Can the Army Make Food Its Soldiers Want to Eat? - The New York Times


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The Problem of Army Food

The article highlights the long-standing issue of subpar food quality in the US Army, citing historical anecdotes and a contemporary example of a bland mess hall serving unappetizing food at Fort Jackson, South Carolina.

A New Approach

In contrast, the article introduces Victory Fresh, a new fast-casual cafeteria at Fort Jackson, offering high-quality meals prepared with an emphasis on taste and presentation. This includes artisan pizzas, custom-carved brisket, and upscale desserts.

Positive Feedback

Sergeant Major Joshua R. Bitle, with 28 years of military experience, praised Victory Fresh's food quality, stating it was the best he had ever had.

The Need for Expansion

However, the article also points out the sergeant's frustration that such high-quality food is not available at every military base, raising questions about the lack of widespread implementation of improved food service initiatives.

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Army food has been vexing and perplexing the soldiers who have to eat it for about as long as there’s been an Army. An age-old marching song describes a biscuit that “rolled off the table and killed a friend of mine.” Troops in World War II immortalized a much-reviled beef dish with the nickname S.O.S., an acronym that still can’t be translated in this newspaper.

And at lunchtime on a recent Wednesday, a mess hall at Fort Jackson in South Carolina was serving up tacos filled with nondescript meat that glistened with grease. The brussels sprouts had the green boiled out of them. The hall itself looked bland and dated.

But just steps away at Victory Fresh, a small, sleek fast-casual cafeteria that shares the mess-hall kitchen, cooks were pulling individual-size pizzas from a $45,000 Marra Forni oven. The brisket had been cured and charred on-site, then carved to order. Dessert included narrow wedges of cheesecake, marbled missiles of sweet cream cheese cut with bitter chocolate.

The celebrity chef Robert Irvine, who opened Victory Fresh last year, was finishing his lunch when a towering figure in fatigues marched up. The soldier, who introduced himself as Sgt. Major Joshua R. Bitle, declared that in 28 years in the military, he’d never eaten as well as he just had.

Then a note of exasperation entered the sergeant’s voice. Why, he asked, wasn’t there a Victory Fresh on every base? “Nobody has given me an explanation for why we can’t do it.”

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