Posted on 07/25/2002 5:06:58 AM PDT by Billie
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07-15-02 Phil V.
07-16-02 MtnGrl
07-17-02 ru4Liberty
Please tell Marsha for us how we appreciate her gems.
Does she perchance lurk so we can say that ourselves???
Thanks for coming, feiny, and I'm glad you enjoyed our tribute to low! Yours is a wonderful compliment, but I have to make two teensy weensy itty bitty corrections. :)(Well not about the Easter Bonnet/"All-That" Hat project - I'll take my bow for that - it WAS fun, wasn't it?)
I am kidding about the corrections to your compliment being teeny though! Would love for you to check us out every day, because I certainly don't do it alone! You need to see the wonderful tributes that daisyscarlett and Mama_Bear add every week to some wonderful FReepers! We 'do' new ones Monday - Friday, and a recap on Saturday in case anyone wants to see what they missed during the week. :)
Oh, and let me show off the darling graphic that ST.LOUIE1 made for us!
Where do you ladies find the time? Thanks again for all your hard work...all three of you!
You just did, dear lady!
This is great. I thought ya'll would like it too. (Thanks joebuck!).......
Maybe should have dinner at Outback tonight. For troops in Kandahar, comfort is an Outback meal delivered on a C-17. But for those traveling to prepare the meal, it's a nerve-wracking mission.
The rumor started about a month ago. It spread through the 101st Airborne Division in Afghanistan like a dust storm in Kandahar. Nobody really believed it, because it sounded too good to be true.
The Outback Steakhouse people were coming. And they were bringing food.
Members of the 101st Airborne, like all of the troops in Afghanistan, have been eating meals such as T-rations, food that is sealed in large tin containers. The entire container has to be boiled to heat the food. Powdered eggs the color of sand are a common T-ration breakfast entree.
The possibility of ribeye steaks, grilled shrimp and, best of all, a deep-fried Bloomin' Onion, had them understandably excited.
About 3 a.m. on June 18, a C-17 landed at the Kandahar Airport. On board were 15 men and women in white Outback T-Shirts. And a giant cooler. It contained 6,700 steaks, 30,000 shrimp and 3,000 giant onions.
"Enough to feed 6,700 troops," said Dave Ellis, Outback's director of research and development.
They also unloaded 13,400 cans of O'Douls, a nonalcoholic beer. Ellis wanted to bring Budweiser, but alcohol is forbidden on the base.
The idea of feeding the troops was born a few months ago, when Outback CEO Chris Sullivan was at a social event with U.S. Army Gen. Tommy Franks.
Sullivan "thought it would be neat to serve the troops a steak dinner and a Bloomin' Onion," Ellis said. Franks thought so, too.
Ellis worked with Central Command at MacDill Air Force Base to figure out how to transport the enormous dinner and get military clearance for 15 people and cook in a war zone in the middle of the desert. The employees came from Outbacks around the country; Ellis is based in the company's headquarters in Tampa.
Most of the food was donated to Outback by the restaurant's vendors; the rest was paid for by Outback. It took nearly three days to fly to Kandahar. The group stopped in Germany, then flew the eight hours to Afghanistan. Armed troops greeted the plane.
"Nerve wracking," Ellis said.
The Outback employees were in Kandahar for only three days. They were preparing food almost the entire time. That posed some special challenges in the 115-degree heat.
Ellis and the other employees wore water-filled backpacks called "camelbacks" so they could constantly rehydrate. In between their tent and the kitchen, they were told not to stray off the gravel path or risk being killed by a land mine.
And they were informed of the closest bunker to the kitchen, in case they were bombed.
Base officials also pointed out the area's infamous sights: where American Taliban member John Walker Lindh was held. Where a firefight happened a few weeks ago. Where Osama Bin Laden's troops had trained nearby.
"You could sense the evil," Ellis said. Watching the troops in action and seeing their Spartan lifestyle made Ellis realize the sacrifices they had made for the United States.
"It gave me a sense of pride," he said.
The sightseeing was limited. Almost immediately, the employees set to work preparing the meal. They used the military's industrial-sized appliances.
They served the thousands of troops in 70 minutes, Ellis said. After eating the ribeye steak, broccoli, grilled shrimp, rolls and Bloomin' Onions, they ended the meal with cheesecake for dessert.
"They were so appreciative," Ellis said. "Comfort is very hard to come by over there."
Since he has been back in the United States, Ellis has received dozens of e-mails from soldiers and their families thanking them for the meal.
"I just wanted to say thank you for supporting the soldiers over here," said Sgt. 1st Class Ryan D. Field. "You have no idea how much it means to get anything from the states, but to have someone ship both great food and great people to prepare the food is awesome."
One woman, a master corporal in the Canadian Forces who is serving in Operation Enduring Freedom, said it was the best meal she had all year.
Well, Daisy, I haven't heard from Jim yet so I guess I'll still be Clara for awhile. But I won't make a "hobbit" if it! LOL!!
I went to the one in Aiken, SC and the line was very long - but they had it so well organized it moved quickly.
The staff obviously had been instructed to give red carpet treatment to us, and they did not stint on the meals.
They charbroiled t-bone steaks in front of you, as well as the normal wide selection from A-Z - salad bar to dessert bar.
What a productive use of advertising dollars, rather than newspaper or television ads!!
(There were radio ads, though, to reach local markets with the offer.)
Tremendous good will was generated.
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