Monday 30 January 2023

Smelling Pretty Colours

Remember COVID? Remember how it was a joke, and then it wasn't a joke, and then it faded away, and then it came back worse? And then it ground on and continued and is still with us, but we've learned to accept that the world has changed, so it no longer has power over our minds. It can kill us, but it can't break us any more. Remember that?

During the early part of 2021 I built a modular synthesiser, and I still haven't grown tired of it. It was one of those if-not-now-then-when projects, but I hate waste, and some of the modules - Plaits in particular - are endlessly fascinating. My love is still strong.

After a lot of tinkering here's what it looks like now:

What's the point of a modular synthesiser? Partially the wealth of modulation options, and partially the fact that all of the controls are right there, in front of me. I don't have to assign controllers or remember that unlabelled knob X controls pulse width, I have the controls right there in front of me.

The tune at the top of this post is built entirely on a bassline made with Mutable Instruments's Plaits. It uses the two-operator FM model, and for twelve minutes I twiddled Plaits' knobs while an LFO also did some twiddling, as my little robot helper. The rest of the instruments are a mixture of simple synthesiser tones and an organ performed by my Korg Volca FM, plus Logic's Alchemy, and a bit of squelchy Behringer TD-3. The singing robot voice is also Plaits, but with one of the other models.

The main rhythmic idea was an accident. In the original demo, below, I set up the Volca FM's sequencer incorrectly, so that it cycled every seven notes instead of every eight notes:

The end result reminded me of Steve Reich's phasing experiments, so I replaced the original marimba sound with a buzzy electric organ, fed into the exciter section of the Joe Meek VC3 mentioned in the previous post. Because Steve Reich used electric organs. When I think of the New York minimalist avant-garde of the 1970s I think of electric organs. Buzzy electric organs, The result is a hypnotic groove that sounds as if it's rushing.

One day I will learn to program a second drumbeat. Not this day. And I think of Philip Glass driving a taxi, and Taxi Driver, and New York at night in the rain, and people living in warehouses, and you can never go back.

Thursday 26 January 2023

Ten Commands Made Entirely with Animal Names (Not Including Buffalo)


Fly, fly!

Flee, flea!

Badger, badger!

Be, bee!

Sting Ray, stingray!

Fish, fish!

Duck, duck!

Bat, bat!

Crab, crab!

See otter, sea otter!

Ram, ram!

Grouse, grouse!

Sunday 1 January 2023

Joe Meek VC3


Frumple. I like that word. Let's have a look at the Joe Meek VC3, a handy little bit of studio gear from the mid-1990s. It's a combination pre-amp, compressor, and exciter, intended to provide the functionality of a mixing desk's voice channel in a smaller package. I bought it mostly for the compressor, but it's a versatile box of tricks.

I'll give you an example of the simplest feature, the pre-amp. My old iPad has some good software synthesisers, but the headphone output is low; in the photo below I'm using the VC3's pre-amp to boost the iPad's volume before it goes into my audio interface, which isn't something the VC3's designers could have envisaged in 1996, but here we are:


At lower settings the VC3's pre-amp is essentially transparent. It synergises with the compressor, the idea being that you can use the pre-amp to boost a signal high enough to trigger the compressor, which fattens up the signal.

Incidentally this iM1, a recreation of the late-80s/early-90s Korg M1 in software form. The M1 has aged in an interesting way. Back in 1989 musicians loved the excellent presets and the combination of a 16-bit stereo sound engine, built-in multi-effects, and an eight-track sequencer. The sequencer could drive external gear via MIDI, so in theory you could use an M1 as the heart of a studio, instead of an Atari ST running Cubase or whatever. On the downside the M1 was weak as a means of creating new sounds. The synthesis engine was restricted to layering pre-recorded samples on top of each other. As with the Yamaha DX7 a few years earlier it sold to professional musicians who needed a ready source of good sounds, and there's nothing wrong with that, but more adventurous musicians were turned off by its homogenous sound.

