25 July 2004

Chow Hall

Three long frame tents sit side by side by side of one another, joined by a couple of hallways to make our chow hall, affectionately known as the ‘Freedom Fighter Cafe’ by its clientele. Each long frame tent is actually a series of five individual frame tents, canvas tents set on a metal A-frame, pieced together head to toe to form one long tent. Inside the left most of the three is the kitchen where several cooks wearing white aprons over their desert camouflage uniforms spend hours preparing three square meals each day for the Soldiers. They feed over 600 Soldiers each meal. A long table with a wood cutting board top runs down the middle of the first third of the tent for cutting vegetables and performing other culinary tasks. A row of shelves line the wall filled with pots and pans and various other large cooking untensils. Adjacent to the shelves holding the tools of the trade, is a gray sheetmetal wallocker in which are housed row after row of spices and herbs. The next third of the kitchen has large gas stoves and ovens on either side of the tent where most of the cooking is done. It can get quite hot inside, especially when all the ovens and stoves are going at once, but the smells are mouth wateringly fabulous. A radio hangs from the frame of the tent near the ovens blaring music from the Armed Forces Network radio station. Two large, deep stainless steel sinks fill the outside wall of the last third of the kitchen tent where the pots and pans and various other cooking utensils are washed by a team of local nationals. They have a system set up whereby dirty pots and pans are stacked up by the cooks in an area opposite of the large, deep stainlees steel sinks until they are attacked by two members of the dishwashing team armed with steel wool, scrapers, and green scrubbing pads who knock off the large remnants of food stuffs before passing the pots and pans off to the washers wearing large, yellow, rubber gloves. These expert washers submerge the pots and pans and utensils in a sink full of hot soapy water and begin scrubbing until the item at hand is completely clean.The clean pots and pans and utensils are then handed off to the rinser who also wears large, yellow, rubber gloves and mans a spray gun connected to a flexible metal water hose spraying off all the residual soap before placing the item onto a drying rack in the corner.

At the front end of the middle of the three long frame tents is the main entrance to the chow hall. Before entering, the Soldiers can wash their hands at one of six hand washing stations set up on the outside of the tent. Once inside, two serving lines are positioned along each wall where two cooks stand behind a glass divider and serve the wonderfully prepared meals cafeteria style. Next in line is a salad bar and a condiments bar where one can choose from a traditional green salad or maybe a macaroni or cucumber salad prepared earlier in the kitchen tent and get any condiments they might need for their meal. There is ketchup, steak sauce, a choice of several salad dressings, and a host of other extras. Lastly, on either side of the tent stand two large stainless steel beverage coolers with glass doors holding cold cans of assorted soft drinks, bottles of water, boxes of juice and milk, and sometimes on lucky days, bottles of Gatorade.

The right most tent houses a series of picnic style tables along each side of the dining tent, with a walkway down the middle to the exit, where Soldiers can sit and enjoy their meal and quiet conversation. In the middle of each table are holders filled with napkins, salt and pepper and bottles of Tobasco hot sauce. Soldiers love Tobasco hot sauce and can usually be found putting it on just about everything from eggs to rice to chicken. At either end of this tent sit two large flat screen televisions that normally show a sporting event, news, or whatever program is currently being aired on one of the six Armed Forces Network television stations.

It isn’t a home cooked meal served by a lovely and talented and downright sexy cook at a dining room table with the kids all talking at once and arguing over who got the longest french fry or the most fish sticks and the dog nosing a leg under the table begging for a piece of steak, but it’s a pretty damned good chow hall in the middle of the desert, feeding hungry Soldiers everyday providing them with the fuel they need to carry on with their missions. Sgt Hook out.


Posted by Hook @ 1517 zulu | | Permalink
This post is filed under: The Stan



6 Comments »
  1. What a nice descriptive story, I feel has if I have just set down to share a meal with y’ll. True makings of a great author you are and I love the stories you keep sharing with us….Now I am off to buy me some stock in “Tabasco hot sauce” if you give me a lead on the brand first. Stay safe my friend.
    Vickie

    Comment by Sweet N Sassy — 25 July 2004 @ 2318


  2. Your writing is so amazing and descriptive. Thanks for sharing your life, and giving us great insight on your job.
    -about that cooked meal….. when you get home, you will have lots of sexy ladies waiting to cook for you.
    Heck, i would make you a feast.

    we love you hero. stay strong and safe.

    xxxxoooooo

    ps, not only is your content amazing, but your blog looks great too.

    Comment by vadergrrrl — 26 July 2004 @ 0127


  3. Ok…i’m no military guy. but i wish you the best and read your blog, like, a lot. but being an English major type who liked From Here to Eternity a lot i cant help wonderin where today’s crocked mess seargeant
    would like, you know if he could find a suitable potable, crash, and i figure it would be on top of the salad bar. What do you think? bb

    Comment by bud — 26 July 2004 @ 0442


  4. redact that now that i see it. please/\.

    Comment by bud — 26 July 2004 @ 0447


  5. Well-painted word picture, Top. The place sounds almost civilized. :-) No merlot?

    Comment by Jim — 26 July 2004 @ 0637


  6. I don’t think I’ll share this particular story with #1 son as he is currently eating MRE’s three meals a day…but when he finally gets back to a more civilized place I’ll get him to tell me about his chow hall and compare them. He tells me Taco Bell sauce is a great addition to MRE’s, like a “spoon full of sugar that helps the medicine go down”. Thanks for sharing!

    Comment by Laura — 27 July 2004 @ 1425


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