Meals Aboard A Ship
Kurt Feltenberger
(02 Apr 2018 01:22 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Meals Aboard A Ship
Douglas Berry
(02 Apr 2018 01:35 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Meals Aboard A Ship Kurt Feltenberger (02 Apr 2018 02:23 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Meals Aboard A Ship
Evyn MacDude
(10 Apr 2018 07:01 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Meals Aboard A Ship
Phil Pugliese
(10 Apr 2018 20:13 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Meals Aboard A Ship
Richard Aiken
(13 Apr 2018 01:40 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Meals Aboard A Ship
Evyn MacDude
(14 Apr 2018 03:34 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Meals Aboard A Ship
James Davies
(02 Apr 2018 01:36 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Meals Aboard A Ship
Kurt Feltenberger
(02 Apr 2018 02:54 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Meals Aboard A Ship
Bruce Johnson
(02 Apr 2018 18:41 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Meals Aboard A Ship
shadow@xxxxxx
(19 Apr 2018 05:52 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Meals Aboard A Ship
Rupert Boleyn
(19 Apr 2018 06:20 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Meals Aboard A Ship
Phil Pugliese
(19 Apr 2018 21:52 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Meals Aboard A Ship
Jeffrey Schwartz
(10 Apr 2018 15:40 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Meals Aboard A Ship
Bruce Johnson
(02 Apr 2018 18:39 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Meals Aboard A Ship
Phil Pugliese
(02 Apr 2018 19:27 UTC)
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Re: [TML] Meals Aboard A Ship
Billye Gilbert
(03 Apr 2018 19:04 UTC)
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On 4/1/2018 9:35 PM, Douglas Berry wrote: > > A concern would be the length of deployments. Things like MREs get > very old quickly. The Army, at least, always tried to get use hot > meals even on deployment. A galley and mess is not wasted spacce. it > is vital to morale. Fresh food, and a variety of it, and eatting in > commons increases morale and bonding between shipmates. The galley > staff would probably double as damage control, freeing others to fight > the ship. > > Think about it. You're stuck on a Gionetti-class light cruiser. You > see the same bulkheads every day for weeks. Your last liberty call was > eight jumps ago. Fresh food and bullshitting with crewmates may be the > highlight of your day! > > Also, the galley can be repurposed as a classroom, assembly point, > overflow sickbay, or any num,ber of uses. I was thinking that the individual portions (entree, veggie1, veggie2, dessert, etc.) would be produced under contract (or perhaps by Fleet owned companies and managed by local companies, much like how the contract to manage the Lake City Ammunition Plant is put up for bid every few years here in the States), and held to a commercial standard that would require the portion to be restaurant suitable. The crew member would then draw whatever his ration allotment would be, and this would have a secondary benefit of allowing the ship's doctor to officially limit individual crew members to specific foods based on health needs. The MRE comparison was just something that was similar in concept. I would never, ever, condemn someone to eating MREs for a full deployment...I'd be nice and just shoot them. -- Kurt Feltenberger xxxxxx@thepaw.org/xxxxxx@yahoo.com “Before today, I was scared to live, after today, I'm scared I'm not living enough." - Me