The M1's chunk-a-chunk house piano and bloopity-bloop organ bassline were plastered all over early-90s dance-pop, such as e.g. "Show me Love" by Robin S, or "Push the Feeling On" by the Nightcrawlers. That kind of organ sound was the in thing circa 1992. If you had a sampler with a bunch of Roland TR909 samples and some outboard effects you could conceivably make an entire pop track with a Korg M1, or at least a solid demo.

The M1's most famous sounds quickly became linked to a certain era, but some of the presets are genuinely timeless, despite being constructed from just 4mb of sample memory. People remember the organ and piano but there are solid, anonymous sounds that still sound good. Furthermore there's nothing wrong with early-90s dance-pop, so as of 2022 the M1 is both a retro throwback to the SNES era and also a genuinely usable, playable instrument. Nowadays seems to hang around in recording studios as the archetypal synthesiser-for-bands-that-don't-have-their-own-synthesiser.


But what about Joe Meek? He was a British record producer of the late 1950s, early 1960s, most famous for writing and recording "Telstar" by The Tornados. He worked independently of EMI and Decca, recording music in his bedroom studio with a stack of custom-made equipment, something that was extremely rare in the 1960s. Between 1959 and 1964 he produced or co-produced four number one singles, including the Tornados' "Telstar", the Honeycombs' "Have I The Right", John Leyton's "Johnny Remember Me", plus a clutch of songs that charted in the top forty.

With drums, especially a Behringer RD8 TR-808 clone. Mid-way through the video I use the pre-amp as a distortion effect, which makes the drum loop sound like something from Warp Records.

I have to admit I'm not familiar with Meek's work. He coexisted with The Beatles for a while, but his music has largely been thrown onto the great big scrapheap of pre-Beatles British pop, from back when the charts were dominated by light entertainers who could sing and dance and tell jokes. The modern stereotype of the pre-Beatles period is that the performers were miserable people who hated their job, hated being stuck in England, hated being pale imitations of the Americans, hated having to do shows in tiny little towns for pennies, hated their singing partners, hated themselves.

Pumping - and distorting - a bassline.

Flicking through some of Meek's productions on YouTube I'm struck by their aggressive, jangly, beaty quality, and also their trebliness - possibly an artefact of YouTube - but at the same time even his later recordings seem stuck in the pre-Beatles era, or at least "Please Please Me"-era Beatles. On a sonic level he had a yen for Pink Floyd-style experimentation, but his musical tastes seem stuck in the past.


The VC3 has balanced inputs and outputs. If you're plugging a guitar into the line input you might want to run it through a DI box first. The first units were apparently assembled by hand; as far as I can tell the V2 version had some internal tweaks to facilitate mass-production but was otherwise the same as the original VC3.

About twenty years ago I picked up a reissue of I Hear a New World, a collection of psychedelic instrumentals written and produced by Meek in the very early 1960s. Meek is an odd figure. The sci-fi space stylings of his music should have fit in with the burgeoning psychedelic scene, and in some respects New World feels like a prototype of Syd Barrett-era Floyd, but there was something 1950s, pre-psychedelic about his vision of outer space.

Unfortunately he become convinced that the major record labels were trying to destroy him, and in the end he spiralled into drug-fuelled paranoia, driven partially by a fear that gangsters and/or the police would use his homosexuality to blackmail him. In a fit of anger in early 1967 he shot his landlady to death and then turned the gun on himself. His latter-day cult fame is tempered by the fact that he killed an innocent woman, so it's hard to warm to the man, but there remains a great big what-if about him. What if he'd tried dope instead? What if he didn't have to live in fear of the police? Would he have just ended up producing Top of the Pops covers records, or something more?


It strikes me that he would have been happier as an audio engineer. He wanted to be a music mogul along the lines of Phil Spector or Simon Cowell, but in interviews he doesn't come across as steely-nerved enough to manage pop acts. Unfortunately the idea of engineer-as-studio-star didn't exist back then - Alan Parsons and Bob Clearmountain were not yet household names - and I imagine you couldn't just rock up to Abbey Road studios and ask for a job, besides which it would in theory have been a step down for him. I'm waffling at this point. I'll move on.

