Dehydrated space food

Made:
1963-1970 in United States
Dehydrated sugar cookie space food from NASA Apollo Programme.

Creative Commons LicenseThis image is released under a Licence

Buy this image as a print 

Buy

License this image for commercial use at Science and Society Picture Library

License

Dehydrated sugar cookie space food from NASA Apollo Programme.
Science Museum Group Collection
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

Dehydrated sugar cookie space food from NASA Apollo Programme.

How were astronauts fed in space in the late twentieth century? The volume and weight of food had to be a small as possible. There was no power available for cooking or refrigeration. The astronaut would eat the food in zero gravity, and there had to be no crumbs or spillage. Waste would have to be dealt with effectively.

Bite-sized snacks were designed to be eaten directly from their package, without the need for rehydrating with water. Snacks with a tendency to crumble, like this sugar cookie, were dipped in a starch like substance that prevented crumbs but allowed the astronauts to dissolve the bites in their mouths.

Details

Category:
Space Technology
Object Number:
Y1991.50.4
Materials:
food and plastic
Measurements:
75 mm x 80 mm, 7 g
type:
space food
credit:
Gift of Dr. K. Gilroy.