Reporter's Notebook: Eatin' Good in Afghanistan
American Forces Press Service
FORWARD OPERATING BASE GARDEZ, Afghanistan, March 2, 2009 – I've eaten more lobster since I arrived here than I have in the past decade in the states.
Don't tell my wife. She thinks I'm suffering.
One of
the few Army-run chow halls I have come across in my travels is
located here. The base was too small when it opened to justify a
contractor's service, so the Army took over the operations.
Army
Sgt. 1st Class Vashon Rogers, who runs the consolidated facility
nicknamed "Olive Gardez," said as many as 800 people --
including soldiers, civilians and local Afghans who work here -- eat
at the facility for any given meal.
Rogers' staff is a mix of
airmen and soldiers provided from units on the base and local Afghan
employees. They serve more than 30 dozen eggs for breakfast every
morning, washed down with 300 cups of coffee, and they go through 40
gallons of ice cream a day.
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Every night has a theme, with
Monday being Italian, Tuesday Mexican, and so on.
Saturday
night is seafood night.
The lobsters and crab legs are
shipped from the United States and driven down on a refrigerated
truck from Bagram.
On seafood night, the crew serves up 400
of the tasty tails, 130 pounds of Alaskan King crab legs, and 135
pounds each of shrimp and scallops.
Don't expect cold beers
or fancy bibs, but Rogers' crew heaps the tails and legs on troops'
plates as they go through the line. They'll also throw on a steak if
you want it.
Because of the growth of the forward operating
base, another dining facility, contractor-run, has now opened. Rogers
and his crew will be relieved of their duties this month, when this
chow hall is taken over by contractors.
Rogers has served
food in both Iraq and Afghanistan, and said the troops here
appreciate the fact that fellow servicemembers are serving up their
food.
"We put a little more love and flavoring in our
food," he said.
Source: On Location in Afghanistan
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