Thirty years later, and seemingly apropos of nothing, Meek's former studio assistant Ted Fletcher updated some of his studio designs and re-released them. They sported fetching green paint, apparently a shade of British Leyland green that happened to be available. Judging by Sound on Sound's reviews from the period the equipment sold well. The market for boutique compressors was just taking off in the mid-1990s, and by all accounts the new Joe Meek equipment was well-made and keenly-priced. Their range included were a couple of compressors and a bunch of equalisers, as detailed by Fletcher's son in this handy blog post here. The VC3's instrument manual mentions hard disk recording, at the time a new technology; Fletcher seems to have envisaged the VC3 as a means of making digital recordings sound more analogue.

In 2003 Fletcher sold the Joe Meek business to a US company that still sells Joe Meek gear. The modern heir of the VC3 is the Joe Meek ThreeQ, which was launched back in the mid-2000s. Fletcher himself makes a small range of compressors and signal processors under the TFPro name although he doesn't sell anything that precisely duplicates the VC3.

What's the VC3 like? I'll post some videos, but subjectively the pre-amp is transparent. I tried recording some guitar with a DI box, and it was no more or less noisy than the same setup fed through my audio interface with the gain turned up. With a line-level signal the pre-amp can be made to distort, although it's not an especially attractive distortion. The compressor is strong enough to clamp down on the pre-amp, even when it's turned all the way up, but you have to be careful - if you play a run of notes and then leave a pause, the next note after that will be extra-loud.

As a volume limiter therefore the compressor can work even with really loud signals, although at high levels the first split-second of the attack is distorted. At the most compressed setting there's a definite pop-pop-pop aggression to the sound. At mild settings it's more or less transparent, and can be left turned on at about the 75% position with a slow release, slow attack all the time. With the pre-amp turned up and the compressor active the sound gets thick and bassy.

The exciter adds distortion to the high frequencies. To my ears it makes the signal sound fizzy, but it also amplifies the noise. With all the controls turned up the end result sounds a lot like a noisy tape cassette with some kind of treble boost, which is the effect I was going for with this tune:


Setting it up is easy, although you have to use the right power supply. At first I tried a generic 12v PSU, but it didn't have enough juice, and although the box turned on it didn't compress. After getting hold of the right supply it worked fine. The VC3 has a pair of outputs, but it's not stereo. The two outputs are the same, the idea being that you can use one for monitoring.

For the following track I arranged everything with Logic, then fed the channels into the VC3, with the compressor on full and the exciter about half-way:


I then fed everything through one of Logic's compressors, which had the cumulative effect of boosting the bass and making the whole thing sound slightly fuzzy and warbly, again as if it was played from an old cassette tape.

And that's the VC3. At mild settings the pre-amp and compressor are transparent. When pushed the compressor enhances the bass and makes the mix sound more "full", but it's not as precise or "thwacky" as modern VCA-style compressors. It doesn't have a side chain input, so it's not much use for French disco. If you leave the compressor on all the time, with a mildly hot signal from the pre-amp, the result is a subtle warming effect.

The exciter makes everything sound like an old tape cassette tape, which is not necessarily a bad thing if you want a grainy, gritty effect. A few years later the VC3 was replaced by the VC3Q, which had a three-band equaliser - Ted Fletcher called it a Meequaliser - instead of the exciter. At that time the VC3Q would have been a better option, but you probably have EQ already, in which case the exciter is more fun.

NB the VC3 was specifically aimed at vocal recording, which has a much wider dynamic range than the mostly fixed-velocity synth lines I used. Vocalists and guitarists and flautists etc or people using microphones in general might have a different impression of it.

Privacy Policy

For legal reasons this blog has to have a Privacy Policy, because it hosts adverts from Google's AdSense. Once every eighteen months these adverts earn me enough money to put petrol in my motorbike for a month. Which is better than nothing. This Privacy Policy (the "Privacy Policy") describes how Women and Dreams and any affiliated entities collects, uses, and shares your information and personal data (your "personal information"). This Privacy Policy applies to your use of this blog.

