American soldiers gobbled up more than 100 million pounds of it during WWII, and a tableful of Monty Python Vikings sang its praises. Although its origins are humble and its nutritional content dubious, Spam is going strong on its 80th birthday.
More than 8 billion cans of the pink loaf have been sold, and presumably eaten, since Hormel introduced Spam in July 1937, Live Science reports. The little blue cans went global when the army shipped troops overseas, and Spam even sustained hungry Russian troops.
Despite many jokes, "it tasted good, nonetheless," former Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev once wrote, per Time. Civilians appreciated the low price and extended shelf-life, and didn't seem to mind the vague "kinda like ham" taste. Ham is, thankfully, one of only six ingredients that also include salt—a lot of it. A regular can packs a mouth-puckering 4,696mg of sodium, plus 100 grams of fat, and 1,000-plus calories, per the Evening Standard.
Read more at Newser
Spam at 80
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