Ocnus.Net
The Military's Pricey Restaurant Tastes
By Nick Turse, Metropolitan Books. 8/5/08
May 9, 2008 - 3:20:46 PM
Judging by
the Pentagon's own accounting, the army, navy, air force and marines have been
very hungry -- and they've been chowing down.
When you think of food and
the U.S. military, you undoubtedly picture a long chow line where a grunt
serves up chipped beef on toast, lowly privates peeling potatoes on KP duty,
and semi-inedible old C-rations or more modern military field fare like
palate-numbing Meals-Ready-to-Eat (MREs).
But that's the old military,
not the new, modern variant -- and not just because private corporations like
Kellogg Brown & Root have taken over the mess halls from construction to
cooking. These days, like the rest of America, the army loves to eat out. No
messy preparation. No dishes to clean up. Not a chip of beef in sight. And,
best of all, it's on someone else's tab. The U.S. taxpayer's. Judging by the
Pentagon's own accounting, the army, navy, air force, and marines have been
very hungry and they've been chowing down.
As it happens, the army has
definite gastronomic tastes. Some ethnic foods, for instance, just about never
make it to the table. Due to the arcane nature of the Pentagon's accounting, it
is almost impossible to know for sure, but the tally on Asian food (although
not Asian bases) appears to be:
Vietnamese restaurants 0
Thai restaurants 0
Indian restaurants 0
Japanese restaurants 0
And don't even ask about Afghan food!
But while it's a no-go on
sushi, cooked fish is another military matter. In 2004, for instance, the army
spent more than $5,000 at Chic-A-D's Cajun Chicken & Catfish Restaurant in
Winnsboro, Louisiana. That same year, the catsh-hungry army dropped $6,500 at
Capt'n Morgan's Steak & Catfish Restaurant in Diberville, Mississippi, and
over $7,300 at Kenny's Katfish Depot in Dequincy, Louisiana. But since, as
Napoleon once observed, an army marches on its stomach, the U.S. Army cannot
live on catfish alone. Sandwiches are, apparently, also a must, so army eaters
plunked down $13,845 at a Quiznos Classic Subs in Louisiana.
In Arkansas, the military
dropped significant sums at such "Natural State" restaurants as:
Rodeo Cafe ($3,485), Molly's Diner ($5,400), Annie's Family Restaurant
($8,996), and the Crispy Taco Mexican Grill ($19,283), among other
establishments. While these 2004 gures were impressive, they paled in
comparison to the combined sum paid out to just two El Nopal Restaurant
locations in Arkansas (more than $423,000) in 2006. And for dessert, perhaps,
the DoD spent a whopping $7.9 million at Arkansas's own White Dairy Ice Cream
Company that same year.
But Arkansas was only a drop
in the proverbial bucket (of chicken, no doubt). Military folks also sampled
the fare at numerous other eateries across the country. Just a few examples
from 2004:
·
Copper Mill Restaurant (Logan, UT) $10,878
·
Bristol Bar & Grille (Louisville, KY) $5,026
·
Englewood Cafe (Independence, MO) $5,026
·
Pericos Mexican Restaurant (Covington, TN) $4,050
·
Big Mama's Kitchen (Fayette, AL) $3,705
·
Timber Lodge Steakhouse (Sioux Falls, SD) $2,544
and some DoD favorites from
2006:
·
City Caf (Elgin, TX) $26,350
·
Home Plate Restaurant (Butner, NC) $47,917
·
Pelican Caf (New Orleans, LA) $105,670
While the military clearly
savors its catfish and tacos, what it really loves is barbeque! In fact, the
military has sampled barbeque all across the United States -- from Shotgun's
Bar-B-Que Restaurant in Texas and Bo's Pit Bar-B-Que in Missouri to the Pig N'
Whistle in Tennessee and Longhorn Barbecue in Washington State. In 2004, the
army shelled out at least $164,828 to get its fingers greasy. In2005 and 2006
combined, the Pentagon spent over half this amount at Corky's Bar-B-Que of
Memphis, Tennessee.
