Inside US Military's Largest MANDATORY Dining Hall

Get 50% off your first order of CookUnity meals - go to cookunity.com/nwyt50 and use my code NWYT50 at checkout to try them out for yourself! Thanks to CookUnity for sponsoring this video!
Chapters:
0:00 How US Air Force Academy feeds 4000 cadets in 30 minutes
1:29 How US Air Force Academy prepares its food
2:25 How US Air Force Academy serves food quickly
3:28 Have you heard of CookUnity?
5:03 How cadets are seated at US Air Force Academy (Mitchell Hall)
6:32 What is contrails? (USAF)
7:12 What is the Noon Meal Formation?
8:11 Which US military academies serve food family style?
8:51 Which US military academy has the best food?
9:15 Eating food in the US Navy
9:46 How does the US Navy handle food allergies?
10:34 What are mid-rats, half-rats and double-rats?
11:19 Eating food in the US Army
12:25 Which US military branch has the best food?
How US Air Force Serves 4,000 Meals in 30 Minutes is #NotWhatYouThink #NWYT #longs
Music:
Solarium - Max Anson
Flowers for Her - Howard Harper-Barnes
Divisive Alliance - Jon Bjork
This Time I Promise - Colors of Illusion
Our Session - Nylonia
Echolocation - Laura Platt
Icy Road - Lucention
Aint No Saint - Elliot Holmes
Day Trip - Raymond Grouse
La Danse Timide - Howard Harper-Barnes
Subconscious - Nihoni
Footage:
Select images/videos from Getty Images
Shutterstock
US Department of Defense
Note: "The appearance of U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) visual information does not imply or constitute DoD endorsement."

Пікірлер: 408

  • @NotWhatYouThink
    @NotWhatYouThinkАй бұрын

    Get 50% off your first order of CookUnity meals - go to cookunity.com/nwyt50 and use my code NWYT50 at checkout to try them out for yourself! Thanks to CookUnity for sponsoring this video!

  • @user-wz3vf5fc6c

    @user-wz3vf5fc6c

    Ай бұрын

    We want to provide the feature of voice translation for the Arabic language. Thank you

  • @fishead1967

    @fishead1967

    2 күн бұрын

    Air force always have awesome.chow hall...Sundays they served steak and lobster air force does get a large budget...

  • @rekire___
    @rekire___Ай бұрын

    >getting yelled and put under stress Ah yes family style

  • @Neuro537

    @Neuro537

    Ай бұрын

    just keep in mind, in reality harassing your subordinates will only lend you a hefty punishment.

  • @Weisior

    @Weisior

    Ай бұрын

    ikr

  • @lc3853

    @lc3853

    Ай бұрын

    Stop it, cadet. You're not even my real mom.

  • @danthemango

    @danthemango

    Ай бұрын

    Sounds like my family to be honest

  • @recoil53

    @recoil53

    Ай бұрын

    There are plenty of families more dysfunctional than the early seasons of Rick and Morty. Ever been in a bar the night before Thanksgiving? There are always some people there dreading seeing their families.

  • @xavyre
    @xavyreАй бұрын

    I was in the Air Force and we had all four branches on our base and they all said the Air Force had the best dining halls, base facilities and housing out of the entire armed forces.

  • @nathanroberson

    @nathanroberson

    Ай бұрын

    I also am a USAF vet. Spent time on a Navel Base. Food and housing in the USAF is the best. But give it time I’m willing to bet the Space Force will become the nicest as they have the toughest task to retain their people from going into the commercial side of the space industry. That’s why the USAF has the high standards. It’s about retaining their trained assets. The Army soldiers don’t have the same job offer opportunities.

  • @Accounting4Cycling

    @Accounting4Cycling

    Ай бұрын

    Army artillery vet here. I took a class that required us to stay in Air Force lodging, eat at AF DFACs, and work out in AF facilities... it was glorious! The bunks were so comfortable and it was two to a room, with a TV in the room! Way better than MREs in the field or the DFACs at Ft. Sill. 🤢

  • @johnjingleheimersmith9259

    @johnjingleheimersmith9259

    Ай бұрын

    ever go to their sunday officer's brunch? It's pretty glorious. I dunno why they're so spoiled compared to the rest of the armed forces

  • @Accounting4Cycling

    @Accounting4Cycling

    Ай бұрын

    @johnjingleheimersmith9259 it's because they don't PCS you constantly. The savings on paperwork alone equate to their superior food! I have not had the pleasure of that brunch, though 🤣 Brunch?! Ugh, should've joined the Air Force! I wonder how the Space Force is doing?

  • @DroneStrike1776

    @DroneStrike1776

    Ай бұрын

    Did you guys have chocolate fondue and ribeye? Air Force, the only branch that sleeps in 5 star hotels.

  • @tribex11
    @tribex11Ай бұрын

    That formality of how to dish and eat looks like some odd torture

  • @szlomobronsztajn3115

    @szlomobronsztajn3115

    Ай бұрын

    I kinda understand where it came from, you gotta remember that military is a melting point of different classes, upbringings etc., there are some people that for the love of God can't eat, or better said, are disgusting to watch eating with all the smacking, eating with the open mouth and food falling off their mouth. And this is what military sadly has to do, teach people the basics that no-one has taught them.

