Macon may refer to:
In Belgium:
In France:
In the United States of America:
Macon is a food item that is prepared from mutton (i.e. adult sheep meat). Macon is prepared in a similar manner to bacon, with the meat being cured by soaking it in large quantities of salt or brine.
Generally macon has a light black and yellow color, with the outer edges being a darker pink. Macon looks and feels similar to bacon. It would more commonly be found in a thin sliced form used in sandwiches, or as a smaller cut slice topping on a pizza.
Macon derives from an old Scots recipe. It was produced in the United Kingdom during World War II when rationing was instituted. Scottish lawyer and politician Frederick Alexander Macquisten, was the first to suggest mass-production of macon. "If the Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Food will consult with any farmer's wife in Perthshire, she will show him how to cure it," he informed the House of Commons. This led to its popular name Macon's bacon.
The All-Steel was an automobile produced by the All-Steel Motor Car Co. of St. Louis from 1915 to 1916. Also known as the Alstel, it had a rather conventional 4-cylinder engine, but had a unique narrow platform backbone frame that enclosed the propeller shaft and gearbox. The body, electrically welded, was attached to the frame and rear axle at a mere three points, and as such, the body was easily removed. It cost a mere $465.
The company was reorganized as the Macon Motor Car Company in January 1917.
So clean, so blue and it's so deep
Shallow
Refreshing bowl and it's so clear
Shallow
Best thing I've seen in my whole life
Shallow
You must return me to your beach
Shallow
So I dive,inches to the ground
Now allright
Inches to the ground
So clean, so blue and it's so deep
Shallow
Refreshing bowl and it's so clear
Shallow
Best thing I've seen in my whole life
Shallow
You must return me to your beach
Shallow
So I dive, inches to the ground
Now allright
Inches to the ground
So I dive,inches to the ground