While U.S. taxpayer dollars
have regularly morphed into barbequed wings and ribs (with not a vegetarian
restaurant in sight), the DoD wasn't completely gastronomically timid. In their
travels abroad, military officials apparently did manage to sample foreign
cuisine, supping at, among other places: Restaurant Schinvelderhoeve in the
Netherlands ($2,133 in 2004) and Restaurante El Escudo Sociedad in Guatemala
(an astounding $82,291 in 2004) and -- evidently the grand champion --
Singapore's First Street Cafe, where the DoD reportedly spent $151,883 in 2004,
$216,646 in 2005, and, an astounding $310,776 in 2006, eating who knows what.
Mostly though, it's
home-style comfort food and red meat in red states. In 2004, for instance, the
army reportedly paid Shoney's, a purveyor of such eats as country-fried steak,
chili-cheese fries, and its signature "Half-o-Pound" (a huge
"chopped beef patty" adorned with "golden-fried onion
rings"), more than $82,000. Just don't ask anyone to go over the top, or
parachute from a plane, while that Half-o-Pound is settling.
The secret of courageous
cuisine
In 2004, the Pentagon handed
over $154,000 to the Secret Garden Cafe in Loma Linda, California. A call to
the Secret Garden Cafe revealed that it was no longer a restaurant at all, but
strictly a catering company, due to high demand from guess who? Its new name?
Courageous Catering and Special Events. A manager at the new catering business
offered the following explanation for its popularity: "We get recommended
a lot because we use, like real butter, and we bring really good desserts and
we only use black angus beef … and so they like us, and we use, like name-brand
sodas instead of generics." The Army Reserve's 374th Chemical Company, she
said, had just hired Courageous Catering to provide post-maneuver sustenance.
For their inaugural menu, they roughed it with country-fried chicken, mashed
potatoes and gravy, beans, corn on the cob with butter for dipping, fresh fruit
salad, corn muffins with butter, sodas, bottled waters, iced tea, and assorted
cookies and dessert bars. Hold the chipped beef, but pass the black angus and
those chocolate chip cookies, Sir!
Tommy Franks rides the
rotisserie
In February 2003,
U.S.
News and World Report's Web site reported that then four-star general Tommy
Franks was said to have actually enjoyed eating MREs, but when he had his
druthers he "noshe[d] at the Tex-Mex restaurant Chevys." Franks's
crowning culinary moment, however, may have been in 2002 when as CENTCOM
commander and the leader of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, he and Outback
Steakhouse CEO Chris Sullivan decided to ship "6,700 steaks, 30,000 shrimp
and 3,000 giant onions" as well as "13,400 cans of O'Douls"
nonalcoholic beer, all of it donated, to members of the 101st Airborne
Division, based in Kandahar. The stunt garnered Outback some meaty press
coverage, so it was perhaps less than startling when Franks's decision to leave
the military was quickly followed by his decision to take a spot on Outback
Steakhouse's board of directors. By 2005, it was reported that he was receiving
an "annual retainer of $60,000 in cash and stock," in addition to the
$100,000 in restricted stock he received for joining the board.
For years, the Complex has
been typified by a revolving door between the armed forces and big-time defense
contractors. Franks may be pioneering a new version of this for a new military
moment. Think of it as the revolving rotisserie of the military-gastronomic
complex. Others may soon join him. In May 2005, just over a month after Franks
officially enlisted at Outback, fellow former four-star general and chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff Colin Powell was the keynote speaker at the National
Restaurant Association's annual conference. And the amusement park/pizzeria
chain Chuck E. Cheese also seems like it's angling for a top general to join
up. In fact, in 2005, it was found that all of the nearly 500 Chuck E. Cheese
franchises were screening a montage of military footage, put together by the
Pentagon, that even a company spokesman admitted could be interpreted as
"prowar."
From the Book The
Complex: How the Military Invades Our Everyday Lives by Nick Turse. Reprinted
by arrangement with Metropolitan Books, an imprint of Henry Holt and Company,
LLC. Copyright (c) 2008 by Nick Turse. All rights reserved.
Source: Ocnus.net 2008