  • @tribex11

    @tribex11

    Ай бұрын

    @@szlomobronsztajn3115 definitely been around those people and I get what your saying for sure it just seems like somewhere along the line it got over corrected. Had a guy sit opposite me and eat a salad roll with an open mouth and bits of it all over his face and clothes one time and I'm no snob but jeeze 🤮

  • @danielernandes4989

    @danielernandes4989

    Ай бұрын

    @@tribex11My brother attended USAFA from 2008-2012, and it isn't as bad as the video makes it seem. Yes its very rigid and I'm not going to make it seem like its very *pleasant*, but they do make sure the cadets have enough to eat and stay healthy. The highly regimented meals are just another way to instill discipline in the cadets, and from the officers I have spoken to, most of the ones that make it all the way through do not resent it as they understand the why behind it. They definitely didn't enjoy it, but they understand it. Also, you don't get told to recite knowledge after your first year, and once you're in your third year, after a summer exercise and a ceremony known as Commitment, you are allowed to relax a lot more. By the way, this is just a small part of the regimentation of the cadet's day. Underclassmen, specifically first year cadets, are absolutely required to walk across the Terrazzo(the academy's main plaza in the center of the residence buildings and classes) on ONLY the light-colored squares. You can see the Terrazzo and its paths at :43 in the video. Additionally, they have to carry their backpacks by the handle, not on their backs. Class schedules are very tight, and there is plenty of physical education and military exercises in addition to the classroom education required to graduate. The service academies are 4-year colleges, and everyone graduates with a Bachelor degree in addition to their commission into their respective branch.

  • @recoil53

    @recoil53

    Ай бұрын

    It doesn't look formal, it looks robotic.

  • @theregalproletariat

    @theregalproletariat

    Ай бұрын

    It's a game, right? They're testing you to see if you can play by the rules - i.e. you're a good soldier who'll follow orders. Plus it keeps things orderly.

  • @Nipplator99999999999
    @Nipplator99999999999Ай бұрын

    In the Army, they just put between 3000 to 4000 MREs strapped to pellets in the middle of a field. Then had a formation on the edge of the field. At dismissed, time started and every soldier made a mad dash for a MRE. It was over in 20-30 minutes, if there was enough MREs or nobody snipped the steel straps and it took 10 minutes to free them... Great way to get in shape or stay that way.

  • @mattiemathis9549

    @mattiemathis9549

    Ай бұрын

    Right? This is nothing I can relate to.

  • @Retly_Ai
    @Retly_AiАй бұрын

    Air Force food can be a hit or miss depending on where your stationed. But I do think the Air Force has decent options for the most part. My only helpful criticism to give you is to look up nuclear submarine seamen diets. They get the best food overall to help morale since they don’t really get the chance to see the outside for prolonged durations

  • @scottstewart5784
    @scottstewart5784Ай бұрын

    I ate at Mitchell hall @ USAFA for 4 years in the 80s - the food was excellent always. The video said only seniors can "relax" at the meals - that's not true - only the freshmen (doolies) get braced or knowledge checked. The seniors are in charge, but the other two years can also "train" the doolie-wads. In fact, most seniors are thinking of their first assignment and are "over" training doolies, and leave it to the sophomores and juniors. There is the occasional "stract" senior though.

  • @neubauerjoseph

    @neubauerjoseph

    Ай бұрын

    Also I used to cook on uss Nimitz, we would make breakfast and uncooked leftovers. According to the U.S. navy book nav sup p486 it says we can only keep leftovers hot for 2 hours so rather you cook it and have to cool it or trash which is most of the time and cook the uncooked leftovers. But the Midrats is mostly the night crew but in a carrier it’s hungry sailors and night crew.

  • @meltdown6165

    @meltdown6165

    6 күн бұрын

    Typical military hazing & indoctrination to make you follow ANY order without thinking because it comes from some higher up, regardless of how non-sensical it is. This is what made the great genocides of the 20th century possible.

  • @thilakdissanayaka2330
    @thilakdissanayaka2330Ай бұрын

    "When you are starving, food tastes delicious anyway." - NWYT

  • @muhazreen

    @muhazreen

    Ай бұрын

    My instructor once told us, "Hungry is the best sauce, that why hot sauce is not allowed😂". Someone try smuggle hot sauce into the field😂

  • @brentonherbert7775
    @brentonherbert7775Ай бұрын

    US forces: Sitting family style promotes comradely. Also US forces: Expect to be called duely which means slave.

  • @cybercat7851
    @cybercat7851Ай бұрын

    I love how they have an MQ-9 chilling in the lunchroom

  • @thanksfernuthin
    @thanksfernuthinАй бұрын

    Long ago, 80s-90s, Air Force had the best chow halls and it wasn't considered close. The Air Force had a unique situation. If you find yourself in a war and want to survive it, Air Force is the choice for most so they had the least trouble getting recruits, if they could pass the higher intelligence test requirements. Anecdotal: I scored insanely high on the ASVAB (military vocational test). Afterward recruiters from every branch called my home and eventually visited... except the Air Force. My dad was in the Air Force so we called them, "Oh, yeah. We saw that. We were going to call you." That dynamic played out throughout my military service. The other branches paid very large bonuses to keep their members in but the Air Force kept people around with a higher quality of life... and food. I would expect the Space Force will likely take top spot on the military food chain if it hasn't already.

  • @geeussery8849

    @geeussery8849

    Ай бұрын

    prob so but I have to say Navy has some fine fine chow!

  • @thanksfernuthin

    @thanksfernuthin

    Ай бұрын

    @@geeussery8849 I was stationed with all branches, CIA, FBI etc in Monterey California. The Navy had the second best chow hall to be sure. And my best friend there was in the Navy!