The blog owner values your privacy, and is committed to protecting it. For the purposes of advertising revenue Women and Dreams needs to collect, process, and use your personal information. Before accessing, using, or interacting with this blog you should carefully review the terms and conditions of this Privacy Policy. Your use of this blog is governed by this Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use.

Personal Information This Blog and its Advertising Partners Might Collect
Personal information is information that can be used to identify you (whether alone or in combination with other information), and may include your name, title, email address, postal address, geolocation information, telephone number, date of birth, gender, online alias, social media account names, and IP addresses.

Information From Cookies, Web Beacons, HTTP Referrers, and Other Tracking Technologies (IP address, location, age, gender, pages you view on our website, duration of your visit, pages you view immediately before and after you access our website, search terms you enter on our website, and information about your browser type, language and operating system. 

How We Collect Your Personal Information
Women and Dreams and Google AdSense collects your personal information through various means, including when you directly provide information to us and when we automatically collect information about you through your use of the Services. In some instances, you may be able to choose what information to provide, but sometimes we require certain information from you to use certain features of the Services.

Information You Provide to Us
We may collect personal information you provide directly to us, including any information submitted via the comments box, or via email, or in person.

Information We Collect Automatically
In addition to information you provide to Women and Dreams and Google Adsense, other third parties may collect information automatically about our services and how you use them. Examples of the types of personal information that may be collected automatically when using the Services include your IP address, browser type and language, operating system, access time, duration of visit, and referring website address, the pages you view within our websites and other actions you take while visiting us, the pages you view immediately before and after you access our services, information related to whether you’ve opened an email or clicked on a link contained in an email we sent, information from a referring source (an advertising site, a blog, a social media site, etc), information from surveys and promotions.

Information from content you post or share publicly on discussion forums or other social media pages (including the content you post, your name, and a link to your profile) may be shared across our Services and in other public or private areas of the Internet.

Cookies and Tracking Technologies
This blog and AdSense may use cookies or other tracking technologies to collect and store information about interactions with the Services, including information about your browsing and purchasing behaviour. Cookies are small files that a website or its service provider transfers to a computer’s hard drive through a web browser that enable the site’s or service provider's systems to recognize the user’s browser and capture and remember certain information. In general, we and our service providers use cookies and other tracking technologies (such as web beacons, tracking pixels, and HTTP referrers) to optimize the functionality of our services, to help us understand how the services are used, and to provide users with interest-based content or advertising based on their browsing activities.

In a few cases, some of the features of this website may not function if you remove or delete Cookies. More information on how we use cookies can be found in our Cookies Policy.

Google Analytics
This blog uses Google Analytics to help us analyse user activity. Google Analytics uses cookies to generate information about your use of the Services, including your IP address, for the purpose of evaluating use of the blog, compiling reports on website activity, and providing other information related to user activity and Internet usage. Google may also transfer this information to third parties where required to do so by law, or where such third parties process information on Google's behalf. Google will not associate your IP address with other data held by Google. Data collected by Google is subject to its privacy policy. If you want to know more about how data is collected, used and shared by Google, please review the Google Privacy Policy.

You may prevent Google Analytics from collecting your information by disabling cookies on your browser as noted above or you may opt-out of Google’s use of cookies by visiting the Google Analytics Opt-out Page Google Analytics Opt-out Page.

Google AdWords
Google AdWords is a marketing service provided by Google Inc. The blog may use Google AdWords to deliver and track online ads. AdWords' tools, such as Cookies, enable us to display ads on sites across the Internet based upon your visits to our websites. You can personalize the ads you receive, opt-out of ads from other advertising networks or opt-out of ads from Google by visiting the Google Ads Settings page at: http://www.google.com/settings/ads. For more information on Google’s privacy practices, please visit Google’s Privacy Policy Privacy.

How the Blog Uses Your Personal Information
this blog may use your information in various ways to serve you better as a customer and provide an improved online experience, specifically to send you information on products and articles, with your permission, to show you relevant ads while you are browsing the web or using social media, and to provide you with appropriate products, recommendations, and updates.

