C Rations

C Rations were military issued meals, with a combination of canned (wet) and dry food.

Wikipedia states:

The C-Ration, or Type C ration, was an individual canned, pre-cooked, and prepared wet ration. It was intended to be issued to U.S. military land forces when fresh food (A-ration) or packaged unprepared food (B-ration) prepared in mess halls or field kitchens was not possible or not available, and when a survival ration (K-ration or D-ration) was insufficient. Development began in 1938 with the first rations being field tested in 1940 and wide-scale adoption following soon after. Operational conditions often caused the C-ration to be standardized for field issue regardless of environmental suitability or weight limitations.

A selection of United States military C-rations from the World War II era. Photo taken at the Mesa Historical Museum, in Mesa, Arizona, United States, with a Panasonic DMC-FZ50 digital camera. The three "B-unit" cans each contain 5 biscuits, a confection, 2 cubes of sugar, a P-38 can-opener, and instant coffee. The entire collection was donated to the Mesa Historical Museum by one man.
A selection of United States military C-rations from the World War II era. Photo taken at the Mesa Historical Museum, in Mesa, Arizona, United States, with a Panasonic DMC-FZ50 digital camera. The three “B-unit” cans each contain 5 biscuits, a confection, 2 cubes of sugar, a P-38 can-opener, and instant coffee. The entire collection was donated to the Mesa Historical Museum by one man.

The C-Ration was replaced in 1958 with the Meal Combat Individual (MCI).[1] Although officially a new ration, the MCI was derived from and very similar to the original C-Ration, and in fact continued to be called “C-Rations” by American troops throughout its production life as a combat ration (1958–1980).[1]Although the replacement for the MCI, the MRE, was formally adopted as the Department of Defense combat ration in 1975, the first large-scale production test did not occur until in 1978 with the first MRE I rations packed and delivered in 1981.[2][3] While the MRE officially replaced the MCI in 1981, previously packed MCI rations continued to be issued until depleted.[1]

A Young Man Went Off to War