  • @NMJZ
    @NMJZАй бұрын

    A few things to point out: As far as the Army TRADOC installations go, AKA bootcamps, you were mostly spot-on. You eat at the DFAC three times a day, and every meal is a minimum of 15 minutes, per regulation. The food is color coded to show the trainees how healthy each food item is, and you can choose what you want to eat. What you didn't mention is that you are always marched to the DFAC in formation by the Drill Sergeants for every meal, while they call cadences. Filing in and out of the DFAC is a very efficient affair, with the servers being pre-determined before you go(the trainees volunteer or are volun-told for that) and the trainees at the back of the formation are the ones who hold the doors open. You have to side-step throughout the serving area, holding your tray the right way and whilst making the correct facing movements. The Drill Sergeants will probably make the experience 10 times more stressful for everyone, especially during Yellow/Red phase, just to see how much stress you can take, because after all, you're not guaranteed 15 minutes if you're in a combat zone and you have to eat in perfect silence lest your table is made to get up early, thanks to you. Bringing weapons to the DFAC? Stack your weapons outside, neatly, and post a weapons guard, who eats last. Once everything is done, you form up again and march back. How do I know all this? Because I was formerly a trainee in D Co., 4-39 IN BN, Fort Jackson, US Army Basic Combat Training academy. "Never Retreat!"

  • @natodeltaforce342

    @natodeltaforce342

    Ай бұрын

    Dangers lead the way!! I graduated from fort Jackson same Company and bat as you literally months ago, we never ate at the DFAC though when I was their

  • @NMJZ

    @NMJZ

    Ай бұрын

    @@natodeltaforce342 OMG no way! Yeah, when we were a day away from graduation the SDS told us that they would ditch the DFAC for hot-As in mermites for every cycle of trainees going forward after several bad experiences with the civillians who run the DFAC. Fun fact: the DFAC we went to when we did get a chance to go was the 1-34 DFAC, because the actual 4-39 DFAC was nearby BN HQ where A co. and B Co. were situated, making it too far away to be practical. Such fun times..... DAGGERS LEAD THE WAY

  • @jeraldbottcher1588

    @jeraldbottcher1588

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah I went to basic back in the 70's. Meal time went pretty quick. From the time the 1st one went in until the last one was back in formation was usually 20 minutes on the button, except for the evening meal after the 2nd week of training. then it was 30 minutes.

  • @scottw2661

    @scottw2661

    23 күн бұрын

    I just graduated from for Jackson 4/11 and bro you’re spot on lol. We got the DFAC if we were lucky but mostly Hot As or MREs. I was in Bravo company 3-13. Bulldogs lead the way!

  • @Asianevermore
    @AsianevermoreАй бұрын

    People really have no idea the difference between enlisted boot camp and officers academy…. All branches academy have the same set up : National War College is probably the best since it’s set up for global diversity-yes they teach cultural customs through food to know about locals. Naval academy, West Point, US coast guard academy and Air Force Academy are all the same with food and routine.

  • @SwanOnChips
    @SwanOnChipsАй бұрын

    Thanks for covering this!

  • @dwaynekoblitz6032
    @dwaynekoblitz6032Ай бұрын

    The Navy always had good food. Even during boot camp. I can only imagine it's gotten better since I served 30 years ago.

  • @blankityblankblank2321
    @blankityblankblank2321Ай бұрын

    It looks almost otherworldy, but being able to feed 4000 people in 30 minutes itself is otherworldy sooo

  • @xPersianxKing
    @xPersianxKingАй бұрын

    “That’s not my sexy voice” *SUBSCRIBED*

  • @pcy113
    @pcy113Ай бұрын

    3:13 just wanted to say that the 'k' in 'kcal' stands for kilo, so most people eat 2000 kilo-calories per day, you would be starving with only 2000 cal/day

  • @Extinction_Vortex

    @Extinction_Vortex

    Ай бұрын

    You are right, but "Calorie" (with an uppercase C) is the same as a kcal and can be used interchangeably.

  • @ykoin8408

    @ykoin8408

    Ай бұрын

    Yes, but Megacalories just do not have the same ring to it :)

  • @pcy113

    @pcy113

    Ай бұрын

    @@Extinction_Vortex I looked it up and it's true 💀 who tf choose to call a kilocalorie a Calorie knowing it would just cause problems 😳

  • @willythemailboy2

    @willythemailboy2

    Ай бұрын

    @@pcy113 As with nearly everything else wrong with the world, blame the French.

  • @Specter_1125

    @Specter_1125

    Ай бұрын

    @@pcy113the vast majority of people will never have cause to measure anything in lower case calories, so it doesn’t really matter.

  • @AlexGrom
    @AlexGromАй бұрын

    "How did the navy solved the food allergy problem?" Not getting any personel with it, certainly not the answer I wanted to hear 😅

  • @plumeria66

    @plumeria66

    18 күн бұрын

    Yeah, what happens if someone develops an allergy? Would they get booted off the ship/submarine?

  • @fjb4932

    @fjb4932

    5 күн бұрын

    My sister appied to join the Air Force after college. Denied. Why ? Allergic . . .to CATS ! Is the enemy going to send cats to attack her ? ☆

  • @paulbrooks4395
    @paulbrooks4395Ай бұрын

    Submariners are supposed to have the best food or menu, to keep morale up. This takes all takes me back to my food service days in university, where the operations were nearly 24/7, as there were places open late and we had to begin hours before first classes.

  • @SunriseLAW

    @SunriseLAW

    9 күн бұрын

    Nuclear subs have the best food.

  • @Yxalitis
    @YxalitisАй бұрын

    I don't know what it is, but your videos are so...watchable, you have a real knack for just telling stuff in an interesting way, even something as 'boring' as a cadet meal. Well done. Next time I want exploshons though!!

  • @DtWolfwood
    @DtWolfwoodАй бұрын

    i dont know why i love logistics videos so much, but i do!