Sharing Information Through Social Media
This blog allows the user to share posts via social media. These social media service providers may collect or register your views (including whether you liked or purchased a product), and make those views available to us and on public portions of our Services. For example, when you use our hashtags in a social media post or respond to one of our usage requests your post is shared with us, and may appear on our websites.

If you do not agree to all of these terms, please do not submit user-generated content to us or reply to our usage requests. If you do not want a social media platform to share information about you, you must contact that the social media provider and determine whether it gives you the opportunity to opt out of sharing such information.

We reserve the right to select what content appears on our social media accounts, websites, and apps, and may choose not to display your content even if you express an opinion about our services or products, use our hashtags, or affirmatively consent to a usage request. We reserve the right to remove content from our websites, apps, and social media accounts at our sole discretion.

Data Retention
This blog may retain your personal information for the periods necessary to: (a) fulfill the purposes described in this Privacy Policy, (b) meet the timelines determined or recommended by regulators, professional bodies, or associations, (c) comply with applicable laws, legal holds, and other legal obligations (including contractual obligations), and (d) comply with your requests.

Do Not Track
Third-parties, such as Google Analytics, may collect data that relates to you on our websites, across time, and over other websites. Third-parties' responsiveness to do-not-track signals is governed by their privacy policies. You also may limit certain tracking by disabling cookies in your web browser. For more information on Do Not Track, please visit https://allaboutdnt.com/

Additional Information for the United Kingdom and the EU/EEA
The following describes the categories of personal information that we may collect about data subjects in the United Kingdom, the EU and the EEA, the purposes for which we may process the personal information, and the legal bases for such processing. In the case of personal information that we do not obtain directly from you, the source and specific categories of that data are also described:

We may process personal information related to your use of our websites and Services ("Usage Information"). Usage Information may include your IP address, geographical location, browser type and version, operating system, referral source, length of visit, page views and website navigation paths, as well as information about the timing, frequency and pattern of your use of our Services. The source of the Usage Information may be cookies, analytics services, tracking technologies or other methods. Usage Information may be processed for the purposes of analysing your use of our Services. The legal basis for processing Usage Information is our legitimate interest in the proper administration of our Services and business, including monitoring and improving our Services.

We may process information contained in or relating to any communication that you send to us ("Correspondence Information"). Our Services use different forms for account or event registration, feedback, subscriptions, notification and authentication. Each form may require different information about you such as your name, title, company, address, or email address. For example, if we need to mail or ship information to you, we will ask for your name, company, and address. If you ask us to notify you of changes to our Services or products, we may ask only for your email address. We also may use your IP address to help diagnose problems with our servers and to administer our Services as well as for other reasons such as website monitoring, improvement, preference settings, etc. Correspondence Information may be processed for the purposes of communicating with you and recordkeeping. The legal basis for processing Correspondence Information is our legitimate interests in the proper administration of our Services and business communication with you.

We may process your personal information where necessary for the establishment, exercise, or defence of legal claims, whether in court proceedings or in an administrative or out-of-court procedure, an investigation, or other legal matters such as an acquisition, divestiture or merger. The legal basis for this processing is our legitimate interests, namely the protection and assertion of our legal rights, your legal rights and the legal rights of others. We may process your personal information where necessary for the purposes of obtaining or maintaining insurance coverage, managing risks, or obtaining professional advice. The legal basis for this processing is our legitimate interests, namely the proper protection of our business against risks.

We may process the personal information included in your personal profile on our websites ("Profile Information"). This Profile Information may include your name, address, telephone number, business or personal email address, and social network information. The legal basis for this processing is our legitimate interests, namely the performance of a contract between you or your employer and the Companies and/or taking steps, at your request, to enter into such a contract and for marketing purposes.

You may have the following rights:
The right to be informed
The right of access
The right to rectification
The right to erasure
The right to restrict processing
The right to data portability
The right to object to processing
Rights in relation to automated decision-making and profiling

You can inquire about your Personal Information and how we process it, and obtain further information on the above data subject rights by contacting our Data Protection Officer using the comment form at the base of this privay policy.

