Posted on 12/17/2007 3:49:19 PM PST by SandRat
FORWARD OPERATING BASE FORTRESS, Afghanistan, Dec. 17, 2007 The Rock believes highly that food service support improves morale, said Army Sgt. Joseph Smith, from Jackson, Mich.
Paratroopers in the battalions Company D and a platoon from Company C live at Forward Operating Base Fortress, near the Chowkay Valley in Kunar province. The base is named Fortress due to 30-foot walls and four guard towers that surround it. Luckily for the soldiers here, Fortress is home to three cooks from The Rocks support company, Company F. The cooks prepare food for 150 to 200 soldiers who call Fortress home. The food comes in prepared packages, which are downloaded, prepared and cooked by Smiths team. Smith explained they could simply cook the same meals over and over again, but they choose not to. The leadership in The Rock gives the cooks freedom to use their imagination when preparing meals. We get to put our personality into our cooking, explained Spc. Jesse Ramirez, from Twin Cities, Minn. Being able to add your own touch makes things more exciting. Smith explained that their dining facility was able to receive extra cooking utensils, which enabled them to cook a bigger variety of food. We can do omelettes, crab cakes, quesadillas -- pretty much anything you want, Smith said. We even have taco night. The three cooks work 12 to 16 hours a day, said Spc. Nicholas Krueger. Not all our time is spent in the kitchen, Krueger explained. We also help pull FOB security, download convoys and organize supplies. Recently, Smith and his team stayed up more than 32 hours in the kitchen to make sure the soldiers Thanksgiving meal was one to remember. We take pride in our cooking, Ramirez said. Thanksgiving is our time to show off. We work long hours, but we enjoy seeing happy soldiers, Smith said. (Army Sgt. Brandon Aird is assigned to 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team Public Affairs.) |
Good news!
"Can You Guess What The Rock Is Cooking!"
Why custom-cooked quesadillas.
As a former soldier, and with newly-minted culinary arts degree, I’m impressed with these guys!
The cooks in my unit weren’t that great, and they certainly had no imagination. I also suppose that military food has changed a bit in 20 years.
To these guys, brave soldier-cooks in a place far away, I say HOO-AH!
Virtual quesadillas? Mess is sort of like a kid's tea party.
Air Force Technical School, made-to-order omelets were the BEST EVER. I watched; I learned, and now I make them the same way. YUMMMM!
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