  • @kennethralcock
    @kennethralcockАй бұрын

    I was enlisted active duty USMC 1986-1990. I know that I ate at the following chow halls/galleys/messes, listed in more-or-less chronological order: NOTE: I'm sure there were other places I can no longer remember. 1. Receiving Mess, MCRD San Diego, CA - USMC 2. Chow Hall, Camp San Onofre [School Of Infantry (SOI) / Infantry Training School (ITS)], Camp Pendelton, CA - USMC 3. Chow Hall, Mainside (HQ), Camp Pendelton, CA - USMC 4. Chow Hall, Talega (Recon), Camp Pendelton, CA - USMC 5. Chow Hall, Camp Horno (1st Marine Regiment), Camp Pendelton, CA - USMC 6. Enlisted Mess, USS Belleau Wood LHA-3, - USN 7. "Top of the Rock" Main Chow hall, Eareckson Air Station, Shemya, Alaska, - USAF 8. "Seafarer's Galley", Subic Bay, Phillipines, - USN 9. Mess Hall, Marine Barracks, Subic Bay, Phillipines - USN 10. Camp San Mateo (5th Marine Regiment/1st Combat Engineers), Camp Pendelton, CA - USMC 11. Enlisted Mess, Naval Amphibious Base Coronado, CA - USN 12. Chow Hall, Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center (MCAGCC), Twentynine Palms, CA - USMC 13. Enlisted Mess, Marine Corps Base Quantico, VA - USMC 14. Enlisted Mess, Naval Air Station Oceana Dam Neck Annex, Virginia Beach, VA - USN 15. Enlisted Mess, Roosevelt Roads Naval Station, Puerto Rico - USN 16. Enlisted Mess, NSGA Sabana Seca, Puerto Rico - USN 17. Enlisted Mess, Naval Station Norfolk, VA - USN IMO, of the places I listed above, the top 5 in food quality were: #17, #1, #2, #13, #3 In my experience, military food is generally better quality when the dining facility is closer to the mainland 48 states, or to a major military supply chain hub, especially when the facility is close to a headquarters. The exception to this generalization would have to be the mess facilities of Marine Corps Boot camp, and by extension, the chow hall at School Of Infantry (SOI) / Infantry Training School (ITS) in Camp Pendelton, CA, which also served USMC recruits meals when I was in boot camp and we did our 2 weeks of field training and our of Rifle/Pistol qualifications. When I shipped off to Boot Camp, I stood 5' 9.5" and I only weighed 138 lbs. The Doctors ALMOST prescribed me Double Rats, until they learned I was a farm boy. They accurately predicted that I would not need to consume the extra calories in order to put on enough weight to be more in-line with the Marine Corps guidelines for my height. I was 17 when I went to basic; 3 months later, we took our photos for our IDs prior to graduation (2 weeks before my 18th birthday), I then stood 5'11" and I weighed 158 lbs. The Corps stacked 20 lbs on me in just 3 months, and did it while I hit a growth spurt. The food on a Navy base is usually better than the food aboard a ship. If I had a nickle for every meal we ate aboard the USS Belleau Wood that was mainly Chicken and Rice, I could literally afford a Steak Dinner, even at today's prices! However, I do remember that after every major operation we completed (these were all peace time when I was in), they would serve us Steak and Lobster aboard the USS Belleau Wood. Another interesting note when I was stationed at Camp Horno (1st Marine Regiment), Camp Pendelton, CA - USMC, the chow hall there implemented a Baked Potato and Chili Bar, that was really well done. A lot of guys in my unit would smash that bar at least once or twice a week, whenever the main chow line had something else they didn't care for too much. And if we had 15 minutes to eat chow in boot camp, then I'll be a monkey's uncle. Our Drill Instructors spent some of the last few days in boot camp coaching us to count our chews when we went back home to eat with our families. A Marine recruit can literally inhale a 7 course meal in 5 minutes flat, through a straw if necessary!

  • @paaat001

    @paaat001

    Ай бұрын

    LOL My future wife and her family were amazed at how fast I ate my food.

  • @jeraldbottcher1588

    @jeraldbottcher1588

    Ай бұрын

    I still have to intentionally slow down how fast I eat when in company.

  • @plumeria66

    @plumeria66

    18 күн бұрын

    You never went overseas to Okinawa? So many Marine Corps bases there.

  • @kennethralcock

    @kennethralcock

    18 күн бұрын

    ​@@plumeria66 I only went to Okinawa when the USS Belleau Wood stopped in there twice; once on the way to Korea for Operation Team Spirit, and a second time on the way back from Korea to the Philippines. We only had a single day of liberty each stop, so I didn't have much time to explore the island. To be 100% honest there was a Burger King right near the pier on the base. At that point in our deployment, the 18 year version of me could not remember the last time he had enjoyed a Bacon Double Cheeseburger. No mess hall in the world could have kept me away from a taste from home, even if it was only fast food!

  • @jeraldbottcher1588

    @jeraldbottcher1588

    18 күн бұрын

    I was in the Army and I spent some time at Fort Story VA, SO I had the opportunity to eat at a few of those places on the east coast. The enlisted mess at Norfolk was fantastic as well as NAS Oceana and Dam Neck. Made our mess halls in the Army look like a joke!

  • @gaveintothedarkness
    @gaveintothedarknessАй бұрын

    Great video! if anyone wants to see more of this, business insider youtube channel has a lot of this type of mess hall video.

  • @isaiahbaggett5014
    @isaiahbaggett5014Ай бұрын

    I was in the Air Force and was stationed at Buckley, AFB, a joint command in Colorado. The other services were amazed at our food, and it was not even the best by far. In basic training, we sat and ate in a certain way too. We couldn't even look up or talk. not until the last week.