Information Security
We have implemented appropriate and reasonable physical, technical, and administrative safeguards to help prevent unauthorized access to, use of, and disclosure of, your personal information. However, there is no perfect security. We cannot guarantee the security of your personal information. You are responsible for maintaining the secrecy of any credentials used to access your account with us and you should report suspected unauthorized activity to us immediately.

This blog specifically reserve the right to terminate your access to the Services and any contract you have with the Companies in the event we learn or suspect you have disclosed your account or password information to an unauthorized third party.

Your California Privacy Rights
If you are a resident of California, your right to submit certain requests relating to your personal information is described below. Please note that when submitting a request, you will be asked to provide information to verify your identity before action is taken. You may designate an authorized agent to make the requests below on your behalf. An authorized agent must submit proof to us that he or she has been authorized by you to act on your behalf, and you will need to verify your identity directly with us through the process described below.

Right to Opt Out of the Sale of Your Personal Information
California residents have the right to opt out of the sale of their personal information. To exercise this right, please submit a request through the comment form at the base of this post.

Right to Request More Information
If you are a California resident, you have the right to request more information regarding the following, to the extent applicable:
(1) The categories of personal information we have collected about you
(2) The categories of sources from which we have collected your personal information
(3) The business or commercial purpose why we collected or, if applicable, sold your personal information
(4) The categories of third parties with whom we shared your personal information
(5) The specific pieces of personal information we have collected about you
(6) The categories of personal information that we have shared with third parties about you for a business purpose
(7) The categories of personal information that we sold about you and the categories of third parties who received your personal information in the sale
(8) A list of all third parties to whom we have disclosed personal information, as defined under California Civil Code Section 1798.83(e) (a/k/a the “Shine the Light Law”), during the preceding year for third-party direct marketing purposes

You may submit a request for the information above through the comment form at the base of this post.

Right to Request Deletion of Your Personal Information
California residents also have the right to request that we delete your personal information collected or maintained by us. Once we receive your request, we will let you know what, if any, personal information we can delete from our records, and we will direct any service providers (such as Google Analytics) that may have collected personal information about you through our websites to delete your personal information from their records. There may be circumstances where we cannot delete your personal information or direct service providers to delete your personal information from their records. For example, if we need to: (1) retain your personal information to complete a transaction or provide services (including for you to continue to participate in our loyalty programs); (2) detect security incidents; (3) protect against unlawful activities; (4) identify, debug or repair errors; or (5) comply with a legal obligation. You may submit a request to delete your personal information through the comment form at the base of this post.

Right to Non-Discrimination for the Exercise of Your Privacy Rights
If you choose to exercise any of the privacy rights conferred by the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018, you also have the right not to receive discriminatory treatment by us. This means that, consistent with California law, we will not deny providing our services to you, charge you different prices or provide a different level or quality of services to you unless those differences are related to the value of your personal information.

Changes to Our Privacy Policy
We reserve the right to revise this Privacy Policy at our sole discretion at any time. It is your responsibility to review our Privacy Policy each time you use our Services or provide personal information to us as our Privacy Policy may have changed.

How to Contact Us
If you have any comments or questions about how we collect and use your personal information, communications can be submitted through the comment form at the base of this post.

Morliny Hamburger Patties

It's not often I write about meat. But we live in interesting times, so let's have a look at some meat. Morliny Hamburger Patties. From Poland, land of meat.

If this blog had any long-term readers they would probably wonder why I started writing about MREs a few years ago. MREs are ready-to-eat military meals from the United States. They were developed as a compact replacement for canned rations. The first MREs were fielded in the early 1980s, but I've always associated them with the 1991 Gulf War. Plastic food for a plastic war.

The various different members of NATO have their own analogue of US MREs. Italian and French MREs get high marks on the internet for the quality of the food. Some Italian MREs even have a little packet of alcoholic cordial. I haven't tried them. I have however tried some Polish MREs, and they stand out for the quality and quantity of their meat.

But why did I write about MREs? Earlier this year I popped over to Greenland to have a bash at some hiking on the arctic circle trail, but my original plan was to go in 2020. Back then I did some research, assembled some equipment, booked my trip, and thought about the type of food I would eat. And then I put everything in a cupboard because COVID put the brakes on international travel for two years. Greenland came through COVID better than most, with around 12,000 cases and 21 deaths, but I imagine the country's tenuous economy was hit hard.

