Posted on Sep 3, 2015
SSgt Terry P.
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There is no real recipe that C-4 enhances. The reasons we cooked with C-4 were many. One reason was because you could. Hot food was always preferred to cold food. C rations were always cold…and when it was raining, you got drenched. Not all rains in Viet Nam were warm rains…very few were. When you stopped for the day, in that period between late afternoon and sundown, you had a few minutes to prepare for the night. That usually meant cleaning your rifle and other weapons, picking a spot where you could defend yourself, if you could, finding a dry place to sleep, and after all this was done, you sometimes had a few minutes to eat.

Out in the bush we had C-rations and, if you could get them, LRRP rations. We usually had to steal….uh, did I say steal…I meant liberate the LRRP rations. They were a freeze dried meal in a package,….and if you could get some hot water into them, they tasted a whole lot better than anything cold.

Having hot water was the trick. You usually only had a few minutes before it got dark enough that any kind of a fire would cast too much light. You could be targeted by someone outside the LZ or the area where you were. Often, it was so wet, it was hard to find anything dry enough to burn. You didn’t want a smoky fire either; the smell could carry a long way. . so, we used C-4.

You had to be careful. C-4 came in a one pound bar, wrapped in a green waxy paper. It was white in color, and had a texture of stale taffy mixed with very fine sand. We would pinch off a piece about the size of the end of your little finger, or smaller. You then had to roll it for a while to make sure it didn’t have any air pockets in it. If you lit it and it had an air pocket, it would explode. Not a bad explosion, but it would blow your canteen of hot water all over you. You didn’t step on it either to put the fire out…you let it burn out. It wanted to explode when you stepped on it….some tried and some instantly needed at least one new shoe.

You took a few rocks and made a little hole in the middle of them, put the C-4 down in the hole, lit it, and immediately put your canteen cup full of water on top of the rocks. You had to do this outside and make sure you were not downwind of the fire. The gas the burning C-4 made was extremely toxic. FNG’s would see us cooking with C-4 and even though they were warned to never use it in an enclosed space, often did, and were medivaced out. The gas was really bad.

Often you’d have to use a second chunk, but soon, you had boiling water. You have no idea what a luxury hot water is until you don’t have any. You’d use about half your canteen for the LRRP ration, the other half remaining in your canteen, you could put in a tea bag or some instant coffee….and lots of sugar. For a few moments, way out in the jungle, forgetting what the day had brought, and not thinking of what the night could bring, for a few moments, you could have a hot meal and a cup of hot coffee and count the days before you could leave the mess you were in and return home.
Edited 6 y ago
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Responses: 41
CWO3 Us Marine
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Just don't stomp it out when done.
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SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth
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Never did, but heard of guys using it.
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SFC David Davenport
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I didn't cook with it but cleaning up after demo ranges there were times we would burn C-4 bits. This is actually pretty safe as long as you don't burn blasting caps or det. cord.
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SSgt Terry P.
SSgt Terry P.
>1 y
Bwahahaha,yes, adding blasting caps and det.cord to burning c-4 is probably a bad idea.
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SFC David Davenport
SFC David Davenport
>1 y
Well with Soldiers these days you have to make sure you actually say that to them. They have the warnings on MRE heaters for a reason...someone out there actually tried to drink the water.
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SPC Jan Allbright, M.Sc., R.S.
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*sigh*... makes me so homesick :(
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SSgt Terry P.
SSgt Terry P.
>1 y
SPC Jan Allbright, M.Sc., R.S. LOL, My initiation to C's. Thanks for the laugh--ham and so and so's .
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SMSgt Lawrence McCarter
SMSgt Lawrence McCarter
>1 y
Ham and Mother F--- ers, Yuk !
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MSG Intermediate Care Technician
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Used it. Never cooked with it. Had some patients in Germany because they ingested it.
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CAPT Kevin B.
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Edited 7 y ago
Made one up while down in Antarctica and boiled some water. Not much to do in the evening while on a traverse. We were at Marble Point near the Dry Valleys, so had a rock base. One of my collateral duties was Blasting Officer so I always enjoyed tinkering. It was a good reminder to make sure the real cooking stuff made it into the cargo bed. This is not a high volume/production thing. You have to keep the amount of C-4 small if you want to keep your cajones. I did use a standard fuse without a cap to see C-4 burn. Did it to a bar of it. Observation: it doesn't burn evenly by a long shot even after a 1/2 hour of kneading. Chef beware.
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SGT Combat Engineer
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Edited 7 y ago
No. It can be burned safely, and I've seen it burn, but we were informed to avoid the fumes coming off it while it burns. Additionally, I don't believe it's cheap, either, so burning it is usually not a good deal for the taxpayer.

I did have a squad leader at one point who liked to play with the guy stuck controlling the ASP. He would look and see what was stacked up next our demo, and then he'd suddenly feign shock and exclaim, for example, "OMFG! You can't put this next to the BLUE CHEMLIGHTS!!!!!" and run out of the ASP headed for cover. I don't remember that ever actually being funny to anybody but us.
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Capt Daniel Goodman
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OK, I gotta admit, that's funny....
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SSgt Bruce McClelland
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It scrambles eggs very well. Too well actually. It scrambles 'em all over the place.
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SGT Philip Roncari
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Since I think the statute of limitations has run out on my use of C4 back in 1966-67 the answer is yes,if you ask where the C4 was obtained that secret will go with me to my grave,we mainly relied on heat tabs but with resupply in the Central Highlands being sometimes a iffy proposition,grunts will always improvise,heat tabs also had very toxic fumes ,excellent punched out C rat can in the photo by the way
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SSgt Terry P.
SSgt Terry P.
7 y
SGT Philip Roncari Well,it could be obtained by dismantling a claymore mine,but some might consider that a bit dangerous.LOL
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SGT Philip Roncari
SGT Philip Roncari
7 y
SSG Terry Pride- Hence the mention of the Statute of Limitations,we tried to always keep a spare Claymore around ,so there would be no chance of leaving a disabled unit on the perimeter, nothing so disheartening as hitting the “Clacker” and hearing a piss poor pop!
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SSgt Terry P.
SSgt Terry P.
7 y
SGT Philip Roncari - After 50 years,i really don't think it matters where we got our C-4--never did figure out what to do with the plate of metal balls though. lol
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