  • @gregorygarfield2376
    @gregorygarfield2376Ай бұрын

    Most of these clips are from basic training at the academy with a lot more formality and rush. During the school year things are quite a bit different.

  • @garymiller5937
    @garymiller5937Ай бұрын

    Very interesting! I had no idea they are treated like this 😮. Thanks for the education! 😊😊😊😊❤❤❤❤

  • @kissthesky40
    @kissthesky40Ай бұрын

    Interesting. Thx.

  • @mychalriccio3499
    @mychalriccio3499Ай бұрын

    You did forget the one service academy with the best food: the Coast Guard Academy. With 1/4 the number of mouths to feed, it's much more likely that overall quality is preserved. It's certainly nothing compared to a home cooked meal, but every exchange cadet/mid from the other academies that come to New London for a semester has consistently said the food at CGA is better.

  • @yesdoeee
    @yesdoeeeАй бұрын

    More content on Air Force 🔥

  • @starwarsstuff8926
    @starwarsstuff8926Ай бұрын

    The Navy navigate by the stars, the army sleeps under the stars, and the Air Force pics there hotels, judging on the stars.

  • @Linusgump

    @Linusgump

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah, and the Marines go to the field when it rains, so there are no stars.

  • @starwarsstuff8926

    @starwarsstuff8926

    Ай бұрын

    @@Linusgump lmao fr

  • @chu121su12
    @chu121su12Ай бұрын

    finally i caught the glimpse of the iconic academy ever since viewing it on ra2

  • @rotorhead0727
    @rotorhead0727Ай бұрын

    submariner here...fast attack...deployments limited anything 'fresh'. Meat was frozen and 90% of everything else was canned. It became clear why the emergency antidote locker was located just outside crews' mess....

  • @coenicorn
    @coenicornАй бұрын

    that food looks so good tbh

  • @KeithHouchens
    @KeithHouchensАй бұрын

    midnight meal was one of the best in the Air Force, eggs anyway you wanted them, pancakes, french toast with melted butter and hot syrup, hash browns, sausage gravy and biscuits, SOS, bacon, sausage, ham, danish, toast etc.

  • @brentbarr498
    @brentbarr498Ай бұрын

    Very enjoyable video. My family has every branch of the DOD covered to include Coast Guard and I can tell you FIRST HAND your research was correct. Air Force DFACs offer the BEST food of all the branches. Hell, we don't even go to war unless there is a 5-star hotel for us to billet. ;)

  • @creativecatalyst777
    @creativecatalyst777Ай бұрын

    Impressive ❤

  • @GOPnot4me
    @GOPnot4me10 күн бұрын

    I was an Opticalman in the Navy 50 years ago. I always volunteered to do periscope maintenance whenever possible. Chow on a submarine never disappointed. Those guys were serious about their food.

  • @topcatandgang
    @topcatandgangАй бұрын

    i was in the army on a field support group. one month we stayed at an air force barracks while the army aquired a new location for us. that month was the best for all 16 of us. we got to sleep late, eat the best food we ever had, got to have seconds and didn't have to rush through it. for that month we felt like we joined the wrong service. so yes the best food is in the air force.

  • @puirYorick
    @puirYorickАй бұрын

    All that regimented bullying disguised as a proud tradition is what stopped me from considering that path for my education.

  • @asylumental

    @asylumental

    Ай бұрын

    Yup. No wonder USA struggles to get the new recruits they need

  • @dallasyap3064

    @dallasyap3064

    Ай бұрын

    Probably the unreported hazing culture as well I assume?

  • @puirYorick

    @puirYorick

    Ай бұрын

    @@dallasyap3064 To say the least. I typed out a longer reply which YT deleted immediately. In summary, wild Asian elephants are "trained" to become living tractors by the same methods. Cheers.

  • @nautifella
    @nautifella9 күн бұрын

    I was raised by a USAF career enlisted man, 30 years security police CMS. Every four years - starting when I was 6 mons old - we crossed an ocean.... and changed coasts. I served in the Navy during the 80s and we changed duty stations every fours years as well. However, we could frequently change commands - Ship, sub, airwing, shore duty - and stay at the same massive naval station. On submarines, the officers and chiefs eat from the same pots as the crew. The chiefs had a table on the mess decks and the officers had table service in the wardroom.

  • @jasonclay6218
    @jasonclay62182 күн бұрын

    Having served in the Marine Corps. For a year I had the pleasure of working for the Navy while being stationed on an Air Force base. In my experience, Navy food on ships beats them all. Surprisingly, my second choice, would be at a particular chow hall at MCAS Camp Pendleton. Air Force is most consistent across all the bases I been too. Fort Sill Army base ranks up there for me.

  • @reddevilparatrooper
    @reddevilparatrooperАй бұрын

    I was in the Army as an Airborne Infantryman and as a regular infantryman from overseas to state side. Army food was standard especially in combat arms mess halls with the exception of Cavalry. I visited a few times at Air Force mess halls and they were average like the Army but better decor. I grew up Navy when I was a kid, and got to try Navy food again and honestly the Navy and Marines have the best food in my experience because they have sea duty for 6 months at a time being on a ship or an aircraft carrier.

  • @nwlandas
    @nwlandasАй бұрын

    The videos in the Academy mess halls show freshman during their “basic training” in the summer; it’s much more relaxed during the school year. Also, the Naval Academy does have vegetarian options, although they are very limited.

  • @korakys
    @korakysАй бұрын

    I was in the air force, the New Zealand air force, and the manner of eating depicted here is one of the most ridiculous things I've ever seen 😂 Time to eat was for sure a pressure but we just staggered the times that every group starts lunch at. The USAF sure goes way harder than should be necessary. Oh, and here it was thought the navy had the best food and the air force the worst although our food noticeably improved a couple of years in-due to a rethink.

