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Milk

they will come in handy when we are out in the field to have brew up on me tommy cooker i had forgot about them.:grinning:
 
yer :grinning:

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Thanks for that.
However that is not the Tommy cooker that I knew.
The military one was a flat metal box affair containing eight hexamine blocks.
Very efficient at warming rations and boiling water but left a thick coat of black tarry stuff on the mess tin.
Happy days.

NoddKD the messy cook.
 
Not a great image, but this is the sort of milk delivery I remember in the 1950s. The cart was very tall and green, with open sides all around. It was much taller that later delivery vehicles, so probably supplied a lot more homes in one delivery.

Screenshot_20240608_151344_Chrome.jpg
Source: British Newspaper Archive
 
We always had sterilised milk in our family but school milk was pasteurised. I have one of my family pics I put elsewhere on the forum. It was taken in Cavendale Ave and looking at the bottle shapes he seems to have a mix of sterilised and pasteurised milk on board.
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how on earth did the milkman manage to pull this along...i cant ever remember seeing one like this

lyn
 
Apparently the sterra bottles used to have some sort of cork bottle top.. This staged 1935 advert (a set, obviously built in a studio) was for Midland Counties Dairy. The milkman has the MCD logo on his collar and the taller sterra bottles in the holder has a cork cap. I vaguely remember.a metal covered cork bottle top, not for milk but some other product - would that be the sort of thing ? Can't imagine a purely cork stopper would have been hygienic.

Screenshot_20240726_094308_Chrome.jpg
 
Apparently the sterra bottles used to have some sort of cork bottle top.. This staged 1935 advert (a set, obviously built in a studio) was for Midland Counties Dairy. The milkman has the MCD logo on his collar and the taller sterra bottles in the holder has a cork cap. I vaguely remember.a metal covered cork bottle top, not for milk but some other product - would that be the sort of thing ? Can't imagine a purely cork stopper would have been hygienic.

View attachment 193450
My recollections are they had a metal “Crown” stopper which had a cork liner or gasket on the underside.

As kids we would pop the used crown cork on the fire, where after a few minutes it would pop up like a rising cake.
 
Glad you remember them Mort.

I've just remembered, the ones I've seen, theyre on Belgian beer bottles. Must provide a good seal to keep the gas in.
 
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Apparently the sterra bottles used to have some sort of cork bottle top.. This staged 1935 advert (a set, obviously built in a studio) was for Midland Counties Dairy. The milkman has the MCD logo on his collar and the taller sterra bottles in the holder has a cork cap. I vaguely remember.a metal covered cork bottle top, not for milk but some other product - would that be the sort of thing ? Can't imagine a purely cork stopper would have been hygienic.

View attachment 193450
My recollections are they had a metal “Crown” stopper which had a cork liner or gasket on the underside.

As kids we would pop the used crown cork on the fire, where after a few minutes it would pop up like a rising cake.
 
Apparently the sterra bottles used to have some sort of cork bottle top.. This staged 1935 advert (a set, obviously built in a studio) was for Midland Counties Dairy. The milkman has the MCD logo on his collar and the taller sterra bottles in the holder has a cork cap. I vaguely remember.a metal covered cork bottle top, not for milk but some other product - would that be the sort of thing ? Can't imagine a purely cork stopper would have been hygienic.

View attachment 193450
My recollections are they had a metal “Crown” stopper which had a cork liner or gasket on the underside.

As kids we would pop the used crown cork on the fire, where after a few minutes it would pop up like a rising cake.
 
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