serving at the time: Lucky Strike cigarettes; movie stars Jane Harrow and Leda Hayworth; the day the Japs bombed Pearl Harbor; What are you doing; where did you hear the news of Roosevelt's death; the moral admonitions of the military chaplain; the sergeant major in the company; and the love letter from his girlfriend. In addition, there is one thing that can quickly summon the sympathy of countless American veterans. A vivid memory of the war, whether they were in the deserts of North Africa, the ruins of Monte Cassino, the beachheads of Normandy or the tropical jungles of Bougainville. For them, Spam luncheon meat. Like enemy bullets and gonorrhea, it is a common enemy for millions of American soldiers around the world.