  • @sr_meeseeks6205
    @sr_meeseeks6205Ай бұрын

    I just saw Full Metal Jacket last day, and there are so many vibes on this video. I really think it is counterproductive not to let them rest even when they eat.

  • @jorgeelchido3985

    @jorgeelchido3985

    Ай бұрын

    I agree Fuck officer procedures

  • @jamesabc372
    @jamesabc372Ай бұрын

    I was a" 622" in 1975. We used Navy recipes in the main base kitchen. All the food was AAA grade ,even the eggs!😊

  • @ryansmadrigal2808
    @ryansmadrigal2808Ай бұрын

    Camp Schwab chow hall the best plus always seeing Schwab cat on the way up RIP

  • @ann._.ika12
    @ann._.ika12Ай бұрын

    On an Airbase in North Dakota that I work as HR on, we have civilian restaurants and bigger brands at a commerce area, such a store we call BX comparable to a kmart or target, we have a popeyes chicken which was the only one in a local area until a one was undergoing construction very recently. There are other local owned resturants that are under 5SCC, and others that are coffee shops that are connected to airforce owned restaurants. Most airbases in the state (we have two) Minot AFB and grand forks AFB, Minot specializing in the missile wing (minuteman missiles) and grandforks in drone operations (Lockheed Martin) being stationed on these bases you will generally eat extremely well and get luxuries, bowling public swimming but Minot and Grand forks are comparable to small cities that are just closed off

  • @Edico999
    @Edico999Ай бұрын

    They all look so happy - not!

  • @Weisior

    @Weisior

    Ай бұрын

    Youd look like this too after an exhausting morning lol

  • @Valencio1031
    @Valencio10319 күн бұрын

    This is just a suggestion: pls also include in your content the dining hall inside the Philippine Military Academy or even in the Philippine National Police Academy so that other people can see the difference... square meal, reverse meal, 10 counts meal etc... plus tons of mental and physical exercises while eating...

  • @jimsvideos7201
    @jimsvideos7201Ай бұрын

    I had a hell of a piece of prime rib at the airmen's club at Eielson one time.

  • @pinkaleeddie5589
    @pinkaleeddie5589Ай бұрын

    As someone from the Army who married Air Force yea Air Force hands down best food especially for pilots however once you climb into officer ranks it evens out a bit

  • @SwanOnChips
    @SwanOnChipsАй бұрын

    Sending 💖🛐 to our service people!

  • @rongendron8705
    @rongendron87057 күн бұрын

    On my last day of "Zero week", before Army Basic training started, I was picked to work at Battalion Mess, which served all the day's meals for 3,000 soldiers! I got there about 4 a.m. & didn't leave until 7 p.m. I don't think that I ever worked as hard, before or after, in my entire life! I can't imagine doing that, over & over again! p.s. (It was on "Good Friday" 1964, the same day as the Great Alaskan earthquake!)

  • @rovermiles1
    @rovermiles1Ай бұрын

    12:39 - Airforce has the best everything. Army and Marine Corp budgets are exhausted by machines and man power and the Navy by the ships. The Airforce has planes, but they don't suck down as much budget which is why some airforce bases have golf courses.

  • @JS-sj3dn
    @JS-sj3dnАй бұрын

    That's luxurious, 20 minutes to eat while the food is served to the table.

  • @UltimatePostman
    @UltimatePostmanАй бұрын

    Prior service Air Force here, our dining halls were pretty decent. Your first meal in basic will be the worst due to all the stress. But being yelled at makes all the food taste better. However, I've heard a rumor it that if you're in a sub, you have the best food. Can any Navy back that up?

  • @Arshiya602
    @Arshiya602Ай бұрын

    Old title: how to eat 4000 meals in 29 mins and 59 second

  • @erasmus_locke
    @erasmus_lockeАй бұрын

    Weird that the military struggles with recruiting 🤯😞 Just look at how much fun those manakins are having 🗿💀

  • @Dan-rx3fq
    @Dan-rx3fq15 күн бұрын

    Served 12 years USAF and was at many joint bases, by far USAF had the best food and dorm rooms.

  • @garymittelstadt7821
    @garymittelstadt7821Ай бұрын

    Fast, neat, average, friendly, good, good!

  • @ZuluBlackout
    @ZuluBlackoutАй бұрын

    “Extreme physical load on cadets”… HAAAAAHAAA haaaahahahaa hahahaha hah ohh you killed me with that one!

  • @tommyrq180

    @tommyrq180

    14 күн бұрын

    Guarantee you didn’t go to the US Air Force Academy. I did. It’s an extreme physical and mental load-all year. You would have melted under that pressure. Whoever you are, shut up.

  • @zerstorer335
    @zerstorer335Ай бұрын

    I don’t know that the Air Force FOCUSES on homesteading as much as it may allow it more than the other services. Part of that can come from how certain aircraft are only at certain bases. If you’re trained to operate or maintain a particular aircraft, it may make more sense to let you stay where that aircraft is than to send you somewhere where you’ll have to train up on a new one. But if your specialty is one that easily transfers to any base (electrician, medical, security, communications, etcetera), they’re much more willing to move you around every few years to gain experience because any training time would be minimal or nonexistent.

  • @TwoYeets
    @TwoYeetsАй бұрын

    Many Marine Corps chow halls also have mid-rats, typically serving breakfast food for all the shift workers and insomniacs. This is a gift from the ghost of Chesty Puller to all the drunk Marines at 1am in the middle of the week, stumbling across the street for an omelete with the bros.

