Chuckwagon

A chuckwagon was originally a wagon that carried food and cooking equipment on the prairies of North America. They would form a part of a wagon train of settlers or feed nomadic workers like cowboys or loggers. While some form of mobile kitchens had existed for generations the invention of the chuckwagon is accredited to Charles Goodnight, a Texan rancher who introduced the concept in 1866. Chuck was then a slang term for food. Chuckwagon food included easy to preserve items like beans and salted meats. Food would also be gathered en route. Today chuckwagon racing is an event at rodeo where wagons are raced around obstacles, but the stove and barrels within them must not be upset.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
donald "duck" dunn
beehive burner
hysterotomy
baby face
morley's theorem
trip distribution
abay river
oxygen saturation
hasdai ben isaac ibn shaprut
articles of federation
future of formula one
morley's categoricity theorem
beas
james hatfield
colne valley
ifconfig
river colne, west yorkshire
consent of the governed
canadian money tracker
jeff crowe
internal market
the thrawn trilogy
sherrice iverson
radio yerevan
genarp parish
the last command (film)
crowe brothers
pierre blais
content industry
the gnome mobile
germanistics
lderup parish
schwabach
william warner (poet)
mila d. aguilar
mentalist postulate
committee for independence and democracy in laos
linguistic issues concerning the euro
hmcs vancouver (ffh 331)
saltwort
geographic data
elizabeth cecil, 16th baroness de ros
de morgan medal
colne valley museum