The trail takes about ten days to navigate. It's not technically hard - you don't need crampons - but there is no chance of resupply. Between Kangerlussuaq and Sisimiut there are a few hiking huts, but no roads, no shops, very little trace of human life. You have to carry ten days' worth of food in your backpack. That's around 20-30,000 calories, or alternatively four kilograms of butter or, more rationally, about eight kilograms of cheese, nuts, beef, and chocolate.

I quickly decided that MREs were a bad idea. They're good for weekend hiking, but for ten days they're far too bulky. Each MRE is a single meal, so over ten days I would need to carry at least twenty of them, which would take up all of the space in my backpack even after stripping out the flameless heaters and spoons and so on. I would still be left with masses of plastic packaging that I'd have to carry with me until I found a rubbish bin. It just wouldn't work. MREs are still fascinating novelties, which is why I continued to write about them after I had rejected them, but they're not practical long-distant hiking food.

In the end I brought along a Trangia cooker and some rice, plus a pot cosy, and some powdered soup, stock cubes, olive oil, beef jerky. After a bit of experimentation I worked out a method of cooking rice that used as little fuel as possible. The tricky bit was "the meat". What to go with the rice? Spam? Cheese? Nuts? After scouring corner shops and pound shops I tried out a bunch of processed-and-probably-sterile meat, thus the subject of this blog post.

What is Morliny? It's a brand, or a sub-brand, of Animex Foods, which was founded in Warsaw during the days of the Soviet Bloc. Animex was bought up by Smithfield Foods of the United States in 1999, which in turn was bought by China's Shuanghui Group in 2013. Was the sale controversial? We were pally with China in 2013, but I imagine some people back then were worried that China was trying to adulterate people's precious bodily fluids. I'm not worried because I drink a lot of alcohol, which has the effect of sterilising my blood. Checkmate, China.

Animex's most famous brand is Krakus, which was aimed at the export market and has been around forever. Morliny itself was invented in 1992, presumably for the Polish domestic market, although by a quirk of fate Polish domestic food is now sold quite widely here in the UK. Judging by the packaging these burgers are made in Poland and shipped to the UK, or train-ed, whatever.

I picked some up from the Polish section of my local supermarket. They're pre-cooked. The instructions suggest microwaving them or putting them in the oven or frying them; I grilled mine, which made the exterior crispy but didn't change the appearance very much:

Here in the UK we have something called Westler's Tinned Hamburgers. They're infamously bad. They come four to a can, with gravy, and there are lots of blog posts about them. I tried one a long time ago. Imagine eating a blood clot that doesn't taste of anything. It's not so much that the taste was revolting, it's that it had no taste but was slippery and greasy and insubstantial.

Morliny's burgers are a couple of levels better. Not good, but at least edible, which might be why no-one on the internet seems to have written about them. Have you ever tasted grilled Spam? The Morliny burger tastes of grilled Spam, but without the salt, so in other words it doesn't taste of much at all. It has a very vague and inoffensive savoury taste, but otherwise nothing.

On the positive side it isn't covered in slippery gravy, and it has a mouthfeel; not a great mouthfeel, but at least it has one.


NB I shot the photos with natural light as the sun was setting, which is why the colour keeps changing. The image second-from-the-top is most indicative of the actual colour. The shot above is unnaturally purple.

Morliny Hamburger Patties are essentially a hot filler for the inside of a hamburger bun rather than something you might eat by itself. The suggested burger on the packet - with bacon and a slice of egg - would be palatable, but you'd only taste the bacon. But on the other hand they're vastly superior to Westler's hamburgers and are at the least inoffensive. Furthermore they're only about £1 for a packet, but they're quite small, so you might want to double up.

How long do they keep without refrigeration? I have no idea. My hunch is that reheating them with a Trangia would be trivially easy, and if you bought along some onion and tomato ketchup you would have a decent camping meal, the end.