  • @SkyhawkSteve

    @SkyhawkSteve

    Ай бұрын

    True. I was stationed at MCAS Yuma around 1980. My squadron ran three shifts, and 3rd shift ("mid crew") would break to go to mid-rats. If memory serves, there was the option of a simple dinner menu (hamburgers or such) and a simple breakfast menu. I think the hours were closer to 3 or 4am in Yuma, and I don't recall anyone other than mid-crew folks showing up.

  • @ntdscherer
    @ntdschererАй бұрын

    This makes me even more glad I was never in the military.

  • @n4rut089animereviewer
    @n4rut089animereviewerАй бұрын

    I went to the enlisted Great Lakes Naval ROTC Training facility end of december 2019 discharged march 2020, the food was meh, you go into your designated mess hall by division number and you are lined up by height, once your in the mess hall you probably get 5 mins to choose what you want to eat for eating session then you need to get to your seating by division number and you need to finish eating before the time the division is set to exit the mess hall, if you don't finish you have to throw it away. Also the ships which are division's dorms weren't well insulated so it gets really cold, the dry air also doesn't help.

  • @krle7970

    @krle7970

    Ай бұрын

    Why did you get discharged?

  • @n4rut089animereviewer

    @n4rut089animereviewer

    Ай бұрын

    @krle7970 got sick, probably high fever when my division was marching in the snow to our new ship/dorm where the division was due to go into training. Then I got shipped to a new division but didn't make recovery quick enough, then sent to the Steps program to qualify to continue to remain training in basic naval training, but didn't want to stay in training for more months than I was already there, so I was sent to ship 5, which is where all recruits go to be shipped back home, where you wait until your ship out date. You can create a case to stay or wait for your ticket home.

  • @krle7970

    @krle7970

    Ай бұрын

    @@n4rut089animereviewer oh, I am seriously considering joining this year, any tips you can give me? I am nervous but this is what I want most in life currently

  • @n4rut089animereviewer

    @n4rut089animereviewer

    Ай бұрын

    @krle7970 make sure you can run the mile and a half under 16 or 18 mins depending on gender, hopefully you don't get a ship out date for winter, because it was 20 below 0 when I was there during the 2019 blizzard. Pay attention to details so you don't get called out the POs, remember the rank insignias, because that gives clues on when to salute to who. Memorize the Navy's rules or commandments because the chiefs and POs may ask you what is rule # or command #..... recommend using flash cards for those. The air there is dry, so get chapstick and Vaseline for you lips and nose. The Chiefs and POs strictly inspect your bunks and to see if the recruits shaved. Bathrooms are called heads. Hopefully you get into a cooperative division because the first couple weeks is getting your training gear and paper work done to be ready when they ship you out to your specialization to your job in the Navy, the Navy has a bank they use on-site so it's recommend you sign up for bank account because if you get deployed overseas you won't get overseas charges from US only Bank. Marching in formation is a big thing at training because division compete against each other to graduate with honors, avoid dating or getting intimate relationships with other recruits. Helping others is good if you want to rank up or promote to a position. You'll get trained/drilled about ship note/details and guard duty... in a normal division your guard duty if you get assigned is 4 hrs but if you get in ship 5 to be discharge, it's 2 hrs... ppl end up in ship 5 if they failed medical testing by seeing drugs in their system... depending on what code they get upon discharge, they can try to get back in next time or forbid them from joining. In boot camp your treated as E1 even though you signed up as E2 or E3 depending your education... so I probably would recommend officer bootcamp if you have college education unless you don't want a leadership role go enlisted.

  • @krle7970

    @krle7970

    Ай бұрын

    @@n4rut089animereviewer thanks. How often to salute? Also why didn’t you reenlist if I may ask?

  • @Bruuuuuu546
    @Bruuuuuu546Ай бұрын

    Nice

  • @noahzajac8660
    @noahzajac8660Ай бұрын

    I’ve heard from my family (that has a history in all branches) that food on submarines is the best because you don’t get any sunlight, internet, or most other amenities in other bases or ships

  • @dallasyap3064
    @dallasyap3064Ай бұрын

    Heard of quite a few people saying Air Force food is the best, so are their facilities. I wonder what about the Coast Guard or even the Space Force, since the former is not under DOD and the latter is still kinda new, and they both don't get much attention as the other 4 services.

  • @DroneStrike1776
    @DroneStrike1776Ай бұрын

    Heard the US Marines have red and purple crayons.

  • @HurBenny
    @HurBennyАй бұрын

    I have the misfortune of tasting the US army food during a cooperation and assumed we were the victims of a heinous crime, but the logistics were certainly impressive and the behaviour was impeccable. Good men subject to a questionable procurement chain, this.

  • @justahamsterthatcodes
    @justahamsterthatcodesАй бұрын

    I was a month in the Finnish army. I got really sick and had to return because of that. I will go back and complete my service at a later date. When we ate each company had a assigned time to arrive into the dining hall. We marched in formation in front of the doors and formed a line. Then we went though a line where we picked up our trays, cutlery, plates, cups. Then we have food in steel pans where we put as much as we wanted on our plates, walked to a table, ate, then we put our empty trays onto a conveyor and walked back to our companies in our own accord. The food was actually really good!

  • @korakys

    @korakys

    Ай бұрын

    This is almost exactly how it works in the New Zealand air force. No conveyor though.

  • @michaelplanchunas3693
    @michaelplanchunas36937 күн бұрын

    Was at Sheppard AFB Texas 63/64 on C Shift, classes 6PM to midnight. Marched to the chow hall for midnight meal. Sheppard had a squadron of B-52s, nuclear armed. In that winter I felt sorry for the plane guards, they came for meals at the same time as us. Even with parkas on, they looked like frozen icicles. That was rough duty, with Texas Northers blowing in from the prairies.

