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Some ingenious German food substitutes
Unknown, 1918, Press cutting, Reproduction
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of 17
Some ingenious German food substitutes
Some ingenious German food substitutes
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Item no
32760
Title
Our ill-fed foes: Some Ingenious German Food Substitutes
Description
From the Illustrated London News published 1918, March 23rd, page 353. Drawn by W.B. Robinson. Additional title: How Germany seeks to make good her shortage of food-stuffs: Wild plants and other substances.
Artist / maker
Unknown
Date
1918
Size
39.6 x 26.7cm
Type
Press cutting
;
Reproduction
Location
Reference Library
Germany turned to its botanists and scientific minds to find alternatives to bolster the Nation's diminishing food supply. Flour for bread making was one of several items that was universally in short supply on both sides of the line. Countless substitutes were used, from the more appetising, like potatoes and beans, to the nearly inedible, like straw, as a means of stretching the remaining supplies of flour. Eventually reedmace was discovered to be a palatable and viable alternative, as reedmace grows readily throughout Germany. The Germans also got inventive with their substitute for coffee; acorns were used as a replacement, though by many accounts the exchange wasn't a desirable one.
Textiles were also difficult to make as before as cotton was troublesome to obtain. As an alternative, the Germans favoured the common nettle to replace cotton and the inside of the bark of the poplar to substitute hemp.
Read history as it happened with free access to the
Scotsman Digital Archive
.
You can search the entire 1914-19 archives of
the Illustrated London News
online.
Exhibitions with this item
ILN During WWI: Sacrifice and Support for the war
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Eating and drinking
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