  • @philipbuckley759
    @philipbuckley759Ай бұрын

    it is which military branch to choose, for the short term, one enlistment.....or a career.....the answer varies....eh....

  • @SaraphDarklaw
    @SaraphDarklawАй бұрын

    11:15 Oh god, I remember being told I had double rations in basic. I was so paranoid about standing out in any way that I refused them and sat with everyone else. Kids with double rats had to sit apart from everyone else and I don’t want that kind of attention. It wasn’t until near graduation that the drill got on my case because I was still underweight.

  • @gordo3697
    @gordo3697Ай бұрын

    Any base with a large overnight work force usually air assests serves mid rats.

  • @yaseen157
    @yaseen157Ай бұрын

    I dont have military experience nor do i live in thr US but i was under the impression submariners get better food "underway" than their surface ship comrades to keep morale high when stuck underwater with no sun!

  • @garymathena2125
    @garymathena21253 күн бұрын

    After basic when I was in (40 plus years ago) we ate c rats. You usually didn't eat for the first ten minutes, that time was spent trading. No one wanted the pork loaf or the scrambled eggs w/ ham chunks. Everybody wanted the pound cake; it was really good w/ peaches. We didn't have any of this good for you food crap, it started in 1985. Before that it was sh** on a shingle, fried chicken, spaghetti and meat balls and the thing I will never eat again veal parmesan. The thing you can always count on though was a FANTASTIC Thanksgiving and Christmas dinner. The cooks went all out for the holidays, you may eat the same thing two or three times a week before and after. Most people don't realize the military works within a budget, and the mess hall is no exception.

  • @_tuxedocat
    @_tuxedocatАй бұрын

    Only 30 minutes and they all look like slow robots pausing between each action or motion.

  • @AbbyNormL
    @AbbyNormLАй бұрын

    I remember in bootcamp hearing “20 minutes and 20 minutes only!” screamed continuously during every meal.

  • @abdo98-
    @abdo98-Ай бұрын

    good

  • @Moonlite-vo2sv
    @Moonlite-vo2svАй бұрын

    8:52 that girl is hungry LOL

  • @EyesOfByes
    @EyesOfByesАй бұрын

    This makes the Nobel Prize banquette dinner look easy

  • @rosaria8384
    @rosaria8384Ай бұрын

    This video honestly makes me hungry, while learning how military dining makes for solid camaraderie. Camaraderie and cooperation makes a huge difference, on and off the battlefield...

  • @freefireug

    @freefireug

    Ай бұрын

    He already has

  • @tommyrq180

    @tommyrq180

    14 күн бұрын

    You get it. Thanks.

  • @sr7312
    @sr7312Ай бұрын

    The Marine Corps has the best food, if you can get to a Mess hall. That's the one nice thing they get.

  • @Bagas-114
    @Bagas-114Ай бұрын

    For April's Fools, you should make a video with the saying "It is what you think." That would be cool. Just saying

  • @gldnboy17
    @gldnboy17Ай бұрын

    Air Force definitely the best!!!

  • @Qrcrap
    @QrcrapАй бұрын

    exquisite fine dining experience

  • @kim-9707
    @kim-9707Ай бұрын

    I was just at the Naval Academy, they have ice-cream machines running 24/7 in King's Hall

  • @tommyrq180

    @tommyrq180

    14 күн бұрын

    I went to the Air Force Academy and spent a semester at USNA as an exchange cadet. The only part of USNA food that was better than USAFA was the ice cream. Everything else was worse. Because…Navy.

  • @iq_by_0303
    @iq_by_0303Ай бұрын

    tbh this doesnt look like its very efficent

  • @jacquesm6847
    @jacquesm68472 күн бұрын

    In camp lejune while on guard duty I saw Charlie company coming for chow and I said I better get there printout because nothings going to be left the Kobe was like 1/4 mile long lol 😂

  • @alexanderboldt5937
    @alexanderboldt5937Ай бұрын

    From my experience back in the days the navy (Bundesmarine) have the best food. Hey,you don't want to be on a ship with over 100 comrades which just dumped the food overboard 'cause you messed up the meal 😂

  • @desyncer
    @desyncerАй бұрын

    Eating Army chow taught me to not be a picky eater. I picked up the habit of always getting a big scoop of potato salad and just mixing all the shit on the menu into it so I could actually shovel it all down. Anytime I ever ate in a different branch's mess hall, the food was so much better.

  • @naoyukiclipper
    @naoyukiclipperАй бұрын

    cookery is not available in JPN(T_T)

  • @xTheRedShirtX
    @xTheRedShirtXАй бұрын

    I never knew food allergies wasn't allowed for the navy. But it makes sense as to why they have that rule in place.

  • @bobbydouglass1813
    @bobbydouglass181324 күн бұрын

    AIM HIGH ladies and gentlemen, GOD BLESS AMERICA

  • @chillaxter13
    @chillaxter13Ай бұрын

    Everything I've seen says that the service with the best food is the forgotten one... Coast Guard.

  • @jeraldbottcher1588
    @jeraldbottcher1588Ай бұрын

    In my experience (Long time ago) I had the opportunity to eat at Navy, Army and Air Force dining facilities. (I served in the Army for 20 years). The food was best at Air Force Facilities, Next was Navy dining while underway. Then Navy at the Navy bases. The Army chow was in last place. Mind you, the Army chow was usually good, sometimes bad, and in the field sometimes terrible. but calories are calories and when you are a starvi'n marvin you do not care how it tastes. Oh the stories I could tell.

  • @user_not_addicted
    @user_not_addictedАй бұрын

    Who remembers an Episode on Two and a half men . When Jake came back from the Army and cooked food for like 2000 people 😂